Jamaica Gleaner

When kites go MISSING

- Carl Gilchrist/Gleaner Writer

THE COLOURFUL kites that used to line the St Ann sky at Easter time were absent this year. Kites of varying colours, shapes and sizes, with only a long tail being their commonalit­y, were expertly crafted by skilled kite makers in St Ann, in anticipati­on of the annual kite festivals that have become a fixture on the Easter landscape.

Last year, St Ann boasted three kite festivals of note, the Jamaica Internatio­nal, the Melrose Farm, and the Brown’s Town Kite festivals.

This year, because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, all three were cancelled. It was a move that left kite lovers and other supporters of the festival, and promoters, disappoint­ed, even as they understood the reasons for cancellati­on and support measures implemente­d by the Government to combat the virus.

While some persons missed the festival, others were only too happy to seek alternativ­e entertainm­ent in the current lockdown.

Promoter of the popular Jamaica Internatio­nal Kite Festival (formerly St Ann Kite Festival), Gary G, pointed out that it was not just Jamaicans who missed the event.

“A lot of people were disappoint­ed that the festival wasn’t held,” he pointed out. “People from all over the world come each year so there was a lot of disappoint­ment with the cancellati­on because of the COVID-19.”

Each year, leading up to the festival on Easter Monday, it was customary to see kite sellers on the roadside between Ocho Rios and St Ann’s Bay peddling their home-made kites. The kite festival also held workshops to teach children how to make kites, thus adding to the fun and anticipati­on of the festival.

WORKSHOPS

“We usually have workshops to teach kids how to make kites, and we would encourage mothers and fathers to come out and spend the day with their kids, show them how to fly kites. They used to enjoy that.”

And that, and the dotted skies, were missing this year.

“Compared to the year before, everywhere you turned you would have seen a lot of kites and all of that. And if you noticed, not many people fly kites this year. It’s like everybody got scared and all of that, so it was really a disaster this year,”

Gary G pointed out.”

But while some persons might have missed the festival, others were busy finding ways to entertain themselves while in lockdown.

Take Taynia Green and her nine-year-old daughter Jada, of Windsor, St Ann’s Bay, for example.

“Jada goes to the kite festival every year, with her cousins. She always enjoys it; she has a lot fun there and she loves that she is able to be out later than usual,” Green said.

Green usually buys kites for her daughter, leading up to the festival, and when the time comes, she’s always eager to go.

“This year, I don’t even think that she was even aware that it was time for the festival. What we did was, we stayed home and made pizza and we played ABC Fast or Slow ... she loves that. We just bonded, pretty much,” Green said.

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