Bikes, bands and bangs launch festival
THE Alexandra Blossom Festival’s big weekend began last night with the roar of motorbikes and the bang of fireworks.
Hundreds gathered in the Linger and Die reserve to watch more than 100 athletes compete in the Round the Clock Race.
Competitors slogged from the reserve to the town’s famous Clock on the Hill and back on foot, in kayaks and on bikes.
James Brent won the adult individual section in 8min 38sec and Coby Pope, of Alexandra Primary School, won the primary individual title in 9min 53sec.
The Pulse Fitness team brought a new element to the race by winning in 6min 12sec after a team member paraglided from the clock down to the finish line.
The crowd was then enter tained by music and motocross during the festival mardi gras.
Festival chairwoman Sharleen StirlingLindsay said there was a ‘‘buzz’’ at the mardis gras last night, which set a great tone for the rest of the weekend.
‘‘It’s going to be fantastic. There’s great weather and everything else that could go right has gone right.’’
Trucks, floats and decorated shopping trolleys known as florreys will cruise down Centennial Ave this morning in the grand procession.
The action will continue in Pioneer Park with food, drinks, music, carnival rides and the crowning of the Blossom Queen.
In a first for the festival tonight, Southern Pro Wrestling New Zealand will stage a bout in the Dunstan High School Gymnasium.
‘‘YOU may be a bit old,’’ Alexandra Blossom Festival princess convener Dianne Elliot says when considering whether a certain 26yearold male reporter is blossom prince material.
‘‘But never say never,’’ she said with a smirk that meant she really did mean never.
Mrs Elliot has run the Blossom Queen competition for 15 years, usually preferring to stay behind the scenes.
She was festival secretary from 1996 to 2008 and still organises the volunteers who run the five ticket stations.
The competition is not about beauty and does not mirror the pageantry of the likes of Miss America, she says.
‘‘They don’t talk about world peace.’’
As early as June, she does her usual rounds canvassing local businesses for prizes. This year’s prize pool is about $4800.
‘‘I’ll walk into shops and they say ‘Oh no, not you again’.’’
The festival queen event has been part of the festival since its beginnings in 1957.
This year, the six princesses and one prince have been taken to a host of events, including the Senior Blossom Queen competition, the festival art exhibition and mardi gras.
‘‘At this stage I’m more or less in the background, reminding them of what they’ve got coming up, introducing them to people.’’
The winner is chosen by a panel of judges based on criteria including personality, presentation and community involvement.
‘‘It used to be a public vote. If you were on the winning float, you were the queen.’’
The competition attracted a certain type of enthusiastic young person, and Mrs Elliot loved meeting them.
‘‘They all have such a wide range of things in the community, you wonder how they have time to do their schoolwork.’’
This year, the competition has changed in a small way due to the addition of its first prince, Alexandra Senior Youth Forum member Jeff Afan.
These included getting more maleappropriate prizes from businesses such as jewellers and beauty salons.
‘‘We had to make sure when we went to the businesses there would be something a male would want.’’
As recently as 2010 there were 15 floats and princesses, more than double this year’s seven, which Mrs Elliot cannot explain.
‘‘People’s expectations are changing, but there are still people who think it’s important to keep the tradition alive.’’