Festivals

Poi Sang Long Procession is in fact
the celebration of novice ordination which the Thai Yai tribe people hold to be
a highly meritorious occasion. Traditionally, the candidate-novice, his head cleanly
shaven and wrapped with head-cloth in the Burmese style, will don a prince-like
garment and put on valuable jewels and gems, and ride a horse or be carried over
the shoulders of a man to the city shrine. On the ordination eve, a procession
of offerings and other necessary personal belongings will be paraded through the
town streets and then placed at the monastery where the ordination will take place
the next day. It is usually held during March-May before the Buddhist Rain Retreat
period.
Chong Phara
Procession The Chong Phara in the Thai Yai dialect means a castle made
of wood, covered with colourful perforated papers and decorated with fruits, flags
and lamps. It is placed in the courtyard of a house or a monastery as a gesture
to welcome the Lord Buddha on his return from giving sermons to his mother in
heaven, according to traditional belief. Other activities to celebrate the occasion
include dances where performers are dressed in animal costumes. The rite is held
during the post rain retreat season from the full-moon day of the 11 the Lunar
month (around October) to the waxing moon night of the same month.
Bua Tong Blossom Festival Each year in November, the hillsides of Khun
Yuam and Mae Sariang districts are filled with a host of golden Bua Tong Blooms.
As gay as a daisy and almost as large as a sunflower, the Bua Tong only blossoms
for a month. At
Doi Mae U-Kho, the blossoms appear profusely. Finally, the golden blooms become
part of the scene. Some specialists have classified these Bua Tong as weeds and
because of this, they may be cleared to make way for cash crops. Fortunately a
group of researchers have discovered the flower’s insect-repellent properties.
And perhaps that is why the Bua Tong, a symbol of Mae Hong Son, is still preserved
on the hillsides. Loi
Krathong Festival Loi Krathong Festival is held on the full moon night in
the month of November every year. Villagers make “krathongs” to
float in rivers. At Nong Chong Kham, various entertainments and a contest of large
krathongs are held near the central pond. Lamps and candles are lit all around
the area. Moreover, at Wat Phra That Doi Kong Mu, there is a ceremony of releasing
candle-lit krathongs bound with balloons to the sky (known as “Loi Krathong
Sawan”). |