Songkran 2008 Thai New Year Water Festival Chiang Mai
Uploaded by: krokosc
Video Description:
High definition footage of Thai New Year water festival the Songkran madness 2008 with huge water splash. It is an annual event and local carnival for fun and play held in Chiang Mai Thailand in mid April. The original footage has been recorded with Sony HDR-SR7E digital video camcorder in M2TS format with a video size of 1920 X 1080 pixels. I used a Sony Vegas Pro version 8.0 and converted it into editable M2V format. To render the footage I used a blu-ray template 1920x1080-60i, 25 Mbps video stream. Once converted into M2V file format I used Adobe Premiere Pro CS for easy and final video editing. To render the footage in Adobe Premiere I used export function and Adobe Media Encoder. I selected a preset of HDTV 1080i 29.97 high quality and the frame size of 1920X1080 pixels. To render a video of 09:00 minutes it took over 3 long hours. It was all well worth it as the final results were simply amazing. The picture quality is absolutely fantastic on my 40" Sony Bravia and 5.1 audio is close to perfect.
The Thai New Year (in Thai Songkran from Sanskrit sankrānti "astrological passage") is celebrated every year on 13 April to 15 April. It coincides with the New Year of many other calendars in South and Southeast Asia. The date of the festival was originally set by astrological calculation, but it is now fixed. If these days fall on a weekend, the missed days off are taken on the weekdays immediately following. Songkran falls in the hottest time of the year in Thailand, at the end of the dry season. Until 1888 the Thai New Year was the beginning of the year in Thailand; thereafter 1 April was used until 1940. 1 January is now the beginning of the year. The traditional Thai New Year has been a national holiday since then.
New year traditions: The most obvious celebration of Songkran is the throwing of water. People roam the streets with containers of water or water guns, or post themselves at the side of roads with a garden hose and drench each other and passersby. This, however, was not always the main activity of this festival. Songkran was traditionally a time to visit and pay respects to elders, including family members, friends and neighbors. Besides the throwing of water, people celebrating Songkran may also go to a wat (Buddhist monastery) to pray and give food to monks. They may also cleanse Buddha images from household shrines as well as Buddha images at monasteries by gently pouring water mixed with a Thai fragrance (น้ำอบไทย) over them. It is believed that doing this will bring good luck and prosperity for the New Year. In many cities, such as Chiang Mai, the Buddha images from all of the city's important monasteries are paraded through the streets so that people can toss wate
r at them, ritually 'bathing' the images, as they pass by on ornately decorated floats. In northern Thailand, people may carry handfuls of sand to their neighborhood monastery in order to recompense the dirt that they have carried away on their feet during the rest of the year. The sand is then sculpted into stupa-shaped piles and decorated with colorful flags. Some people make New Year resolutions - to refrain from bad behavior, or to do good things. Songkran is a time for cleaning and renewal. Besides washing household Buddha images, many Thais also take this opportunity to give their home a thorough cleaning. The throwing of water originated as a way to pay respect to people, by gently pouring a small amount of lustral water on other people's hands or over a shoulder as a sign of respect. Among young people the holiday evolved to include dousing strangers with water to relieve the heat, since April is the hottest month in Thailand (temperatures can rise to over 100°F or 40°C on some days). This has f
urther evolved into water fights and splashing water over people riding in vehicles. Nowadays, the emphasis is on fun and water-throwing rather than on the festival's spiritual and religious aspects, which sometimes prompts complaints from traditionalists. In recent years there have been calls to moderate the festival to lessen the many alcohol-related road accidents as well as injuries attributed to extreme behavior such as water being thrown in the faces of traveling motorcyclists. The water is meant as a symbol of washing all of the bad away and is sometimes filled with fragrant herbs.
Tags for this video: carnival chiang definition festival fun high madness mai new play songkran splash thai Thailand water year
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