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Kite Flying in Brazil

bepmoht

Kite Flying in Brazil


So a very popular hobby in my town appears to be kite flying. Most flyers are teenage boys. They come out most every afternoon and fly their tiny kites up and down the streets of all places. I don’t know the history behind this, but I’ve seen kites stuck in phone and electrical wires all over Brazil. I’m curious if anyone knows the back story on this hobby in Brazil? I did some initial google research, it seems it’s a very popular sport in Brazil. Go figure.


As a kid in the northeast USA we use to fly kites once in a while. Usually it was in the spring when there was a boatload of windy days. At FW Woolworth we could pickup kites for 15 cents. I think at that time they were made in Japan. We would assemble them, fly them for a while until the string broke and they flew miles away, or a cross wind might cause the inevitable crash which shattered the bamboo frame into kindling. This is what kids did in the 1960s, way before the internet, smartphones and cable TV.

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abthree

08/24/24 @bepmoht.  Kite flying has been super popular everywhere I've lived in Brazil (Northeast, Minas, North), mostly among preteen and teenage boys, but with some adult men, as well.  Some competitive flyers even use a wire string to cut the strings of other flyers in the air.  Almost all of the kites have been pentagonal, with the point down and flat on top, the larger ones called "papagaios" and the smaller ones called "pipas".  I've almost never seen the losenge-shaped kites that we used to fly in the northeastern US, and never yet seen a box kite.


Now that you mention it, I wish that I knew the history, but I don't.

bepmoht

@abthree


It’s funny you mentioned the box kites. My middle brother was a fan of that design. Much more time to assemble and more difficult to get airborne. I seem to remember they were more expensive too! Probably 35 cents 🤪. Getting the correct tail weight for prevailing conditions was often the challenge.

abthree


08/24/24    @abthree
It’s funny you mentioned the box kites. My middle brother was a fan of that design. Much more time to assemble and more difficult to get airborne. I seem to remember they were more expensive too! Probably 35 cents 🤪. Getting the correct tail weight for prevailing conditions was often the challenge.
   

    -@bepmoht


I thought that they were SOOOOOO cool!  🤣

GuestPoster376

I flew the GAYLA "Bat" design kite as a teenager, like everyone else in my neighbourhood did.


Didn't know kites were cool in Brasil though. In Praia de Pipa near Natal the wind is so strong, it would be an ideal spot to do that. Ahhhhh memories.

ibdegen

Ah, memories! When I was in Santos in 1982 for Música na Praia, kites were all the rage. The wind was perfect on the beach. These were nothing like the flimsy, paper kites I'd seen in the states at that time. The kites were beautifully made out of ripstop cloth with decent dowels, and included string on a piece of wood designed to allow the string to be easily paid out, retrieved and controlled. A glove and sack were included as well. There were all kinds... box kites, deltas, fighting kites, etc. I was so impressed I brought several back and enjoyed them for years. I last used them with my kids around 10 or so years ago on Kite Day in Berkeley. My kids, now adults, may still have them.

Eventually I started seeing kites of similar quality for sale in the US. Now they are ubiquitous.

Peter Itamaraca

If you ever see motorcyclists riding around with a chrome rod with a hook on the end sticking up from the handlebars, this is also all about kite-flying.


Apparently some kite-flyers do battle with each other, and try to cut the string of their competitors. The winner is the one still connected when all others have been cut off! To enhance their chances they coat (allegedly) their string in ground glass to make the cutting easier.


The motorcyclists are scared that they may encounter the released kites at around head height, and be decapitated, and so the chrome rod with hook may save their lives by trapping the glass coated string first.


I kid you not...

KenAquarius

@Peter Itamaraca I read an article about this just the other day â€kite fightingâ€.  Apparently it has become a real problem in some areas with calls to ban the practice. It talked about the number of people severly injured by the blades. It also had a photo of a motorcyclist who had his face slashed badly as the wire hit him while he was speeding down a highway.

mberigan

Cerol is what they call the glass powdered string used to cut the strings of other kite fliers - also called manja in English. It is dangerous and illegal.


Otherwise, thinking of kite flying - now I can't get "Let's Go Fly a Kite," with Dick Van Dyke & The Londoners out of my head:


Ohh Ohh Ohh

Let's go fly a kite, up to the highest height

let's go fly a kite and send it soaring

up, through the atmosphere

up, where the air is clear

Ohh Let's go fly a kite


I love kite flying!

bepmoht

@mberigan


Had to hear it now that you mentioned it 🥳