kite festival guwahati 2021

Brahmaputra Sea shore Fair is an outside celebration held in Guwahati on the gorge sea shores of the powerful Brahmaputra stream. It is held each year in the long stretch of January that concurs with the Magh Bihu, the gather celebration in Assam.[1][2] It is supposed to be propelled from different celebrations held in the southern conditions of India. It is a juncture of the regular with the advanced and addresses the way of life and convention of the territory of Assam.[1] The point of the celebration is to advance native culture, creates and promoting customary games of Assam.   Occasions   During the season, the sea shores are involved to set up fairs.[1] The celebration incorporates different occasions like Sea shore cricket, Sea shore volleyball, water boating, paddling and wind surfing, ice skating, kayaking and Air sports like swelling, paragliding and hang floating. Guests and sightseers can take an interest in these occasions and show their abilities. Conventional games like elephant races, egg breaking and chicken battling are likewise held alongside these cutting edge and in fact progressed games. Rivalries like Sit and draw and kite flying are additionally held where youngsters can participate. Show of conventional specialty is likewise a piece of the celebration. With its inception in the Manasarovar Lake district, close to the Mount Kailash, situated on the northern side of the Himalayas in Burang Province of Tibet as the Yarlung Tsangpo River,[1] it streams along southern Tibet to get through the Himalayas in incredible chasms (counting the Yarlung Tsangpo Amazing Ravine) and into Arunachal Pradesh (India).[4] It streams southwest through the Assam Valley as Brahmaputra and south through Bangladesh as the Jamuna (not to be mixed up with Yamuna of India). In the tremendous Ganges Delta, it converges with the Padma, the well known name of the stream Ganges in Bangladesh, lastly, in the wake of converging with Padma, it turns into the Meghna and from here, it streams as Meghna waterway prior to discharging into the Straight of Bengal.[5]   Around 4,696 km (2,918 mi)[1] long, the Brahmaputra is a significant waterway for water system and transportation in the locale. The normal profundity [perhaps width?] of the waterway is 140 m (450 ft) and greatest profundity is 370 m (1,200 ft). The waterway is inclined to disastrous flooding in the Spring when the Himalayan snow dissolves. The normal release of the stream is around 19,800 m3/s (700,000 cu ft/s),[4] and floods reach around 100,000 m3/s (3,500,000 cu ft/s).[6] It is an exemplary illustration of a twisted waterway and is exceptionally vulnerable to channel relocation and avulsion.[7] It is additionally one of only a handful few streams on the planet that displays a sea swell. It is traversable for the majority of its length.   The waterway depletes the Himalayan east of the Indo-Nepal line, south-focal segment of the Tibetan level over the Ganga bowl, south-eastern part of Tibet, the Patkai-Bum slopes, the northern inclines of the Meghalaya slopes, the Assam fields, and the northern bit of Bangladesh. The bowl, particularly south of Tibet, is described by significant degrees of precipitation. Kangchenjunga (8,586 m) is the lone top over 8,000 m, consequently is the most elevated point inside the Brahmaputra bowl.   The upper scopes of the Brahmaputra Stream, known as the Yarlung Tsangpo from the Tibetan language, begins on the Angsi Glacial mass, close to Mount Kailash, situated on the northern side of the Himalayas in Burang Region of Tibet. The wellspring of the stream was before thought to be on the Chemayungdung glacial mass, which covers the inclines of the Himalayas around 97 km (60 mi) southeast of Lake Manasarovar in southwestern Tibet. The waterway is 3,969 km (2,466 mi) long, and its seepage region is 712,035 km2 (274,918 sq mi) as indicated by the new discoveries, while past archives demonstrated its length fluctuated from 2,916 km (1,812 mi) to 3,364 km (2,090 mi)and its waste zone somewhere in the range of 520,000 and 1.73 million km2.    Subsequent to passing Pi (Pe) in Tibet, the stream goes out of nowhere toward the north and upper east and carves a course through a progression of extraordinary restricted crevasses between the uneven massifs of Gyala Peri and Namcha Barwa in a progression of rapids and falls. From there on, the waterway turns south and southwest and moves through a profound crevasse (the "Yarlung Tsangpo Fabulous Gulch") across the eastern limit of the Himalayas with ravine dividers that expand upward for 5,000 m (16,000 ft) and more on each side.  The Yarlung Tsangpo enters the province of Arunachal Pradesh in India, where it is called Siang. It makes a fast plunge from its unique stature in Tibet lastly shows up in the fields, where it is called Dihang. It streams for around 35 km (22 mi) toward the south after which, it is joined by the Dibang Waterway and the Lohit Stream at the top of the Assam Valley. Underneath the Lohit, the stream is called Brahmaputra and Doima (mother of water) and Burlung-Buthur by local Bodo tribals, it at that point enters the province of Assam, and turns out to be exceptionally wide—as wide as 20 km (12 mi) in pieces of Assam.   The Dihang, twisting out of the mountains, transforms towards the southeast and slides into a low-lying bowl as it enters northeastern Assam state. Only west of the town of Sadiya, the waterway again goes toward the southwest and is joined by two mountain streams, the Lohit, and the Dibang. Beneath that conversion, around 1,450 km (900 mi) from the Narrows of Bengal, the stream becomes referred to customarily as the Brahmaputra ("Child of Brahma"). In Assam, the stream is powerful, even in the dry season, and during the downpours, its banks are in excess of 8 km (5.0 mi) separated. As the waterway follows its twisted 700 km (430 mi) course through the valley, it gets a few quickly streaming Himalayan streams, including the Subansiri, Kameng, Bhareli, Dhansiri, Manas, Champamati, Saralbhanga.


kite festival guwahati 2022

What is kite festival guwahati 2021.
The Kite Festival of Guwahati is known as Jeevan Kite Festival/Jeevan Kite River Festival. Kites of various shapes, colors and materials are seen in this festival. It is organized by Jeevan Initiative.

Thousands of kites in the shape of fish, butterflies and birds are brought from various international kite festivals. Kiteboarders from many countries participate in it. Various sports, river rides, traditional and modern cultural performances, ethnic food festivals for youth and many competitions are organized.

The Brahmaputra River is the fifth strongest river in the world by flow. It is an essential integration factor between the lifeline of Assam and the communities. It flows very wide range more then  20 km in many parts of Assam.

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Jeevan Kite River Festival: Three Day Festival

Start: 12 February 2022

End: 16 February 2022

Location: Opposite Fancy Bazaar along with bank of Brahmaputra river.

Timing: Every day the festival will start at 11 am and continue till 9 pm

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Why kite festival guwahati is celebrated

The celebration of the festival is mainly dedicated to paying tribute to the Brahmaputra, which has nurtured various ethnicities and variations. But the river is infamous due to floods. Such festivals are organized to change the image of the Brahmaputra River. The important thing is that this festival presents the message to the general public to clean and preserve the river.

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Also read: Nag Panchami 2022

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