A krathong is the distinctive 'boat' made for the festival out of a banana tree trunk and decorated with folded banana leaves held in place by pins, a candle, incense, and flowers. Some also add coins or small paper bills. I've heard a variety of different reasons for the celebration of Loi Krathong - to show respect to the water goddess Pra Mae Khongkha for use of water, to let go of ill will and grudges from the past year and look for a fresh start in the new year, and to venerate the Buddha with the candle light.
I've begun Thai language classes, and during one hour of class we got together and made a krathong. Some can be bought on the street made of Styrofoam - but considering part of the reason for the celebration is to thank the river goddess, I'm glad we used biodegradable materials.
First, spelling:
We started with a slice of a banana trunk, and wrapped a 1'' ribbon on banana leaf around the outside:
Then the class folded banana leaf strips to make the triangular wedge shapes and pinned those on the stem:
Add a candle, some incense, and FLOWERS!
And ta-da! Our krathong, as presented by two of our teachers. It later went for 200 baht at the school auction - about $7. The highest one (from the level 5 students) went for 1200 baht! Considering I later purchased three beautiful krathongs down the street from our house for 60 baht each, I'm still pretty impressed with what ours went for.
After class, I headed home and bought aforementioned krathongs from the crafty flower ladies down the street. There is a temple very close by and their stands are always full of garlands, folded lotus blossoms, sugar cane poles, incense, and so many other wonderful offerings. Husband, Work friend, Thai language class friend and I all met up down by Saphan Taksin BTS stop by the Chao Phraya River. The river winds through Bangkok and we'd heard there would be a floating parade of massive krathongs and fireworks - excellent. We hopped on a river boat and headed to Wat Arun.
The guys on the boat ride up the river:
Wat Arun is a massive temple on the riverbanks is spectacularly illuminated at night:
The boat stopped in the river by Wat Arun, and everyone around us started to light their krathongs. I guess it's that time! Here, a couple light their boat before launch:
A deck hand looks out at the festivities:
Krathongs successfully launched, our boat headed to a nearby pier for passengers to disembark. What else could there be to do? We just had a beautiful river ride, launched festive boats and let go of grudges. Oh, plenty more was in store.
On shore we found dinner in the form of Pad See Ew Noodles for 30 baht ($1USD) and many treasures for sale. To the left below are a number of krathongs for sale:
Kinda chaotic:
Hookahs for sale:
And cartoon nightshirts:
We walked up on the closest bridge to get a better view of it all, and saw this:
Wow - a really spectacular night!
I've begun Thai language classes, and during one hour of class we got together and made a krathong. Some can be bought on the street made of Styrofoam - but considering part of the reason for the celebration is to thank the river goddess, I'm glad we used biodegradable materials.
First, spelling:
We started with a slice of a banana trunk, and wrapped a 1'' ribbon on banana leaf around the outside:
Then the class folded banana leaf strips to make the triangular wedge shapes and pinned those on the stem:
Add a candle, some incense, and FLOWERS!
And ta-da! Our krathong, as presented by two of our teachers. It later went for 200 baht at the school auction - about $7. The highest one (from the level 5 students) went for 1200 baht! Considering I later purchased three beautiful krathongs down the street from our house for 60 baht each, I'm still pretty impressed with what ours went for.
After class, I headed home and bought aforementioned krathongs from the crafty flower ladies down the street. There is a temple very close by and their stands are always full of garlands, folded lotus blossoms, sugar cane poles, incense, and so many other wonderful offerings. Husband, Work friend, Thai language class friend and I all met up down by Saphan Taksin BTS stop by the Chao Phraya River. The river winds through Bangkok and we'd heard there would be a floating parade of massive krathongs and fireworks - excellent. We hopped on a river boat and headed to Wat Arun.
The guys on the boat ride up the river:
Wat Arun is a massive temple on the riverbanks is spectacularly illuminated at night:
The boat stopped in the river by Wat Arun, and everyone around us started to light their krathongs. I guess it's that time! Here, a couple light their boat before launch:
A deck hand looks out at the festivities:
Krathongs successfully launched, our boat headed to a nearby pier for passengers to disembark. What else could there be to do? We just had a beautiful river ride, launched festive boats and let go of grudges. Oh, plenty more was in store.
On shore we found dinner in the form of Pad See Ew Noodles for 30 baht ($1USD) and many treasures for sale. To the left below are a number of krathongs for sale:
Kinda chaotic:
Hookahs for sale:
And cartoon nightshirts:
We walked up on the closest bridge to get a better view of it all, and saw this:
Wow - a really spectacular night!
























