At the end of spring, May 27 and 28, at the museum-reserve “ Tsaritsyno” XV Spring Festival will be held kites “Motley sky”.

As part of the holiday, a 30-meter air whale will be launched, according to the official website of the mayor of the capital.

The festival will run for two days, from 12:00 to 19:00. The site for launching kites will be the shore of the Nizhny Tsaritsynsky pond (between Shipilovsky passage and Novotsaritsynsky highway, next to the Orekhovo metro station). About 15 thousand people are expected to attend the event.

Sky over the park Tsaritsyn” will be decorated with 20 giant kites of various shapes and colors: octopus, owl, bear, fish and others. The length of each is about 20 meters. This year, a 30-meter air whale will be launched at the festival for the first time, it is the largest in Russia. These kites are made from very durable and lightweight nylon sail fabric.

Anyone can come to the festival and fly their own kite into the sky. Those who don’t have one can rent one for free or attend a master class on how to make one.

Traditionally at the festival “Motley sky” spectators will see demonstration performances in which a professional aerobatic team will fly sports kites.

Festival “Motley sky” first took place in 2003. Since 2012, it has been held at the museum-reserve “ Tsaritsyno” Twice a year.

/ Tuesday, April 25, 2017 /

Topics: Zamoskvoretskaya

. . . . . It will launch a 30-meter air whale. Spectators can expect Japanese kite fights and aerobatic team performances.

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One of the key moments will be fights on traditional Japanese Rokkaku kites. The goal of the competition is to deprive the opponent's kite of stability in the air and force it to land. Six “ pilots".

At the festival “Motley sky” They will also create a “garden of the wind” - install fluttering ribbons, flags and other structures. DJs will play for visitors, and there will be a fair on the shore of the pond.

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Kite Festival “Motley sky” will be held in the capital's museum-reserve “ Tsaritsyno” May 27-28, according to the official portal of the Moscow mayor.

“Motley sky” will be held on May 27-28 from 12.00 to 19.00, the site for kite launching will be the shore of the Lower Tsaritsyn Pond. Organizers expect about 15 thousand people to attend the festival.

. . . . .

Anyone can fly their own kite at the festival or rent one for free. There will also be a master class on making kites for guests. Traditionally, a professional aerobatic team will perform at the festival and fly sports kites. One of the key moments of the event will be fighting on traditional Japanese Rokkaku kites. The goal of the competition is to deprive the opponent's kite of stability in the air and force it to land. . . . . .

Festival “Motley sky” was first held in 2003, and since 2012 it has been held in the museum-reserve “ Tsaritsyno” Twice a year.


. . . . . During the event, it is planned to launch a 30-meter air whale, reports the portal of the mayor and government of Moscow.
During the festival in the sky above the park “ Tsaritsyno” Two dozen huge kites of various shapes and colors will soar. Here you can see an octopus, an owl, a bear, fish and so on. . . . . . But the largest, not only at the festival, but throughout Russia, will be a 30-meter air whale.
. . . . . Those who do not have one will be able to rent it for free or make it themselves by attending a master class on making it during the festival.
. . . . .
The festival will take place from 12:00 to . . . . .


Visitors to the kite festival in the park Tsaritsyno” will be able to see the largest air whale in Russia. This was reported on the official portal of the mayor and government of Moscow.

. . . . .

The material explains that the air whale is the largest in Russia. In addition, 20 giant kites of various shapes and colors will decorate the sky above the park. . . . . . Festival visitors will be able to bring their own kite and fly it into the sky. . . . . .


. . . . .
As part of the festival, 20 large animal-shaped kites will be launched. The length of each kite is about 20 meters. The largest kite in Russia - a 30-meter whale - will also be launched. In addition, there will be performances by an aerobatic team that will fly sports kites, and traditional Japanese Rokkaku kite dogfights.
At the festival, everyone will be able to fly their own kite, or rent a kite, as well as attend a master class on making kites.


. . . . . The sky above the park will be filled with twenty-meter high kites of the most incredible colors and shapes! Anyone can send their own kite on an air trip.

The site for kite launching will be the shore of the Lower Tsaritsynsky Pond.

One of the main events of the festival will be the Rokkaku kite fight. . . . . .

One of the most spectacular events of the upcoming festival will be the launch of the largest kite in Russia - a 30-meter air whale. It is noted that the kite is made of lightweight, but at the same time durable nylon sailing fabric. It was made by the famous New Zealand designer Simon Chisnel. With all my impressive size The “air whale” weighs only 26 kilograms.

Anyone can take part in a master class on making a kite or rent one.

There will also be demonstration performances where a professional aerobatic team will fly the kites.

. . . . .

A fair will open on the shore of the pond, and DJs will maintain an atmosphere of celebration and fun throughout the festival.


From May 26 to 27, Tsaritsyno Park in Moscow will host a kite festival called “Motley Sky.” A festival will begin on the shores of the Lower Tsaritsyno Pond, which has won the hearts of thousands of people.

Once a year, thousands of inventors will improve their kite flying skills. An incredible colorful show will open before the eyes of spectators in the capital.

Speckled Sky Kite Festival 2018: a great option for a day off

Thousands of people will flock to Tsaritsino to see the largest kite in Russia. It is here, on the banks of Nizhny Tsaritsynsky the pond will pass Kite Festival “Motley Sky”. All those who cannot attend this colorful show have a second chance to do so in the fall: in 2018, from September 1-2, the festival will be repeated again.

The initiator of the festival was the club of kite lovers “Prokite”. This festival was first held in 2003 and immediately appealed to the taste of many people. The organizers of the holiday admit that they hold this event not only for entertainment, but also to make outdoor recreation more popular. It is not necessary to come here with a kite; you can make one at a master class that will take place on the shore of the pond. From 12:00-18:00 there will be a festive program where guests and festival participants will enjoy fun music, surprises and exciting master classes.

Sometimes there are incidents here: in 2017, due to a strong gust of wind, several large kites were blown into the sky, but the rest were saved. This holiday is also suitable for lovers of passive relaxation: far from the bustle of the city, you can simply relax in nature, admiring the kites in the sky.

Speckled Sky Kite Festival 2018: Rokkaku Battle

The climax of the festival will be the battle of Rokkaku. This tradition was borrowed from Japan. Participants in the battle were hexagonal kites depicting famous samurai. If in earlier times they were made of bamboo and special paper, now carbon fiber frames and nylon are used more often.

In order for the kite to be stable in the air flow, its design must have sides of 5:4:3. The number of guide sails is three. The point of the fight is to shoot down the enemy's kite with any means. As a rule, teams participate in this competition. To bring down a kite, two strategies are used: you can entangle the lines and lines of all participants, or you can turn the kite over so that it cuts the competitor's line. The winner is the one with the only kite left in the air. Before the start of the battle, all snakes are infused in the direction of the wind and undergo a thorough check.

The length of the sling, as a rule, reaches 45 meters. It should be noted that the winner of the fight gets the opponent's kite. A peculiarity of fights in Russia is that pilots do not use lines coated with abrasive, as this allows them to quickly cut the enemy’s line, 1rre reports. This, in turn, is considered a harsh technique, due to which the bright show in the sky can end very quickly.

The organizer of the event is the club of kite lovers “Prokite” with the assistance of the State Budgetary Institution “Mospriroda” of the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation environment and GBUK of Moscow State Museum-Reserve"Tsaritsino".

The purpose of the festival is to popularize active recreation in nature, create a platform for joint creativity and exchange of experience.
The event program includes:
- master class on making kites
- parade of kites with the participation of the largest in Russia - 30 meters long;
- wind garden (ground installations: waving flags and ribbons)
- master class on making a fighter plane using origami technique
- fights on rokkaku - traditional Japanese fighting snakes. Anyone can take part in the battle
- food market
- music sets

SPECIAL GUEST– AWITA team (France), which is already more than 10 years old. During this time, the guys collected one of the world's largest collections of kites. Passionate lovers of the sky, the guys are ready to fly kites in any weather, fully justifying the name of their team: after all, AWITA is All Ways In The Air, i.e. "Always in the air."

Entrance to the festival is free.

Event time: from 12:00 to 18:00
Location: the territory of the Lower Tsaritsynsky pond between Shipilovsky passage and Novotsaritsynsky highway.
Address reference: Bazhenova str., 11B, GPS coord: 55.623412, 37.687569
How to get there: Art. metro station "Orekhovo" or "Tsaritsyno"

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The Motley Sky Kite Festival is a festival filled with bright colors and amazing atmosphere. Not only brave pilots and astronauts can conquer the skies, but also those who are simply in love with the blue heights and know how to catch favourable wind.

Every year thousands of romantics and inventors gather in Moscow and compete in flying kites. And while the kite owners remain on the ground, their creations soar skyward, conquering heights clear skies and sailing imposingly on the air waves.

Motley Sky 2019

And now we will tell you where and when this amazing and vibrant event will take place.

Kite Festival Motley Sky 2019 will pass twice: May 25-26- spring and August 31 - September 1 - autumn event. The venue will remain the same. The festival will take place in Moscow on the banks of the Lower Tsaritsyn Pond. The site is located between Shipilovsky Proezd and Novotsaritsynskoye Highway. The festive program will take place from 12.00 to 18.00. The exact address and you can see the diagram.

Welcome to one of the brightest events of this year - the #MotleySky Festival in Tsaritsino!

Detailed program August 31 - September 1, 2019

Friends, detailed program festival "Motley Sky" on August 31 and September 1 you can see .

About the Festival

The Motley Sky Kite Festival was first held in 2003 and rightfully received the status of the oldest holiday. Since then, every year it has conquered more and more hearts of people in love with the sky.

Tsaritsyn Ponds have become a permanent venue for this vibrant event, and the time for meeting friends always remains the same - these are the last weekends of May and August.

If you don’t have a kite, don’t be upset, just lying on the green grass away from the bustle of the city and looking at the sky painted in different colors and being alone with your thoughts is also a great pastime.

Fresh air and friends, great music and a fair wind, a sea of ​​smiles and a great mood, a friendly atmosphere and acquaintances - this is the Motley Sky Kite Festival.

The organizers of this holiday are the Prokite club and the Tsaritsyno Museum-Reserve.

Program

The festival program is always filled with exciting events and pleasant surprises.

There is an amazing blue sky, which is decorated with hundreds of colorful works of art presented by both the organizers of the event and its guests. Also here you can see the largest kite in Russia, the length of which reaches as much as 30 meters.

You will especially like the Wind Garden - these are amazingly beautiful ground installations in the form of flags and ribbons fluttering in the wind.

Those who are especially curious will enjoy the exciting master classes, where you and your children can learn how to make real kites, and then they can be launched into the sky.

Also spectacular will be the traditional Japanese rokakku battles - this is a battle of Japanese fighting kites, and absolutely all interested guests will be able to take part in them.

In addition, a sea of ​​interesting and pleasant surprises awaits guests, so come and visit!

Video

We invite you to see how this amazing and colorful event takes place in Tsaritsyn Park. But, as they say, it’s better to see for yourself once than to hear a hundred times. So come visit with the whole family or a group of friends. You will always be welcome here! See you!

Last weekend, September 1-2, the colorful “Motley Sky” kite festival took place near the Lower Tsaritsynsky Pond. The event has its own history - the festival has been held for fifteen years. The first of the festivals “took off into the sky” in 2003, and since then “Motley Sky” has become a bright and interesting tradition. From noon until seven o'clock in the evening, the festival awaited both adults and very young visitors.

The organizers of the festival are the Tsaritsyno Museum-Reserve and Prokite, a club of kite lovers. They were the ones who managed to give us an original, memorable event (by the way, on given time“Motley Sky” can deservedly be called the oldest kite festival in Russia). It takes place not once, but twice a year - at the end of May and the beginning of September. Why the choice of dates? This question is easy to answer - firstly, you can count on already - or still - good or at least good weather; and secondly, a lot of children appear at the event, and if the festival were held in the summer, many of the likely young visitors would already be vacationing outside the city.

“The Motley Sky,” like any other cultural event of this kind, has its own goals, simple, but very positive. Among them, the organizers call leisure in the lap of nature, creating a platform for those who want to exchange experiences or create something new together. In addition, it is no secret that the festival is attended primarily not by “kite ballooning” professionals, but by ordinary people, many of whom know very little about kites. And the “Motley Sky” festival gives them the opportunity to join a bright, entertaining, and, by the way, sporting pastime - some people buy their first kite after the “Motley Sky”. And sometimes even on time!

You can appreciate the scale of the largest kite from these photographs.

It should be noted that French kite connoisseurs also took part in the festival. It’s always nice when an event of this kind attracts not only those who, as they say, “are close, but because they can’t go.”

At the festival, visitors could admire a variety of kites, from small to huge, with whales and what looked like a stingray attracting everyone's attention. Most of the kites flew into the air from the hands of ordinary festival visitors - at the “Motley Sky” the idea of ​​​​bringing with them an “aerial pet” was welcomed. Moreover, kite flying by visitors was a separate item included in the event program.

Those interested could attend a master class on making kites from two o'clock in the afternoon. From children's hands, with the help of thin paper, scissors, rulers, plastic sticks and felt-tip pens, simple, crooked, but personally made kites came out! Admission to the festival was free, but the master classes were also free. Within five minutes, a queue of several dozen people formed at the tables where they were held - the popularity of the master class was beyond doubt!

In addition to kites, visitors were delighted with ground installations in the form of multi-colored waving flags - white, blue, yellow flowers… The rainbow “pinwheels,” as the little visitors called them, were also immensely beautiful, lined up along the path at a sufficient height so as not to interfere with the passage of visitors. The installation complex wore beautiful name"Garden of the Wind"

The event had a good, albeit expensive food court. Those who wished could buy ice cream, drink coffee, eat a hot dog, French fries or hot sausage. Alas, Ice Cream for Adults caused slight disappointment (both for children and adults). Apparently, most of the adult patrons were expecting something other than just adding a little alcohol to the ice cream (which inflated the price to an almost obscene level, as some patrons openly said). However, others immediately admitted with a laugh that “something else” could hardly be present at a family-type festival, where children of all ages come...

The musical accompaniment from several DJs, relatively quiet and partly for this reason pleasantly unobtrusive, fit well into the general outline of the festival. It was clear - or rather, heard - that the DJs approached the selection of music with all care - and they made the right decision!

A separate point of the festival was fighting on traditional rokkaku kites. However, very few festival visitors knew what “rokkaku” was, and therefore I would like to say a few words about it here.

Actually, we're talking about about the Japanese kite flying tradition. Rokkaku is a hexagonal kite (the word itself translates as “six corners”). According to the original historical tradition, the snake was made from bamboo and washi (paper made from the fibers of the bark of the “paper tree”), and then decorated with designs. Of course, in those days painting was done by hand. The theme of the painting was often portraits of famous samurai.

In fact, at the master class they suggested doing something similar - two slats were attached to a hexagon cut out of paper, and then the kite creators hurried to a table on which colored felt-tip pens of various shades lay in the public domain.

If we talk about the homeland of rokkaku, then in Japan similar fights are held in two cities - Sanjo and Mitsuki. In Sanzho, kites measuring one and a half meters fly into the air. A team of 5 to 10 people is responsible for one kite. The goal of the battles is simple - to shoot down the enemy’s kite by any means. This can be achieved, for example, by cutting the rail (roughly speaking, rope) of the enemy’s kite with your own, you can turn the enemy’s kite over so that it loses the wind and falls to the ground, you can entangle several “objects” belonging to your opponents with one of your kites... In theory , a kite of this size could be controlled by one person - if we were talking about ordinary aeronautics. But here the whole team has to run around - either help pull the railing, or move the railing basket... The winner is the one whose kite ultimately remains in the air.

In Mitsuki the rules are slightly different. The competition there takes place near the river, just like in Sanzho, but... they fly kites here everywhere larger format- from three and a half meters. Of course, it is almost impossible for one person to hold such a structure, and therefore flying a kite becomes a team affair. Here the goal is no longer to shoot down the enemy’s “object,” but to hook it and drag it to your bank of the river (initially the teams are on opposite banks of the river).

Well, the last thing I would like to tell you about is the fair. At the festival you could buy books, printed T-shirts and coats, funny little things - from bracelets to bronze figurines and bright neckerchiefs and, of course, kites. Among the latter there was a fairly good selection of prints, however, rather purely for children, which was even somewhat disappointing, and the price range ranged from 700 to 2000 rubles, depending on the size and model of the kite.

What the festival lacked a little was some specially allocated space where kite owners could demonstrate their “pets” and their talents. Therefore, the snakes were hovering right above their heads, and, frankly speaking, it was even scary to pass by a young enthusiast trying to fly a kite... somewhere - and every minute he would have to dodge a snake attack!

According to experienced visitors and participants of the festival, this time they were somewhat let down by the wind. On a wonderfully sunny day there was almost complete calm, which, of course, made it difficult to fly kites. But despite this, “The Motley Sky” was a success, bringing a day of smiles to many festival-goers.