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			boon bang fai (บุญบั้งไฟ, บุณบั้งไฟ)  
		Thai name for the annual Rocket Festival
		(fig.), as held 
		in many parts of
		
		
		Isaan and in a 
		few places in the North, to celebrate the ending of the Hot Season and 
		the beginning of the wet
		 
			
			
			monsoon 
		and the
		
		
			rice 
			
			 planting season. It 
		is believed that there are
		
						
	      nagas (fig.) 
		living in the skies where they create the rains. In Isaan, legend has it 
		that Phraya Thaen, the angel of the waters, ordered the nagas to play in 
		Lake Anohdaad, a place in  
		
        
		Himaphan, so that water spilled down to 
		the human earth as rain, the primary natural source of  water. It 
		is thought that during the dry season the nagas fell asleep and people 
		in Isaan will therefore launch makeshift   
		
			
		bamboo-rockets into the sky (fig.), 
		in order to wake up the naga's, so they can send down the rains needed 
		for nourishing their crops. These rockets are made from up to 10 meter 
		large bamboo containers, filled with din prasiw (ดินประสิว), i.e. nitre 
		(saltpetre) and charcoal, with the amount used depending on the type of 
		rocket. There are namely three types, i.e. Bang Fai Kilo (บั้งไฟกิโล), 
		which contains one kilogram of nitre, Bang Fai Meun (บั้งไฟหมื่น), which 
		is filled with 12 kilograms of nitre, and Bang Fai Saen (บั้งไฟแสน), 
		the largest rocket, with 120 kilograms of nitre (fig.). Veteran specialists 
		calculate the proper proportion of nitre and charcoal, so that the 
		rocket will be launched smoothly, without exploding on the ground. Teams 
		of villagers compete with each other in making the most beautifully 
		decorated rockets and may spend months doing so. They are decorated with 
		Thai traditional patterns in gold and include nagas, as well as other 
		figures related to rain-begging legends. During the festival, the 
		rockets first join in a parade (fig.) 
		and are then launched from wooden racks in a large field. Some of these 
		self-made rockets propel up to several thousand meters high, though 
		traditionally, the entire rocket crew of any rocket which is not 
		launched successfully will be thrown into a mud pool (fig.). 
		The ceremony is held during the sixth lunar month, 
		as part of the  
		
		hihd sip song and 
		celebrated the most exuberantly in
		  
		
		      Yasothon 
		province, where it is customarily held in May. The tradition and 
		festival are related to the epic folktale
		
		
		Pha Daeng Nang Ai.
		
		 
		Also called
		
			boon
		
		
			
			bong fai 
		or simply referred to as Bang Fai. In recent years, in
		 
		
	Kalasin's
		
		      amphur 
		of Kuchinarai (กุฉินารายณ์), a new and unique kind of rocket has been 
		introduced known as 
		 
		Bang Fai 
		Talai Lan (บั้งไฟตะไลล้าน), a 
		circular wheel-rocket that spins through the sky creating twisted trails 
		of smoke. After reaching its peak it lands with the use of a parachute. 
		This spectacular festival was publicized on a set of Thai postage stamps issued in 
		2018 (fig.). See also
		
			bangfai phayanaag. 
		 
		
		
		See also POSTAGE STAMP, 
		
		TRAVEL PICTURE, 
		
														
		
														THEMATIC STREET LIGHT 
		and 
		
		
		WATCH VIDEO (1),
		
		(2),
		
		(3) 
		and
		
		
		(4). 
		 
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