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Saturday April 19, 2014.
Float Your Fanny Down the Ganny is a 10km race along the Ganaraska River to commemorate the 1980 flood that crippled Port Hopes downtown area.
The float parade at Yuan Xiao Jie or Chap Goh Mei, the 15th and last day of the Chinese New Year at the Eu Tong Sen Street and North Bridge Road on 28 February 2010.
Vicenza community members participate in the Family Float Nite held at the Villaggio pool Aug. 11.
Many children and adults enjoyed the last family night at the facility.
After Aug. 22 the Villaggio pool will be open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
It is closed on Wednesday for maintenance and it will be closed for the season on Sept. 4.
For more information call 634-6536 or visit www.vicenzaMWR.com
Learn more about us on www.usag.vicenza.army.mil or www.facebook.com/USAGvicenza.
Photo by Laura Kreider, USAG Vicenza Public Affairs Office
My favorite part in doing these is seeing people notice me while editing.
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Vicenza community members participate in the Family Float Nite held at the Villaggio pool Aug. 11.
Many children and adults enjoyed the last family night at the facility.
After Aug. 22 the Villaggio pool will be open Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
It is closed on Wednesday for maintenance and it will be closed for the season on Sept. 4.
For more information call 634-6536 or visit www.vicenzaMWR.com
Learn more about us on www.usag.vicenza.army.mil or www.facebook.com/USAGvicenza.
Photo by Laura Kreider, USAG Vicenza Public Affairs Office
Float Fall verzorgt de aftitelingsong van De Nieuwe Wildernis, een majestueuze natuurprent die Natuurpunt vanaf 25 september in de zalen brengt. Foto: Wolx
I am creating an art float with friends and neighbors for this year’s Mill Valley Memorial Day Parade.
Our float for this parade features the Bamboodu Theater, a mobile puppet stage I created for civic events and art shows. Our first show stars Lady Liberty and Mr. Trump. As music plays, a Mr. Trump’s recent tweets and alternative facts appear on a news ticker. Each time Trump says something wrong, Liberty hits him on his thick, bobbing head.
As we march, we will invite parade watchers to sing along the inspiring poem by Emma Lazarus about the Statue of Liberty (“Give me your tired, your poor …”). Through this interactive art experience, we hope to engage people of all ages to change the world through civic action.
I am building this float with a wonderful team at the Mill Valley Community Action Network (MVCAN), a local political group which I recently joined to resist the conservative takeover of our country.
I’m very grateful to all our friends and neighbors who are helping bring it to life: Danny Altman, Laura Boles, Jean Bolte, Phyllis Florin, David Glad, Peter Graumann, Edward Janne, Suz Lipman, Jean Marie Murphy and Mark Petrakis, to name but a few.
Our Bamboodu Float is coming along beautifully, and I can’t wait to show it off at the parade on Monday, May 29, 2017.
Join your neighbors to keep democracy alive!
Learn more about the Bamboodu Float: bit.ly/mvcan-float-info
Learn more about my Bamboodu Theater: bit.ly/bamboodu-info
See more photos of the Bamboodu Float:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157683621675736
See more photos of the Bamboodu Theater:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157680393574291
Learn more about MVCAN at www.mvcan.org/
#resist #mvcan #politicalart #bamboodu
Lego Float in Garstang Childrens Festival Procession, held every year on Spring Bank Holiday Monday (Whit Monday). 101 Pictures #42 Holiday.
Had a ten mile float trip down the Niangua River and saw lots of nature to photograph... Unfortunatly, things didnt go as planned passed the halfway point and ended up putting the camera away, which turned out for the best... I would of lost my camera.....
Niangua River
Dallas and Laclede Counties Missouri
Montgomery County Thanksgiving Parade, November 23, 2019. Photos by Marilyn Sklar, Montgomery Parks.
Its hard to describe how overwhelmingly huge and impressive these floats were. They were all elaborately designed and amazingly executed. All of them were far to big for the streets they were coming down so they were built like origami. They fold down small, move under the power lines and the signs hanging from the buildings and then stop and unfold all huge again. Then they fold small, move forward and unfold again. And they keep doing this all down the street. It was so cool! Each float told a different story. We were really wishing we knew what the stories were by the end of it! I imagine that they were the sorts of images that would be immediately recognizable to the Japanese people watching. Like if in an American parade, you saw an old woman dressed in tattered black rags holding an apple and a woman lying asleep next to her, you'd know that the story being represented was Sleeping Beauty. But if you'd never read the story, you'd be terribly confused. It was like that.
The Sansha Taisai (also called the "Three Floats Festival" or the "Hachinohe Summer Festival") is a beautful festival, the center of which is 26 huge floats that are paraded through the streets. They are accompanied by people in tiger and dragon costumes, samurai on horses and shrines from the three temples that sponsor the event.