Akita Kanto Festival — Pole Lantern Balancing Spectacular
The Akita Kanto Festival (秋田竿燈まつり) is one of Tohoku's three great festivals, held annually August 3-6. The centerpiece is the kanto — a bamboo pole up to 12 meters tall, hung with 46 paper lanterns (chochin) weighing up to 50 kilograms. Performers (mostly men, some women and children) balance these illuminated poles on their palms, foreheads, shoulders, and hips while walking through downtown Akita, accompanied by taiko drums and flutes. The spectacle symbolizes prayers for a good rice harvest — the kanto resembles stalks of rice heavy with grain.
Up to 280 kanto are paraded simultaneously on Kanto Odori Avenue, creating a river of glowing lanterns swaying against the night sky. The skill required is extraordinary — balancing a 12-meter pole on your forehead while walking requires years of practice. When a performer loses control and the kanto tips, nearby teammates rush to catch it before lanterns hit the ground (a successful catch draws massive applause). The festival atmosphere is electric — 1.3 million spectators over four nights, street food stalls, summer heat, and the hypnotic sound of taiko echoing between buildings.
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