logo
Paddles Up: Race into Hong Kong's Dragon Boat Festival

Paddles Up: Race into Hong Kong's Dragon Boat Festival

Yahoo16-05-2025

Join the 9 Days and Nights of Festivities Against Victoria Harbour's Iconic Skyline
Experience the thrilling Sun Life Hong Kong International Dragon Boat Races in Tsim Sha Tsui—where strength meets tradition! (Photo Credits: SHOTCOURT)
HONG KONG, May 16, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The boats are fierce, the drums are loud and the energy is electric – Hong Kong's Dragon Boat Festival is back in spectacular style! Each year, this high-adrenaline celebration draws elite paddlers from around the world to compete in one of the city's most anticipated summer events. While races take place citywide, the spotlight will shine on the 2025 Sun Life Hong Kong International Dragon Boat Races, jointly organised by the Hong Kong Tourism Board (HKTB) and the Hong Kong China Dragon Boat Association, returning to Victoria Harbour from 7-8 June.
Cheer for your favourite team on the Tsim Sha Tsui Promenade and snap epic action shots of the dragon boat races!
The race will transform the Tsim Sha Tsui East Promenade into a festival hotspot each year. This year, over 190 teams from 12 countries and regions, including teams from Qatar and Egypt for the first time, will compete in high-energy races set against Hong Kong's iconic skyline, drawing cheering crowds of locals and visitors alike.
The 9 Days and Nights of Festivities Against Victoria Harbour's Iconic Skyline
To mark the start of Dragon Boat Festival and build up momentum ahead of the races, HKTB is hosting 9 days and nights of action-packed celebrations starting 31 May along the photogenic Avenue of Stars. From 1pm to 10pm daily, visitors can look forward to festive foods, icy-cold beverages, summery sweets and photo opportunities galore with the dazzling harbour as a backdrop. The area will also include festive photo spots with displays of Ocean Park Hong Kong's adorable Panda Friends – the giant pandas An An, Ke Ke, Ying Ying, and Le Le, along with the adorable twin cubs Elder Sister and Little Brother. A special pop-up store will offer a selection of panda-themed merchandise.
As the action peaks on 7-8 June, spectators can enjoy free entry and shaded viewing areas along the waterfront from Tsim Sha Tsui East to the Avenue of Stars. In Urban Council Centenary Garden, refreshing beers will be available at a lively Beer Garden set up to beat the summer heat and Cirque du Soleil performers will delight attendees with surprise appearances during the event. Find out more details of the event at the Hong Kong Tourism Board's event website.
A Month of Tradition, Craft and Celebration
Dragon Boat Festival was inscribed by UNESCO on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) of Humanity. With its deep cultural roots, the Dragon Boat Festival aligns perfectly with inaugural Hong Kong ICH Month—a celebration in June that invites visitors to experience Hong Kong's cultural richness.
Visitors can participate in highlight tours to explore the ICH-related traditional craftsmanship, such as bamboo steamer-making techniques, etc. Sign up for the tour at the Hong Kong International Airport Visitor Centre or Kowloon Visitor Centre starting 9 June, or visit the Hong Kong ICH Month 2025 website for more details.
Whether you're drawn by the thrilling races, immersive festivals or deep-rooted traditions, late May and June is the perfect time to experience Hong Kong. The city welcomes visitors with a packed calendar of events that honour the past while embracing the present.
Media can download photos at the following link: https://assetlibrary.hktb.com/assetbank-hktb/action/browseItems?categoryId=1995&categoryTypeId=2&cachedCriteria=1
For media enquiries, please contact: Ms Holly ChanTel : 2807 6206Email: holly.chan@hktb.com
Ms Sarah HoTel : 2807 6372Email : sarah.ho@hktb.com
Photos accompanying this announcement are available at :
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/4c75b361-1b29-4da1-b039-ee0aa141c65b
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/8006eb41-848f-4273-a6c8-704ee6c4c18c
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/f41297bd-0310-495e-8733-209a5820bc73

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Batik, Dong Songs, Tea Aroma Bridge China-Sweden Friendship! Guizhou Cultural Feast Draws Swedish Crowds
Batik, Dong Songs, Tea Aroma Bridge China-Sweden Friendship! Guizhou Cultural Feast Draws Swedish Crowds

Business Upturn

time14 hours ago

  • Business Upturn

Batik, Dong Songs, Tea Aroma Bridge China-Sweden Friendship! Guizhou Cultural Feast Draws Swedish Crowds

By GlobeNewswire Published on June 7, 2025, 16:06 IST STOCKHOLM, June 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — 'Nihao! China' Dragon Boat Festival Garden Party jointly held by China Cultural Center in Stockholm and Culture and Tourism Department of Guizhou Province, successfully concluded at Kungsträdgården, Stockholm, Sweden on May 31st (local time in Sweden). To celebrate the 75th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and Sweden, the Guizhou delegation, who came from afar, includes inheritors of intangible cultural heritage and song and dance troupes, meticulously prepared four immersive cultural experience zones: 'Tea for Harmony Yaji Cultural Salon', 'Wonder on Fingertips, Great Beauty of Intangible Heritage', 'Delicious Cuisine in Duanwu, Happy Journey to Explore' and 'Gorgeous Ethic Costumes, Beauty and Co-Prosperity'. Distinctive ethnic songs and dances of Guizhou dazzled the audience during the 'Conversation and Connection' performance, presenting the unique charm of the 'Fascinating Guizhou, A Heaven of Myriad Mountains' in a panoramic way to the Nordic audience, giving a heartfelt cultural tribute to the friendship between China and Sweden. Chinese Ambassador to Sweden Cui Aimin and Mrs. Li Lihong, Cultural Counselor of the Embassy of China in Sweden and Director of China Cultural Center in Stockholm Li Rui, and other guests were invited to attend the event. Ambassador Cui Aimin visited the four carefully arranged exhibition areas and watched Guizhou song and dance performances with great interest. 'We are deeply impressed by Guizhou's abundant tourism resources, vibrant ethnic cultures, and authentic local cuisine. The presentations by the Guizhou delegation vividly reflect the profound and unique charm of Chinese culture, and foster closer bonds between the peoples of China and Sweden', the couple said. The event attracted over 10,000 visitors and was met with enthusiastic feedback from the Swedish public. After attending the event, many audiences said the event made them develop a strong interest in Chinese culture, particularly the colorful culture of Guizhou. 'It's amazing! These handicrafts are so exquisite, and the tea tastes truly unique. I really want to visit Guizhou to experience it!' They said. Photos accompanying this announcement are available at: Disclaimer: The above press release comes to you under an arrangement with GlobeNewswire. Business Upturn takes no editorial responsibility for the same.

This S.F. toast cost $13.50, and I'd buy it again
This S.F. toast cost $13.50, and I'd buy it again

San Francisco Chronicle​

time16 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

This S.F. toast cost $13.50, and I'd buy it again

Each week, critic MacKenzie Chung Fegan shares some of her favorite recent bites, the dishes and snacks and baked goods that didn't find their way into a full review. Want the list a few days earlier? Sign up for her free newsletter, Bite Curious. Remember when The Discourse revolved around the price of toast at the Mill? A simpler, sepia-toned time… The current seasonal toast special costs $13.50 (more than three times the $4 that sparked outrage 12 years ago), but it's 'toast' in the same way that 'The Metamorphosis' is a book about a bug. A chonky, inch-thick slice of Josey Baker's whole grain Wonder Bread is slathered with chive cream cheese, then dolloped with a punchy, vegan pesto made with both basil and arugula. The element that takes the toast from serviceable breakfast to composed dish, however, is the crunchy, garlicky clusters of chili crisp pepitas that are sprinkled over the top. Yow. Go eat this while it's still on the menu. Scribe Winery takes its food seriously. Their chef-in-residence program reads like a who's who of bestselling cookbook authors and James Beard honorees, and the quartet behind Top 100 restaurant Valley all met while working at Scribe. The team grows much of their own produce, collects eggs from the spunky vineyard chickens and serves incredible beans. Spiritually, beans are the opposite of caviar on a restaurant menu; they're humble, a hard sell, and a chef isn't going to serve them unless they're absolute knockouts. Scribe's pink beans are brothy and creamy, seasoned with a good amount of acid and showered with fresh herbs. Last weekend, my family celebrated the Dragon Boat Festival with a proper feast, anchored by homemade zongzi and a cured duck that's a specialty of Yiyang in Hunan, our home province. The ducks are marinated in a variety of Chinese spices and herbs, many of them selected for their medicinal properties, before being air dried. The resulting delicacy is a dark reddish brown in color, mildly spicy and very savory in addition to being good for your spleen and blood circulation, my cousin tells me! Cousin Winnie's house, or the internet

Photos of the Week: Ox Racing, Bat Research, Smart Whale
Photos of the Week: Ox Racing, Bat Research, Smart Whale

Atlantic

time2 days ago

  • Atlantic

Photos of the Week: Ox Racing, Bat Research, Smart Whale

Monsoon flooding in India, destroyed bombers on a Russian airfield, Dragon Boat Festival races in China, a huge tomato fight in Colombia, surfing in South Africa, and much more Gareth Fuller / PA Images; Getty Dawn breaks over the Standing With Giants silhouettes, which create the 'For Your Tomorrow' installation at the British Normandy Memorial in Ver-sur-Mer, France, a day before the 81st anniversary of D-Day, on June 6, 2025. The 1,475 statues honor each of the servicemen who fell on D-Day, and stand in the shadows of the memorial overlooking Gold Beach, where many of them landed 81 years ago. The sculpture Knife Angel is installed in Newton Aycliffe's town center mall on May 31, 2025, in England. The Knife Angel 's arrival in Newton Aycliffe is meant to coincide with the Durham police force's monthlong initiative to raise awareness of knife crime. The 27-foot (eight-meter) sculpture was created by artist Alfie Bradley and the British Ironwork Centre, and is made of 100,000 blunted blades surrendered during knife amnesties held by police forces across the country. A folk artist spits fire during the Dragon Boat Festival, also known as Duanwu Festival, on June 1, 2025, in Tacheng, Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. Sanka Vidanagama / AFP; Getty People take photos of the aurora australis, also known as the southern lights, as it glows on the horizon over Lake Ellesmere in Lincoln, on the outskirts of Christchurch, New Zealand, on June 1, 2025. The South African big-wave surfer Jacques Theron rides a foil board on a wave at an offshore reef known as Dungeons, in Cape Town, South Africa, on June 1, 2025. A sports enthusiast and his dog compete during Bunar Fest, a tire festival, navigating rocky obstacles while floating on an inner tube in the chilly Lumbardhi River, in Kosovo, on June 1, 2025. Lionel Bonaventure / AFP; Getty A French gendarme kisses his dog during a ceremony to mark the 80th anniversary of the National Canine Training Center of the Gendarmerie, in Gramat, France, on June 5, 2025. Yuriy Dyachyshyn / AFP; Getty Oleksandr Zavnenko, an amputee and Ukrainian veteran of the fight against Russia's invasion, dances on prosthetic legs with his wife, Maria, a professional choreographer, in Lviv, on June 4, 2025. Luca Bettini / AFP; Getty During the 21st stage of the 108th Giro d'Italia cycling race, the peloton rides past the Colosseum, in Rome, on June 1, 2025. Daniel Karmann / DPA; Getty Florian Janik, lord mayor of Erlangen, in Bavaria, Germany, distributes the first mugs of free beer after the traditional barrel tapping at the Erlangen Bergkirchweih festival, on June 5, 2025. People throw tomatoes during the Gran Tomatina Colombiana, on June 1, 2025, in Sutamarchán, Colombia. Similar to the event held in Buñol, Spain, the festival hosts thousands of people who gather to be part of a celebration that includes parades, music, and the well-known tomato battle. Children accompanied by their parents splash in a water path set up during the Dragon Boat Festival, also known as Duanwu Festival, in Yuncheng, Shanxi Province, China, on June 1, 2025. Peter Kneffel / DPA / Getty The oxen Simmerl ( left ) and Ferdinand ( right ), with their respective riders, Leonhard Wagner and Vroni Stürzer, race at the first Hadorfer Ochsenrennen oxen race, in Hadorf, in southern Germany. Rolf Vennenbernd / DPA; Getty A baby southern pudu named Adora sits in a box on a scale at the Cologne Zoo, in Germany, on June 5, 2025, weighing 1,325 grams. Southern pudus are considered one of the smallest deer species on Earth. A periodical cicada nymph climbs to the tip of a fern frond in Cincinnati, Ohio, on May 16, 2025. People take part in a dragon-boat race during the Dragon Boat Festival in Tongren, Guizhou Province, China, on May 31, 2025. A scientist from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute captures a bat for research in Gamboa, Panama, on June 1, 2025. Homeland Security officers prepare to transport immigrants who were taken into custody at the offices of a Homeland Security contractor, on June 4, 2025, in Chicago. About a dozen immigrants were taken into custody after reporting to appointments at BI Incorporated, a company that contracts with government agencies to provide electronic monitoring. An aerial view of unsold Tesla vehicles sitting in a parking lot at the Hunter's Square mall, in Farmington Hills, Michigan, on June 2, 2025. Dozens of Cybertrucks have been parked at the partially closed shopping center over the past week. According to a report, Tesla employees said that the 'vehicles are sold and marked for delivery' and the shopping center was owned by the owner of a nearby Tesla service center. However, according to the City of Farmington Hills, 'storage of vehicles is not a permitted use,' and the city is currently in the process of resolving the issue with the mall's management. An aerial view as construction continues at the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, in Los Angeles's Exposition Park, on June 2, 2025. The spaceship-style 300,000-square-foot museum, which plans to open in 2026, following years of delays, was founded by filmmaker George Lucas and his wife, Mellody Hobson, and was designed by the architect Ma Yansong. Saudi Arabian security forces take part in a demonstration as people arrive for the annual hajj pilgrimage, in the city of Mecca, on May 31, 2025. Thick smoke and flames erupt from an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City, on June 1, 2025. Maxar / DigitalGlobe / Getty A satellite view of the aftermath of a coordinated drone strike shows destroyed Russian Tu-95 bombers on the tarmac at Belaya Air Base, in Russia's Irkutsk Oblast. The image reveals significant blast damage and charred aircraft remains. Ukraine claims to have damaged or destroyed 40 large Russian aircraft in the attack. A volcanic plume rises from the southeast crater of Mount Etna, on June 2, 2025, in Catania, Italy. A car moves away from an approaching storm with a rain shaft during a Project ICECHIP operation studying hail and the hazards of severe thunderstorms, near Tipton, Oklahoma, on June 3, 2025. A woman carrying her pet dog wades through a flooded street in Imphal East, in the Indian state of Manipur, on June 1, 2025, following flash flooding and landslides caused by torrential monsoon rains over the previous two days. Barbara Gindl / APA; AFP; Getty A float with a whale sculpture titled Schlau Wal ('Smart Whale'), made of daffodil flowers, on the water during the daffodil festival Narzissenfest, in Altaussee, Austria, on June 1, 2025. Hannah Mundin, a colorist at Madame Tussauds London, looks toward the Greggs sausage-roll figure as it is unveiled at the waxwork attraction in London, on June 4, 2025, ahead of National Sausage Roll Day, on June 5. Alan Taylor is a senior editor at The Atlantic.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store