Firework displays are a traditional entertainment during the hot Japanese summer. The Chigasaki fireworks were last night and locals assembled on the beaches at dusk. It's crowded, but not like the better-known Enoshima or Kamakura events. There's always space to put down your mat.
Facing the crashing sea that filled our noses with ozone and drowned out the loudspeaker commentary, we popped open our beers and snacks and settled down for the 50-minute spectacle of 3,000 fireworks, a mere quarter of the number set off in Tokyo the same evening, but plenty enough for a superb show. We were lucky with the weather but not the wind which blew the smoke directly in from the sea, partly masking the later fireworks. While the explosions and the rockets delivered shock and awe on the warm summer evening far from any war zone, down the coast to the left, a just-past-full moon rose silently over Enoshima Island.
The final crescendo turned night to day, and as the thousands of us filed away in an orderly fashion, the pyrotechnicians waved red torches from their barge by the harbor, thanking us for turning out to enjoy their handiwork.
--Julian
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