The Rajasthanis love to celebrate and happily participate in elaborate rituals with gay abandon. There are numerous fairs and festivals in Rajasthan and there is always something assigned to each month of the year. Kite Festival is certainly one of them, which is enjoyed by people of all age-groups in Jaipur Rajasthan.

Makar Sankranti or 14th January is celebrated with a lot of fanfare and color every year. Family and friends gather in throngs on top of roofs, celebrating Makar Sankranti and unleashing their kites on the sky and add a romantic touch to ethereal pink Jaipur monuments.
Kite Festival in Jaipur
The three-day festival will start tomorrow (14th Jan) with an inauguration at the Polo Ground, which is the venue for kite flying and fighting for the three days of the festival.
The festival includes two kinds of celebrations. A massive extravaganza follows with Air Force helicopters releasing kites from the sky, and hundreds of school children releasing balloons. Kites that look like wasps, exquisite stained glass windows, graceful mythical birds soar in the sky and the sky shimmers with magic.
Significance of Makar Sankranti
Makar Sankranti is a festival of the Sun god. The sun goes for Uttarayan popularly called Utran from this day according to Indian astrology.
Makar is a Rashi (Zodiac) and Sankranti means transition. Hence, Makar Sankranti means transition of the Sun from the zodiac Makar. People goes to Ganga Sagar near Kolkata, West Bengal, to take a bath on Makar Sankranti.
Large number of people go to Ganga Sagar to take a bath on this day. Kumbh Mela in Haridwar is also beginning from Makar Sankranti.