Saturday Nov 23, 2024
Saturday Nov 23, 2024

Alabama throws 'Tardy Fras Parade'

With both COVID-19 hospitalizations and vaccinations ebbing, many partied with abandon.


Nepalnews
2021 May 23, 9:12, MOBILE, Ala.
Hayley Bosarge vies for throws as she holds her daughter Ellie Bosarge, 2, during a parade dubbed

Alabama’s port city threw a Mardi Gras-style parade Friday night, Thousands of joyful revelers, many without masks, competed for plastic beads and trinkets tossed from floats, first since Carnival celebrations were scrapped earlier this year by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Many lined up shoulder-to-shoulder and several deep along sidewalks, shouting and cheering as nearly 30 floats and several high school marching bands crossed a stretch of downtown Mobile. With both COVID-19 hospitalizations and vaccinations ebbing, many partied with abandon.


Children scream for throws during a parade dubbed
Children scream for throws during a parade dubbed

It was definitely not a Mardi Gras parade: Those can only be held during Mardi Gras, the period before Lent. But it felt a lot like one, which was a big part of the goal after months of lockdowns, illness, deaths and face masks.

Call it Tardy Gras, perhaps.

James L. Hurst said he was jubilant to be out partying after a difficult year. Many had no face coverings amid an upbeat mood sweeping the crowd on a balmy spring night with clear skies. Some took part in small house parties near the parade staging point. Others on the route eagerly held up hands, aiming to catch cheap beaded necklaces tossed by riders atop the floats.

“We didn’t get a chance to celebrate our Mardi Gras last year because it was canceled because of the COVID-19,” Hurst told The Associated Press. “It feels great to be out! We have our vaccines and we are ready to go!”

Riders toss throws from a float during
Riders toss throws from a float during

He called it the start of a new era, adding, “My momma had the COVID and it was like three months before I got to see her before she got over it. She made all of us get our vaccines.”

Christopher Robinson, a longtime Mobile resident and a king of one of the parade groups — called krewes — said he was “raised on Mardi Gras” in this port city and was just glad to be able to celebrate again after such a year.

“Oh, we hate the pandemic,” Robinson said. “But you know what? It brung us back to a great season to be able to celebrate and come back even louder than before. Celebrations, friends, family, having a good time. This May 21st is bringing us back together as we would normally do it.”

A horse and rider lead off the parade. Photo: AP
A horse and rider lead off the parade. Photo: AP

Police officers on the parade route cheerfully picked up beads and trinkets from the streets and handed them to children in the crowd, which was kept back behind barricades. The booming high school marching bands, together with shouts from the crowd, provided a soundtrack for the party. The events of the day included a ship commissioning and nighttime fireworks.

Police ride between crowds and floats. Photo: AP
Police ride between crowds and floats. Photo: AP

“During the past 14 months to 16 months or so it’s been very difficult to make it all work, but this is a real blessing,” Stephen Toomey, who owns a Mardi Gras supply company, told WALA-TV.

Statewide hospitalizations from COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus, are at the lowest point since April 2020, although more than 11,000 have died in Alabama and more than 540,000 have been infected. With only about a quarter of the state’s population fully vaccinated, the state’s immunization rate has trailed the nation for months.

A woman dressed in period costume hands a trinket to a child during the
A woman dressed in period costume hands a trinket to a child during the

Vaccination rates in Mobile County roughly mirror those of the state, with about 25% of the area’s more than 400,000 residents immunized. Some feared in advance that, despite the latest federal guidelines about face masks, large numbers of unvaccinated, unmasked people could clog the parade route.

Dr. Bernard Eichold, the Mobile County health officer, said earlier that health officials hoped people would follow safety recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, al.com reported.

“Like during a traditional Mardi Gras event, everyone needs to exercise personal safety and have a safe and wonderful event,” he said.


A rider tosses trinkets from a float during the parade. Photo: AP
A rider tosses trinkets from a float during the parade. Photo: AP

Mobile police said about 64,000 people attended the festivities. Officers responded to 13 complaints and made two misdemeanor arrests.

New Orleans, where Mardi Gras celebrations also were canceled this year to slow the spread of the coronavirus, has not attempted a similar event.

The original parade route was expanded because of the high level of interest, organizers said, and 21 Mardi Gras societies were participating with downtown hotels nearly sold out. Restaurants and bars were planning special events and deals.

A rider dances atop a float. Photo: AP
A rider dances atop a float. Photo: AP

While the parade’s theme is “Celebrating Mardi Gras” and Mobile, it was actually meant to mark the commissioning of the Navy’s new ship USS Mobile, a shallow-water combat vessel manufactured in Mobile. Aside from the parade, receptions, a breakfast and a commissioning ceremony were also part of the plans.

“We’re absolutely excited about having Mardi Gras in May, certainly unexpected,” Elizabeth Broughton, co-owner Debris Po Boys, told WALA-TV.

Xeavier Domingue, 2, stands on a trash can to catch throws during the parade. Photo: AP
Xeavier Domingue, 2, stands on a trash can to catch throws during the parade. Photo: AP
Riders toss beads from a float during the parade. Photo: AP
Riders toss beads from a float during the parade. Photo: AP
Riders toss throws from a float. Photo: AP
Riders toss throws from a float. Photo: AP
Alabama Tardy Fras Parade style parade
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