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The story of a rope; the Naha TsunahikiDate Posted: 2009-10-08 ![]() It takes a lot of straw to create the rope used in the Naha Tsunahiki each year, a project done on the southern edge of Naha Military Port. The tug-of-war takes place each year, and the rope is rebuilt—and stretched a bit—every time. Tons of straw are painstakenly handwoven into strands, with each 40 strands being twisted into a thin rope. Nine thin ropes become a larger foundation rope used to form both the main ropes, each about 100 meters long, and to accomplish a band wrap around the bundled individual main ropes. For the 17th straight year, Naha Military Port’s 835th Army Transportation Battalion has volunteered its land as a construction site. It’s a secure area for construction, where more than 20 workers labor more than two months fabricating the rope and stretching to rest along 60 pallets. Although the Ryukyu Kingdom Festival has endured for centuries, and the modern tug-of-war era more than three decades, the tsunahiki came to international attention in 1997. The Guinness Book of World Records saw the tug-of-war in Naha, and documented the giant rope as the largest in the world made from natural materials (and used in a tug-of-war. |
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