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This Giant Kite Festival Turns Winter Blues into the Coolest Hues  

by Amy Felegy

Large colorful kites fly across a frozen lake against a white sky.
Photo Credit: Courtesy City of Clear Lake
Some kites in the fest, particularly the ones flown by semi-professional kite pilots, are the size of buses—hundreds at a time.

Iowa’s Color the Wind Kite Festival, the biggest of its kind in the Midwest, is in its second decade of flying massive kites in the middle of winter.


A mammoth kite is strapped down to a truck; Interstate 35 is backed up with traffic.  

It’s one of the biggest weekends for small-town Clear Lake, Iowa: Color the Wind Kite Festival

“The event itself draws almost 20,000 people from all across the Midwest to see these kites in the sky,” says Stacy Doughan, president and CEO of the Clear Lake Area Chamber of Commerce.  

But they’re not just kites—once a year, acres of frozen lake set the stage for flying cats, astronauts, Iron Man, and dinosaurs. Yes, even pigs fly (at least in Clear Lake).  

A large pig kite with white wings flies in a blue sky in front of the sun.
Photo Credit: Curtis K. Olinger Photography via the City of Clear Lake
Once a year, acres of frozen lake set the stage for flying cats, astronauts, Iron Man, and dinosaurs. Yes, even pigs fly (at least in Clear Lake).  

The event inspired Iowa artist Andy Chenchar, who grew up visiting the city as a child. His new exhibition in town features collages depicting Color the Wind’s fantastic colors and shapes. 

“It’s the color contrast against the sky that’s kind of grayish-blue,” Chenchar says. “These things are huge sculptures in the air and the way they float and the tension between the ground and the sky … They’re really colorful and sculptural and kinetic.” 

He’ll connect scraps from magazines and paper, creating horizons and shapes to form what he calls an artistic puzzle. Chenchar’s piece Kite Fest is informed by his frequent visits to the area and the festival. 

An art piece featuring a collage of people standing on ice flying multicolored kites.
Photo Credit: Courtesy the City of Clear Lake
“Kite Fest” by Andy Chenchar. Printed paper collage.

“It’s incredible to watch ’em go up and hang up there in the air,” he says. 

Doughan says some kites, particularly the ones flown by semi-professional kite pilots, are the size of buses—hundreds at a time. Several dozen fliers will hoist multiple kites at once, filling the chilly air with flowing reds and yellows. 

Color the Wind started in 2005 with local kite pilots Larry and Kay Day, who traveled to similar festivals across the U.S. before deciding Clear Lake needed its own. 

“Summer is just a packed time here in Clear Lake, and so doing it in the middle of winter on the frozen lake was just appealing,” Doughan says. “Because after a long, dark, dingy winter, it’s so nice to have the bright kites in the sky on top of the snow-covered lake.” 

It’s Cold But We Still Art!

Read more stories about how Midwesterners creatively celebrate and embrace winter!