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My Songkran in Scotland – A Gentle Thai New Year Story & Traditions You May Not Know

Updated: May 14, 2025 · Published: Apr 13, 2025 by bonnie.yveskitchen · This post may contain affiliate links · Leave a Comment

Songkran, or the Thai New Year, is more than just a water festival — it’s a celebration of renewal, family blessings, and spiritual cleansing.

🇹🇭✨Sawadee Pee Mai (สวัสดีปีใหม่) Happy Thai New Year 🎉

While most people associate Songkran with playful water fights and street celebrations, my Thai New Year in Scotland turned out to be something entirely different — quiet, meaningful, and deeply rooted in tradition.

Jump to Sections

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  • 🪷Introduction | A Different Kind of Songkran4
  • 📿 Day One | Bathing the Buddha & Offering Blessings
  • 👣 Day Two | Water-Pouring Rituals at Home
  • 🛕 Day Three | Visiting Temples & Building Sand Pagodas
  • 💧 The Meaning of Water | More Than a Splash
  • ❄️ Songkran in Scotland | Cold Hands, Warm Heart
  • FAQ – Thai New Year & Songkran
    • 🔗 Want to Explore More?

🪷Introduction | A Different Kind of Songkran4

Most people associate Songkran, the Thai New Year, with playful water fights and wild street celebrations. But over the years, I’ve come to know a quieter, more heartfelt side to this festival — one filled with rituals, blessings, and the delicate scent of jasmine water.

A few years ago, I experienced my first Songkran in snowy Edinburgh. It was also my first time celebrating this special festival far away from home — and yet, somehow, I felt even closer to the spirit of the tradition than ever before.

Since the weather was freezing cold, there were no water fights, of course. Instead, we gathered with a small Thai community to share home-cooked dishes, chant prayers, and gently bathe a Buddha statue with floral water. The fragrance and rituals brought me right back to the new years I used to spend with my family in Thailand. Closer to the spirit of the tradition than ever before tradition than ever before.

Thai Monks in Edinburgh
Pray with candles & flowers
Queue up to offer & receive blessings

📿 Day One | Bathing the Buddha & Offering Blessings

Songkran officially begins on April 13th, often called Wan Sangkhan Long, or Buddha bathing day. Early in the morning, many Thais start by bathing and cleansing themselves, followed by visits to the temple with offerings — traditionally fresh flowers and floral-scented water, rather than incense or food.

At the temple, families pour water gently over Buddha statues as a symbolic act of purification and renewal. Monks chant blessings, and in traditional homes, elders pour water over the shoulders of loved ones to pass on blessings for the year ahead. It’s a moment of deep calm, respect, and connection.

get dressed, holding flowers and go to temple
to bathe the buddy with floral water
Source : Web Photo

👣 Day Two | Water-Pouring Rituals at Home

The second day of Songkran is often celebrated as Family Day, a time to express gratitude and seek forgiveness from parents and elders.

Children rise early, bathe again, and kneel respectfully in front of their parents with a silver bowl of floral water. Gently pouring the water over their parents’ hands or feet, they ask for blessings and offer apologies for any wrongdoings in the past year. This intimate ritual is one of the most touching moments of the festival — quiet, humble, and filled with love.

Pouring floral water for blessings
learn the tradition since little kid

🛕 Day Three | Visiting Temples & Building Sand Pagodas

The third day is traditionally spent visiting local temples as a family. In Thai culture, this isn’t just a spiritual practice — it’s a way to begin the new year with mindful intention.

Men bring colorful flags attached to small donations, which they place around the temple grounds. Women carry sand, often gathered ahead of time, to build small pagodas in the temple courtyard. This practice is both symbolic and beautiful — returning the sand that one may have carried away on their feet throughout the year, and offering it back in a creative, graceful form.

Children and young women often decorate the sand pagodas with flowers, colored paper, and incense sticks — turning it into a quiet yet joyful celebration of renewal.

Mother & daughter is building sand pagodas (Source : web photo)
People builds sand pagodas in the temple (Source : web photo)
a beautiful sand pagodas (Source : Web photo)

💧 The Meaning of Water | More Than a Splash

While the most visible part of Songkran — especially to tourists — is the spirited water fights in the streets, the true essence of the festival lies in what water represents.

In Thai and other Southeast Asian cultures, water is a symbol of purification, forgiveness, and blessing. Pouring water over elders and Buddha statues, or simply over one’s own hands, is a deeply meaningful act — it signifies washing away the misfortunes of the past year and entering the new one with clarity and grace.


❄️ Songkran in Scotland | Cold Hands, Warm Heart

Celebrating Songkran in Edinburgh was different — no heat, no street celebrations, no traditional temple bells echoing in the distance. And yet, as I stood in a small hall filled with the scent of jasmine, surrounded by Thai voices and kind smiles, it felt unmistakably like Songkran.

There was warmth in the shared food, in the laughter that filled the room, and in the soft sound of water being poured over a small Buddha statue. Despite the cold outside, I felt deeply connected to the traditions I grew up with — and grateful to carry them with me, wherever I go.

Food Sharing is happiness
wee Scottish-Thai girl dancing
My first Songkran in Edinburgh

FAQ – Thai New Year & Songkran

Q: When is Songkran celebrated?
A: Songkran usually takes place from April 13–15 and marks the traditional Thai New Year.

Q: Why do Thai people splash water?
A: Water represents spiritual cleansing and blessing for the year ahead.

Q: Is Songkran only celebrated in Thailand?
A: While it's most widely observed in Thailand, Thai communities abroad also mark it with local gatherings, blessings, and traditional food.

🔗 Want to Explore More?

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  • 🌼 HOW to make popular street food KANOM KROK
  • 🥕 Curious about vegetable carving? I’ll be sharing more in an upcoming post.

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    How to Make Thai Mango Sticky Rice – A Classic Thai Dessert 芒果糯米飯
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    《味遊古城 BoNinThai》|是濃湯不是咖喱?細談泰國紅綠黃咖喱
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  • Freshly cut mango cubes on a wooden cutting board with whole mangoes in the background.
    初夏的誘惑 - 水仙芒的季節故事

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Yves Kitchen, Bonnie Yves

Hi, I'm Bonnie

I cook, write & preserve food traditions between cultures,
from a Thai village to my tenement kitchen in Edinburgh.

Silver Award Winner . World Marmalade Awards 2026

Bonnie's Story

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A little spicy surprise at the end. 😋 seaweed men A little spicy surprise at the end. 😋

seaweed mentaiko tamagoyaki @smoked_tamago 

The first bite was all about the silky egg and delicate aroma of seaweed. Soft, comforting, and beautifully balanced.

Just when I thought the story had ended, the mentaiko quietly made its appearance — bringing a gentle burst of umami and a hint of spice.

It didn’t steal the spotlight from the egg.

Instead, it completed the whole experience.

Simple ingredients often reveal the most skill.

No wonder this tamagoyaki was crowned Scotland’s Street Food Champion 2025 🏆

Even my Japanese friend approved. 😋

Some dishes don’t need to be complicated.

So proud of you, Hongkonger😊

They just need to do the simple things exceptionally well.
George Michael taught me the importance of being t George Michael taught me the importance of being true to yourself and listening to your own heart.

Growing up in Hong Kong, while many children around me were listening to Cantopop, an eight-year-old girl was already humming Careless Whisper. I would spend my pocket money on cassette tapes and read the lyric sheets over and over again, looking up words in the dictionary. My dream was simple: one day, I wanted to meet him.

Decades later, that little girl is now living in the UK. Life has taken me further than I could ever have imagined, yet sadly I never got the chance to meet him.

Perhaps that is George Michael’s greatest legacy for me. His music crossed cultures, languages and generations, and accompanied me through different chapters of my life. He showed me that following your own path is not always the easiest choice, but it is the most honest one. #georgemichael #lastchristmas #tonightthemusicseemssoloud
Larb Moo Yang - Thai Style grilled pork belly sala Larb Moo Yang - Thai Style grilled pork belly salad #edinburgh #edinburghfoodie #edinburghfoodbloggers #foodporn #thaifoodlover goo
On my way home, I spotted Malay Laksa and simply c On my way home, I spotted Malay Laksa and simply couldn’t resist bringing a bowl home 😍

The lovely owners packed everything separately — broth and toppings apart, while the tofu puffs were left soaking in the soup to absorb all that delicious flavour.

Takeaway dishes can sometimes lose a little magic, but so much thought has gone into the details here that it still scored top marks at home.

Even my notoriously picky husband couldn’t stop praising the pork belly and the rich, comforting broth 😍

And for those who don’t eat meat, there are vegetarian options too 🌱

@malay_laksa Edinburgh’s laksa champion, without a doubt. Thank you for bringing such wonderful food to our city 💕

#edinburghfood #edinburghfoodbloggers #edinburghfoodie #scotland #foodblogger
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