After Wind Scare, Balloons Fly in Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade

NEW YORK (AP) —

The beloved balloons flew, if lower than usual, as the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade rolled on after an anxious weather watch Thursday.

Spectators lined up a half-dozen deep along the route on a breezy but beautiful fall day, with leaves and confetti swirling in the wind.

Parade officials and the New York Police Department had been keeping an eye on wind gauges along the 2.5-mile parade route that snakes through Manhattan.

The National Weather Service had projected sustained winds of up to 24 mph with gusts to 40 mph during the parade.

City rules require balloons to be grounded if sustained winds exceed 23 mph and gusts exceed 34 mph. The balloons have been grounded only once for weather-related reasons, in 1971.

On Thursday, Macy’s Vice President Susan Tercero made an announcement a half-hour before the parade started that the balloons would fly, albeit at a lower level.

The parade, one of the city’s most popular events, features about 8,000 marchers, two dozen floats and marching bands.

The character balloons can go as high as 55 feet off the ground and as low as 10 feet.

The rules requiring them to be grounded in high-wind conditions came after wind blew a balloon into a lamppost near Central Park in 1997, critically injuring a woman.

In 2005, a balloon smacked into a lamppost in Times Square, causing cuts and bruises to a woman in a wheelchair and her 11-year-old sister.

In 2017, a gust on an otherwise calm day sent a smaller balloon into a tree branch. That one popped and fell harmlessly into the crowd.

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