PORT-OF-SPAIN, Trinidad — Trinidad and Tobago was practically shut down on Tuesday as it neared the climax of its famed annual two-day carnival.
But this year, the event — dubbed ''the greatest show on Earth'' — faced the pressures of rising costs, leaving a growing number of residents on the twin-island Caribbean nation no longer able to afford to participate.
Ticket prices for premium parties were costing nearly $700, while the price for costumes in a popular masquerade band were in excess of $2,000.
Cognizant of rising prices, teachers and musicians are finding creative ways to make carnival more accessible for residents, whose forebears were slaves barred from participating in such festivities.
Joshua Lamorelle, who goes into impoverished communities and teaches stilt walking for free, said: ''It is giving the kids an opportunity to be a part of something that is very hard for them to afford.''
A few days shy of schools and businesses closing for the massive carnival street parade, that began on Monday, Lamorelle was giving students final pointers. He observed as 11-year-old Kanye Simmons sat on a wall and secured stilts to his legs ahead of a junior parade.
Stilt-walking is Simmons' favorite pastime, even more so than video games: ''I find it's very educational, and it's very fun.''
His mother, Chrisann Clarke, said she appreciates Lamorelle's push to educate children on the country's culture and the history of carnival. She was also grateful that she didn't have to pay for her son to participate in the parade, as is customary.