Sorry for the slow report on this - I spent time in China after I'd been at the symposium.
It was a very interesting week - especially since it was held in Japan with all the interesting cultural differences there are compared to here. The setting of the Symposium was magnificent - in front of the largest lake in Japan, lake Biwa. Each night of the Symposium there was a different display held at a different location on the lake. To get there we either travelled by boat or bus or a combination of the two. An interesting "lunch box" consisting of many different shapes of all sorts of substances was provided each evening too. Trying to guess whether the substance was a vegetable or an animal, and, if so, if it lived in the sea or not was an interesting challenge.
There were many interesting presentations and discussions at the Symposium and it was great to catch up with old friends in the fireworks world. After the evening displays, it was interesting to visit typical Japanese tatami rooms to sample sake and other delights. One of the highlights for me, and of particular interest to members of this forum, was the evening I spent with Benito Pagano - the main driving force of the Italian fireworks company IPON. We were sat in one of the tatami rooms, together with Georg Alef of Weco (Platinum Jupiter winner last year) when Benito decided to show us how he makes the large salutes that IPON are famous for. Grabbing a 6" ashtray as a former, he deftly folded newspaper around it as Georg rolled a fake spollette as a time fuse. Benito folded the paper around the spollette and after only a matter of seconds, we had what looked like a 6" salute sitting on the table. It was a joy to see such artisanship first-hand.
As for the displays, the highlight of the week was the combined display put on by several Japanese companies. This included the firing of two 24" (yes, twenty four) shells. They functioned magnificently. The display itself was very different to typical Western displays. It was fired from two barges but was naturally asymetric - the left hand barge firing an arc of shells reaching from just above the surface of the lake up to vertical whilst the right hand barge fired just vertically. This disturbed me during the display since I formed the incorrect impression that there was something wrong with the right-hand barge; so used to symetry my western-conditioned brain is. It's only after watching the display several times since that I've come to really appreciate how unusal and beautiful this display was.
The next Symposium will be held in Berlin in April next year. There's a rumour that several attendees of this year's Symposium are going to collaborate on a special display for Berlin. Who knows ... perhaps I'm one of the collaborators
Paul.