Their Majesties the Kings of the East traveled the main artery of Tinajo to the Plaza San Roque for the enjoyment of children and adults who came to see them before the most magical night of the year.
Kings and pages distributed joy and more than one hundred and sixty kilos of sweets in Tinajo that the children collected with enthusiasm and a smile drawn on their faces, all enlivened by the Parranda del Rancho de Pascua de Tinajo that marched together with characters such as Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Pluto, Donald Duck and Sponge Bob.
The passage of Melchor, Gaspar and Baltasar and their camels through the streets of Tinajo provoked continuous displays of affection from the little ones, who rushed to collect sweets and fill their pockets every time their majesties threw them into the air.
The Kings' camel ride closed a royal retinue infected with the rhythm of the Batucada Los Cumbacheros and the colorful animation of stilt walkers, jugglers and floats that filled the Tinajo afternoon with color and soap bubbles.
After the passage of Their Majesties through Tinajo, the town's Social Hall was filled to the brim to enjoy the performance of the Tinajo Municipal Dance School.
Participants and the public enjoyed the songs and the story of "Coco" from the hands of Miguel Rivera, a 12-year-old boy who lives in the small town of Santa Cecilia in Mexico.
A show impregnated by the hours of work and enthusiasm that the Tinajo Municipal Dance School dedicated to the performance for the delight of the public and that was the culmination of an afternoon awaited by all the little Tinajeros.
The mayor, Jesús Machín, on behalf of the Tinajo City Council, and the rest of the councilors thanked "the magnificent behavior of the public and the work of the municipal staff as well as the performance of the Tinajo Municipal Dance School and the participants in the great parade of the Three Wise Men, the neighborhood collaboration with the floats, music groups, dance and animation without forgetting the work of the Local Police of Tinajo and Civil Protection of Tinajo."