Source: Nola.com
"Nagashi-somen" (flowing noodles) is a festive way to eat somen noodles in which a person places the noodles on a water slide made of cut bamboo trees, and another person tries to grab the moving noodles from further down the stream with chopsticks.
The event, which took place at the "Mitake no Mori" (Forest of Mitake) here on June 13, went off without a hitch, gaining approval by a Guinness World Records observer as the new world record for longest nagashi-somen. Participants will make a formal application for the record soon.
About 500 bamboo trees were cut and attached to each other to form the half-pipe course, on which a serving of somen noodles traveled for 35 minutes before being caught by a town employee at the end. 

Selfishness, all of it. In the midst of our navel-gazing we haven't even considered what the ongoing tragedy is doing to BP CEO Tony Hayward.
Fortunately, though, Hayward was on a call with BP investors and analysts Friday when somebody was thoughtful enough to ask him how he's been holding up during his country's scorched-water assault on Louisiana.
The Telegraph of London said Hayward's comeback "stunned his audience."
"I'm a Brit," he said. "I can take it."
He says that now; but for a while there it seemed like Hayward was going to falter. I, at least, was worried about him.
During a recent trip to Venice he gave reporters a message for people whose livelihoods have been put on hold by BP: "We're sorry for the massive disruption it's caused their lives," he said.
"There's no one who wants this over more than I do. I would like my life back."
Of course, some people took that the wrong way, and Hayward was pressured to crawfish. "I made a hurtful and thoughtless comment ... when I said that 'I wanted my life back," he said Wednesday on Facebook.
"When I read that recently, I was appalled. I apologize, especially to the families of the 11 men who lost their lives in this tragic accident." He also said something about how it's his priority to restore our lives, "not mine."
Don't be modest, Tony. We know our feelings are secondary to yours. Really, we can't imagine how this is making you feel.
You said, "Safety remains our number one priority, and I'm pleased to report we can see clear progress. There has been a significant reduction in the frequency of recordable injuries and the number of major incidents related to integrity failures has also fallen."
Five days later, the Deepwater Horizon rig blew up, 11 men died, and soon there was enough oil was spilling into the Gulf to make your life some kind of miserable.
Louisiana hasn't yet figured out how we're going to survive.
But how it warms our hearts, Tony, to know that you're going to be OK.