The money collected from singing is used by the villagers for the urorme, a feast for all the villagers. It is held on the earliest convenient date and is preceded by a collective hunt (obviously does not happen now) in which all the males in the village participate. The urorme feast is held to celebrate and re-affirm ties of friendship and to forget past rivalries. All male members of the village from all castes join in the feast that is held late in the evening in the Ed mand, the village meadow. Boars and deer killed in the hunt are cooked by the men and served with riceotti cooked at home by the women. Food is distributed to those male members who are unable to attend the feast. This marks the end of the Puttari festival which is still celebrated with a mix of traditional and modern means.