"It is nice and Covid is hopefully in the past now and we're here as a family having a good day," he said.
His band from Ballymageough was leading the Co Down contingent in the parade, he said.
"It's a big day out to be enjoyed by all."
On stage at Stormont, a singer wore a Union Flag dress, with bunting and flags bedecking the streets in and around Belfast.
Spectators, many of whom had prepared for a long day, brought flasks of tea and picnics.
At the Arches Care Home on the Upper Newtownards Road, residents were taken out on to the pavement to watch proceedings, and some said they had never seen a bigger parade in Northern Ireland.
Buses were put on for some for the one and a half-hour walk from Stormont into the city centre.
In the centre of Belfast, a wreath was laid at the cenotaph as the parade passed by.
Unionist politicians mingled with the crowd and Orange Order bands, some of which had come all the way from Canada.
DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson was there, while his predecessor Arlene Foster enjoyed proceedings among the crowd.
Party colleague Ian Paisley Jr was in Stormont too for the occasion, as well as Upper Bann MLA Jonathan Buckley and Lagan Valley MLA Emma Little-Pengelly.
Ulster Unionist Party leader Doug Beattie was there for part of the day, as was Police Service of Northern Ireland Chief Constable Simon Byrne.
Everyday politics did not appear to be the priority for many in the crowd as they cheered the return of post-pandemic normality.
The lack of a functioning executive at Stormont, blocked from forming by the DUP over its opposition to the Northern Ireland Protocol, did not weigh heavily for some.