Fiesta Fun in Valencia

Take a trip down to Valencia at certain times of year and you'll find yourself in the middle of some fun filled fiestas, as Rufus Clay found out...

Valencia is Spain’s third largest city and though it isn’t as modish as a city like Barcelona, it is just as lively. Valencia has a background of Moorish settlement, is the city that gave Spain paella, and has some of the country’s most beautiful silk shops. It also has a regular turnout of fiestas throughout the year, which are said to be the wildest in Spain. Here are a handful of festivals you should mark down in your travelling calendar - from spring to summer.

Las Fallas de San Jose, March

This is undoubtedly the biggest of the bonfire festivals, and a significant one at that. A fortune is spent on preparation and materials for the bonfire, all of it burned on the final day. Anybody in the public eye is fair game, and caricatures of film stars, politicians and whoever else fits the profile, are put in the pile. More traditionally, there are some bullfights for those that approve and a series of epic firework displays.

Dia de San Juan, June

Not too dissimilar to Las Fallas, except it’s on a smaller scale, and most of the festival happens on the beaches of San Juan de Alicante: Malvarossa, Cabanyal and Aloboroya. The bonfire jumping is the main attraction here - it’s a traditional event. According to the folklore of the festival, those that can jump three times over the bonfire will be purified of all their sins.

La Tomatina, August

This is light-hearted and silly festival that is lots fun. With an arsenal of 140 tons of ripe tomatoes, festivalgoer delight in a war, which leaves no stone left clean and no person - tourists included- without tomato stains on their clothing. As well as the vegetable throwing, the festival has lots of traditional music; beautiful firework displays and Europe’s best orchestras serenade the event in the open-air auditorium.

With the festivals, planning is key as they tend to take over the city and the hotels and hostels get booked up pretty quickly. It’s best to try and arrange your lodgings in advance. You’ll find lots of accommodation for the shoestring budget near the train station; however for a list of hostels around the city you might like to try HostelBookers.com for variety. Don’t forget you’ll need travel insurance during your stay – it doesn’t hurt to plan ahead with this either. Check out Go Travel’s list of packages for one that fits the bill.


Related posts

Add comment


 

  Country flag

[b][/b] - [i][/i] - [u][/u]- [quote][/quote]



Live preview

May 17. 2008 05:28 PM

About Us

The n - tertainment group blog is written by three different writers, check out the author bios coming soon.

Recent posts

Recent comments

Don't show

Archive

Search

Categories

Tags

Don't show

    Disclaimer

    The opinions expressed herein are my own personal opinions and do not represent my employer's view in anyway.

    © Copyright 2008