Sunday, February 23, 2014

Notes from a Sunny Stroll

     Carnaval (Carnival in English) is fast approaching here in Spain and everyone’s talking about it.  It’s quite a big deal here, especially in the south of Spain.  The celebration is similar to the granduer, lavish Carnaval celebrations in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.  The celebration of Carnaval evolved from a feast where everyone would finish off all the goods to be sacrificed during lent such as meat and sweets.  However, it evolved into a full-fledged celebration of everything carnal.  In Galicia, they kick off Carnaval with a matanza (a pig killing celebration).  Family and friends gather together to choose one of the family’s pigs to kill for meat for the family’s own meat supply.  We were invited to a matanza, but we didn’t make it.  I suppose attending a matanza will have to remain on our bucket lists until next Carnaval. Just Kidding!  Oh Spain and their crazy traditions.

There are many pig faces and parts being sold
in the market before Carnaval (Carnival)

        Some of the traditions associated with Carnaval here are simply crazy and absolutely strange! In a nearby town in Galicia, they celebrate Carnaval by throwing ants at people in the streets.  We’ve been told that people line up in the streets to be pelted by ants.  In one small Galician town the ants are covered in flour.  In another town, they are covered in feces from different farm animals.  What in the world?  I can just picture it.  “Let’s get the whole family together for the annual Carnaval ant throwing parade, and then we’ll head to the restaurant to grab a bite to eat.”  Just how do these traditions get started?  I find it so strange that some of Spain’s most bizarre traditions survive since everyone I’ve met is quite normal and pretty sophisticated.  Among other bizarre Spanish traditions are bullfights, the running of the bulls, tomato fights, and baby jumping festivals.  
The huge annual tomato fight (tomatina) that takes place in Buñol, Spain
If you’re interested in reading about a few other loco Spanish festivals, check out this link:
http://www.babylon-idiomas.com/blog/spanish-culture/babylon-idiomas-presents-10-crazy-spanish-festivals-where-people-throw-stuff/
  
Spanish Culture Vs. American Culture Part II:
     Finally! Finally! Finally! The sun came out this Sunday and it was almost sixty degrees outside.  This means that everyone (literally EVERYONE) was outside after the siesta.  Walking around on the paseo (our beachside trail), one could’ve easily mistaken it to be summer by the way everyone was celebrating.  I know us Wisconsinites probably appreciate the sun just as much after a long winter, but these Spaniards just have a different way of showing it. The air smelled of barbecues. We probably saw over fifty children riding bikes on the very short trail, and we probably spotted over fifty dogs. When the sun comes out, they don’t mess around. The entire family pours out onto the small paseo and it seems as if no one has a care in the world.
 

Top Five Observations From Our Sunny Run:

1. It’s completely normal for a fifteen year-old boy to hold hands with his mother while walking.

2. Sweet elderly couples love to hold hands!  If I wasn’t already so impressed with these eighty year olds for actually walking at a pretty normal pace without any assistance, the fact that they hold hands at that age makes me adore this group of Galicians even more.

3. Women walk arm and arm. Whether they are teenagers or in their eighties, they link arms as they stroll together.  This concludes our hand-holding/arm-linking observations.  :)

4. I think it is difficult for Spaniards to walk and talk at the same time unless they are walking very slowly.  If two or more people are walking on the trail and having a conversation, they often take a few steps, stop, and turn to each other to finish their conversation.  It’s so funny to watch the older men walking together (very common).  They walk a few steps, stop, face each other, and repeat. 

5. Babies and children are treated like royalty.  Maybe that’s an overstatement, but for every little four-year old riding a bike, there was bound to be at least three adults around this little princess taking pictures.  It’s cute because the kids don’t seem very conceited either.

From our perspective...
     They spend their non-walking years in ritzy buggies and dressed in the fanciest of baby clothes.  When they are older, a three year old still dresses with the styles of a very hip and modern thirty year old.  They look like dolls!  In fact, baby clothes here are very expensive.  It seems that all the baby clothes come from boutiques.  It is normal to pay 50 Euros for a pair of baby shoes.  In America, it’s totally acceptable to buy baby clothes from a garage sale.  We love to save.  This makes sense since the kids will get the clothes dirty as soon as they put them on.  Here, the children look immaculate!  It’s odd not to see little boys with dirt-stained knees.  Maybe their knees would be dirty if American football was popular here! 


A Day Trip to Santiago de Compostela

                                   
    Robin and I spent yesterday in the capital of Galicia.  We visited the cathedral where Jesus's apostle, St. James, is rumored to be buried.  University students "hug" him (the statue) for good luck before beginning classes.  

Stay tuned to find out whether Alyssa eats Octopus...tentacles and all!

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