Bullfighting festival reviews: some of Spanish bests

Undoubtedly, Spanish bullfighting festivals are terrific experiences from street parades and bulls running to enjoying finger-licking food and dancing throughout the nights. To enjoy them, you should have to have at least half of energy the Spaniards possess. A variety of how people can celebrate impresses even the most avid feaster, who will try to compare events, actually incomparable, and find similar features truly different.

In fact, each bullfighting festival is different from another one. All festivals include the best bullfights and these are probably festival features, where things start moving differently. Each festival city of Spain has its own, long-term traditions of celebrating, which, in fact, differentiate one festival from another one. Therefore, you should never think that you know everything about the bullfighting festival, visiting only one city in Spain.

Each festival is unique, and, perhaps, reading some of bullfighting festival reviews will help you to make a right choice. Bullfighting festival reviews can help you see some particular features, distinguishing one bullfighting festival from another one, as well as become familiar with features, the most appealing to your taste. The following short bullfighting festival reviews, running in major cities, in Spain can be quite handy.

Certainly, the national bullfighting festival in Madrid is an event, making Spain famous worldwide. The festival is officially held from May, 8 to 15, though the celebrations may continue even longer. To see a large city of Madrid during the celebrations is to experience the entire culture of Madrid in a limited period of time. You can head for a pilgrimage to the ermita de San Isidro, the early eighteenth-century chapel, famous for its miraculous water for health and purification. Traditional songs are sung in the streets, music plays everywhere day and night, street vendors sell traditional wafers and churros, dipped in chocolate, and people are dressed in their traditional costumes.

Numerous bullfights take place in the famous Las Ventas, though to buy the tickets is not an easy task. San Fermin Pamplona or Running of the bulls takes place from the 6th to the 14th of July in Pamplona, Navarra. It is famous for the daily running of wild and dangerous bulls through the streets of the town during the festivities. The sight and activity is not for heart-fainted.


One of Andalucia's best festivals is Jerez's ?Feria del Caballo? or the Horse Fair, first celebrated in the 13th century. It is a two-week celebration of everything Andalucians love most of all - sherry, flamenco, bullfighting and horses. Jerez is unique due to the history of horse breading and is considered the birthplace of Spanish thoroughbred. During the festival, you will be brought somewhere to another place and time, where you will see elegant horsemen in broad-brimmed hats, tight black trousers and short jackets, riding along the park paths. The beautiful ladies in long, frilly flamenco dresses sit side-saddle behind them. The riders walk their horses slowly round the park (this peculiar sight is available in the Parc Gonzales Hontoria), stopping periodically for a ?catavino? of sherry. Generally, Andalucia holds fiestas all the year round and all of them reveal the residents? passion for bullfighting, colors, fashionable dressing up, flirting and partying.

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