Scribbler in Seville

Carnaval de Cadiz, family style

Cadiz, Carnaval, fiesta, Spain

This sign is above the gate in Cadiz’s city wall where you enter the old town – to let you know you’re now in Carnaval-land.

Carnaval, Cadiz, Fiesta, Spain

My daughter and I dressed as hippies for the Carnaval de Cadiz.

Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family

Bumble bees are always a popular outfit at Carnaval.

It started as a casual conversation with a complete stranger outside a restaurant. He was from Cadiz, and wanted to know if we were going to Carnaval? Hmm, not sure, bit full-on with kids, we replied. Nah, he said, you’ll be fine. I’ve always wanted to go, so the seed was planted. Cadiz Carnaval is a ten-day-long, 24-hour fancy-dress party to celebrate the start of Lent and arrival of 40 days of abstention. As a city, Cadiz has a history of invidiuality, thanks to its isolated situation on a near-island; and of anti-authority – during Franco’s regime, Carnaval was banned, but the Gaditanos carried on behind close doors anyway.

Initial plans, hatched that very night, were to go as a priest and a nun with our two children as little diablitos (my attempt at biting anti-Catholic wit). But our son loathes dressing up, so that put the kybosh on our genius idea. (He didn’t even agree to come to Carnaval until the night before.) In the meantime, we sussed out train prices, and decided driving would cost about half RENFE’s return fare. Not very ecological, but who wants to hang around a packed train station, waiting for a two-hour journey, with two small, knackered kids? Not me.

Teatro de Falla, Cadiz, Carnaval, Carnaval de Cadiz

The Teatro de Falla, where the singing groups competition takes place in the weeks before Carnaval.

nuns, monks, bishops, catholic, religious, religion

This was the reaction when three nuns happened upon some bishops – an ecstatic reunion.

bishops, nuns, chruch, catholic, Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family

Note the attention to detail – what is the priest on the left being fed?

cadiz, carnaval

Knights on the seafront.

Duquesa de Alba, Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family

My favourite Spanish aristocrat, the Duquesa de Alba – in triplicate. The girl on the right spoils the effect by not adopting the pose – party-pooper.

cadiz, carnaval

For some reason, Spanish men love dressing up as babies. This one’s a lloron (cry-baby). His friend is an aging hippy with a sneaky seafood snack.

In the end, my daughter and I were hippies (headband, flowers painted on face, beads, garlands, kaftan – all ours, so no need to splash out). After a smooth journey, punctuated by sightings of Tio Pepe figures and Osborne bulls, we parked easily and headed off to the Teatro de Falla. All around us were people in costumes ranging from perennial favourites – babies, knights, chickens, bumble bees, matadors, priests and nuns – to popular personalities – the Duquesa de Alba – and lots of people wearing normal clothes, but with block-coloured mohican wigs, Venetian-style masks or outsized shades.

Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family, mohicans

You’re never too old for a mohican.

shades, sunglasses, outsize, Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family

A pair of outsize shades will transform any normal person into a mad geek.

masks, carnaval masks, Venetian masks, Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family

I had assumed that everyone would be in costume, which was one of the reasons I dressed up (apart from wanting to keep my daughter company). But many people were in mufti, and a good number wearing just one strategic carnaval item on their head or face – you can’t really call it an accessory, as it is the outfit. More a statement piece. The streets around the Cathedral were heaving with stalls selling all these colourful goodies.

erizos, sea urchins, erizo, sea urchin, Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family

My son (the one not in fancy dress) checks out the spiky erizos (sea urchins).

erizo, sea urchin, Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family

The inside of sea urchins – mind those spines.

Mojama (dried tuna) and camarones - typical Cadiz fare.

Mojama (dried tuna) and camarones – typical Cadiz fare.

oysters, camarones, shrimp, seafood, Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family

After much deliberation, we decided on the oysters with a side of camarones – 4 euros for the lot.

Another welcome surprise was the fresh seafood on offer – I had been so busy thinking sartorial, I’d forgotten the gastronomic. Street stalls offered erizos (sea urchins), ostiones (oysters), mojama (dried tuna, like fishy jamon), teeny weeny camarones (shrimp), and one stall had a single massive shell with an animal inside the size of a small mammal. We got some oysters and camarones, which were delicious, although a drop of tabasco would have perfected the experience. (Sandwiches were the less interesting but essential part of the picnic.)

beach, Playa la Caleta, sand sculpture, Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family

This amazing sand sculpture took two weeks to make. I love the way its texture and colour perfectly complement the stone wall.

sand sculpture, Carnaval, Cadiz, Carnaval de Cadiz, family, beach, Playa de Caleta

This train-themed sculpture caught my children’s imaginations. Poor deprived creatures.

After a child-friendly detour along the seafront, with the picture-postcard view of the cathedral, we stopped off at the beach – Playa de Caleta is where Die Another Day was filmed (it’s a dead ringer for Havana), so that always gives a movie-fame frisson. As an unexpected added bonus, we saw some amazing sand sculptures, which the enthusiastic, bounding boy nearly trashed.

carnaval, cadiz

The Queen with her retinue of beefeaters by the market.

Wandering back past the market, we suddenly spotted the queen – Queen Elizabeth II – with some beefeaters in their scarlet jackets and bearskins, one carrying a large Union Jack. I ran alongside them like a paparazzo, snapping away, until they stopped and set up camp on the steps of the Correos (post office). Watching British soldiers raise their flag outside a Spanish state building was surreal. My son played the national anthem on his kazoo, a buzzy instrument typical of the carnival.

cadiz, carnaval

The chirigota (singing group) performs its British-themed songs, led by The Queen.

The group, known as a chirigota, then proceeded to sing ditties about unemployment, the King of Spain, Gibraltar and the Jubilee to the tunes of Rule Britannia and the National Anthem (click to see the videos), and introduced the delicate subject of getting Gibraltar back under the Spanish flag (to loud cheers). The lead-up to Carnaval sees a two-week competition of these singing groups – always topical, often satirical, and this year with many on the theme of los recortes and la crisis, while King Juan Carlos’s shenanigans with mistresses and elephants didn’t escape judgement either.

cathedral, cadiz, carnaval

Carnaval revellers start to amass in front of the cathedral, as the evening’s celebrations get going.

By then children were drooping, and we were all footsore, so (reluctantly on my part) we made our way to the cathedral, now a meeting point for all costumed revellers – a sea of colour before the mighty basilica, with groups of yellow, red and white. The drinking was just starting, and as we walked back to the theatre, we met hundreds of people ready for an evening of craziness – unusually tall babies with outsize bottles around their necks, for ease of sipping.

rumba, carnaval, cadiz

This rumba outfit is probably what put my son off fancy dress: he had to wear one on stage (and dance in it) for his end of term show, aged 3. Can you blame him?

This was but a brief snapshot of Spain’s second-largest carnival (after Gran Canaria’s), and lacked the usual requisites, in other words darkness and alcohol; most people come at about 9pm, stay up boozing and partying all night, and then go home in the morning. But the afternoon atmosphere was fantastic – fun, friendly and above all great for families.

Next year’s Carnaval is from 27 February to 9 March 2014.

21 thoughts on “Carnaval de Cadiz, family style

  1. Mad Dog

    That looks amazing – you make a great hippy and I loved your original idea. You’ve reminded me of sea urchin and mojama posts I haven’t made yet too 😉

  2. Matthew Hirtes

    Excellent post, Fiona. Have to say I winced when looking at those erizos, though. Once impaled my hand on one of those spiky fellows. Ouch. Took a week to extract the chappy.

  3. CiaranW

    I thought Cadiz was an amazing place on a short visit a few years ago. A dense, tight city of streets and squares out on that isthmus – almost seemed separate from the rest of Spain. Nice train station but I missed my last train! Great post Fiona. Not sure I like the look of that bag of camarones though!

    1. Fiona Flores Watson

      Thanks for your comment Ciaran. Yes, Cadiz’s geographical situation definitely contributes to the feeling of being apart from Spain – people there have always been very outward-looking, towards the Atlantic and Africa. The camarones were yum – you’ll have to come out again and try them! 🙂

  4. quieromilk

    Great post Fiona. I loved the photos. I’ll try to make it next year with my kids as a new experience. I’ve been to other Carnavales (never in Cadiz) but I don’t know why I cannot remember very much…

  5. Maya Middlemiss

    Love it Fiona – definitely trying to fit Cadiz in to our Easter Andalucia tour, even if the costumes will be different then 🙂 For some reason I find the idea of carnevaling Spaniards dressing up as the queen of England particularly hilarious

    1. Fiona Flores Watson

      Cadiz is great because it’s very small and easy to get around – just park in the old town, as we did, and you can get a flavour of it in a morning, then have a lovely seafood lunch! The motorway from Seville is very fast, with one toll, I think it’s 7 euros, but you can always take the Nacional. Yes, that outfit was very very funny, kind of surreal, really. I was SO glad I saw it, total luck.

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  7. Josh

    Glad you enjoyed it! I went for the opening weekend this year and had quite the night! Wish I’d seen more during the day time. Great pics, not so sure about the local fare though! Hard to swallow?

    1. Fiona Flores Watson

      Not a big fan of mojama, Josh, but the oysters I had were yum, and I’ve had erizos before, and they were delicious! Between your night-time jaunts and my daytime experiences, we’ve got it covered!!

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