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CHRISTMAS

12 weird and wonderful Christmas traditions celebrated across Spain

Feliz Navidad (Happy Christmas) to all our readers! If you're spending Christmas in Spain, here are 12 traditions foreigners tend to find both brilliant and bizarre.

12 weird and wonderful Christmas traditions celebrated across Spain
Santa runs, crapping figurines of famous people, eggs and flares pranks and the Three Wise Men arriving on balloon, just some of the marvellous madness to expect at Christmas in Spain. Photos: Gabriel Bouys, Josep Lago, Jaime Reina, Cristina Quicler/AFP
 
From Catalonia’s ‘crapping log’ to the Basque Country’s very own version of Santa Claus, The Local guides you through the weird and wonderful world of Spanish Christmas.
 
Nativity scenes that make a statement
 
Spaniards love their nativity scenes and many municipalities display a public one in the run up to Christmas. But they don’t always follow the traditional format of Holy family in a stable surrounded by farm animals.
 
Some towns stage a “living” Belén – the Spanish word for Bethlehem – with real actors and real animals. But others choose to make a social statement with the scene. A few years ago, Barcelona caused controversy by displaying a modern take on the biblical scene with the figures displayed in what looks like a flea market or “a load of old tat” as some critics described it.
 
 
A giant 18-metre-high Nativity Scene in Alicante, which in 2020 broke the Guinness world record for ‘the largest nativity scene figurines’ (Photo by JOSE JORDAN / AFP)

 

Christmas crappers

The caganers or ‘crappers’ are a popular nativity scene decoration in Catalonia, where a defecating figure perched behind Mary and Joseph is said to symbolise fertilization (because fertility was a stretch), as well as bringing luck and prosperity for the year ahead.
 
 
The traditional figure is that of a young peasant from Catalonia, sporting a red barretina cap and a pipe. 
 
But modern crappers represent public figures of the moment, from politicians to sporting heroes. Not surprisingly, the Donald Trump figure was a best-seller a few years ago, now it’s Ukraine’s Zelensky and Argentinian footballer Messi. 
 
The late Queen Elizabeth II and King Charles depicted as ‘Christmas crappers’. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)

 
 
 
Spain’s big fat Christmas lottery
 
It is the biggest lottery in the world and has been held almost without interruption since 1812. Expect huge queues in the streets to buy a ticket, lots of superstitions and theories, and absolute joy and champagne among the winners.
 
Lottery vendors and winners celebrate with champagne after ‘the Fat One touched them’. (Photo by JORGE GUERRERO / AFP)

 
 
 
Santa Claus Run
 
Thousands take part each year in Madrid’s traditional 10K charity run dressed in the red and white suits of Father Christmas or one of his elves, which makes for a sight to behold.
 
Finding a friend in the Santa Claus run feels like playing a game of ‘Where’s Wally?’. (Photo by CURTO DE LA TORRE / AFP)

 
 
The Basque ‘Father Christmas’
 
Move over Santa because there’s a fatter, more rugged version of you living in northern Spain. The Olentzero, as this pipe-smoking farmer-like legend is known, became the alternative to Santa Claus and the Three Wise Men for more militant Basque parents in the 1970s.
 
Nowadays, he tends to work in partnership with his ‘foreign’ present givers in most Basque households.
The Basques are different, even when it comes to Christmas. Photo: Midjourney AI/Wikipedia

 
 
 
Christmas ‘crapping’ log
 
As well as including crapping figures in their nativity scenes, Catalans also have Tió de Nadal, a jolly Christmas log which they stick in the fireplace every Christmas Eve.
 
Tradition says you must order Tío Nadal to defecate while spanking him with a stick. The ever-smiling tree trunk then waits for all the kids to go to bed before bringing them their presents.
 
 
Catalonia’s ‘crapping’ connection to Christmas is utterly bizarre. Photo: Josep Ma. Rosell/Flickr

 
Sing when you’re winning
 
Orphans brought up at Madrid’s San Ildefonso School have been responsible for singing out the winning Christmas lottery numbers since 1771.
 
Nobody knows exactly how such a peculiar way of calling the numbers came about, but legend has it that San Ildefonso’s orphans once chanted prayers through the streets of Madrid for alms.
 
They were then chosen for Spain’s Christmas lottery because as orphans they were considered to be less prone to cheating.
 
 
SPAIN-CHRISTMAS-LOTTERY-CHILDREN
The San Ildefonso schoolchildren always use the same tone and rhyme when singing the numbers. Photo Handout: Sociedad Estatal de Loterías y Apuestas del Estado/AFP

 
 
 
Play the fool
Spaniards celebrate the Día de los Santos Inocentes on December 28th by playing practical jokes on each other (don’t try to play a joke on a Spaniard on April 1st as you won’t get many laughs).
 
Spaniards don silly wigs and glasses and prank each other, shouting “¡Inocente, inocente!” on revealing the broma. (joke).
 
In the Alicante town of Ibi, they take it even further with their 200-year-old traditional festival called Els Enfarinats (those covered in flour), where participants dress in military clothes and stage a mock coup d’etat as they battle using flour, eggs and firecrackers.
 
Revellers dressed in mock military garb throw eggs as they take part in the “Els Enfarinats” battle in the southeastern Spanish town of Ibi. (Photo by JAIME REINA / AFP)

 
 
Grappling with grapes
 
If you’ve celebrated New Year’s Eve in Spain, you may have spotted how locals scoff up 12 grapes as the clock strikes midnight.
 
The 12 uvas tradition is said to have begun at the start of the century when vine growers in Alicante (eastern Spain) had such an abundant harvest that they had to come up with a way of selling the grapes before they went off.
 
The custom has now spread to many Latin American countries as a way of bringing prosperity for the year to come.
 
Scoffing down a grape for every dong is harder than you may think. (Photo by Rebeca MAYORGA / AFP)
 
 
 
Wakey, wakey Three Kings
 
Every January 5th, children in the southern Spanish city of Algeciras tie dozens of cans together and drag them through the streets causing an almighty racket.
 
The reason for this ear-splitting tradition? To scare a legendary giant who tries to cover the sky in a thick cloud of smoke to stop the Three Wise Men from delivering the children’s presents.
 
 
 
 
Three Kings’ Parade
 
The Epiphany is traditionally Spain’s main festive holiday, when children receive their presents brought not by Santa Claus, but by the Three Wise Men.
 
Huge Three Kings parades or cabalgatas are held in towns and cities across Spain on the evening of January 5th, when children line the streets to catch sweets thrown into the crowds by Melchior, Caspar and Balthazar.
 
The latter is often portrayed by a ‘blacked up’ person, although in recent years there has been a move to find black actors to play the role due to the controversy the outdated practice has caused.
 
 
Three men in blackface dressed as King Balthazar, an increasingly controversial practice in Spain. (Photo by CRISTINA QUICLER /AFP)
 
 
Too much of a sweet thing
 
Spain’s Roscón de Reyes is a traditional cake families eat every January 6th (Epiphany). Be warned: this festive treat comes with the hidden ability of making your teeth crumble, and we’re not talking about sugar.
 
Every Roscón has a metal/plastic figurine inside it. Whoever gets it in their piece is crowned king or queen of the table. There’s also a bean inside the pastry and whoever gets it has to buy next year’s roscón.
 
Careful with your teeth when you bite into a Roscón de Reyes. Photo: Wikipedia

 
 
 

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SPANISH TRADITIONS

IN IMAGES: Is La Rioja’s Wine Battle the wildest party in Spain?

Every June 29th, Spaniards in the winemaking region of La Rioja spend the day dousing each other in wine during 'la Batalla del Vino': the Battle of Wine.

IN IMAGES: Is La Rioja's Wine Battle the wildest party in Spain?

For the last three centuries, revellers have gathered in the town of Haro, La Rioja (northeast Spain), every June 29th for La Batalla del Vino – literally, the Battle of Wine.

And it’s no surprise, as Haro is known as ‘the Capital of Rioja wine’. 

Dressed all in white with red neckerchiefs, thousands of participants set off in the morning for a 6 km hike. They then climb up a mountain and gather at the Hermitage of San Felices de Bilibio for a mass to celebrate the feast day of San Pedro (St. Peter).

They then head outside, armed with bottles and jugs of vino, for a wine fight that goes on until there isn’t a spot of white to be seen on their person, and everyone is drenched from head to toe.

A sea of wine-drenched revellers. (Photo by CESAR MANSO / AFP)

Tank trucks filled with wine distribute Rioja to revellers with water pistols, back-mounted spraying devices and buckets as they shoot, pour and spray vino in all directions.

Keep in mind that the cleaner you look, the more you will be a target – so just accept that you will turn burgundy sooner or later.

A participant pours red wine on a drum during the “Batalla del Vino”.(Photo by CESAR MANSO / AFP)

If you’re planning to take part, it’s advisable not to wear your newest set of white clothes and shoes, because they’ll likely never be the same again. And don’t worry, despite all the craziness, glass bottles or devices are not allowed.

It’s a good job wine is cheap in Spain, keeping in mind how much is wasted during Haro’s Wine Battle. (Photo by CESAR MANSO / AFP)

Approximately 9,000 locals and tourists attend the annual event, with a reported 130,000 litres of red wine spilt.

Haro’s Battle of Wine was declared a Festival of National Tourist Interest in 2011.

Once every single drop of wine has been spilt and the battle is over, it’s time to tuck into chorizo and morcilla, and this time drink the wine. (Photo by CESAR MANSO / AFP)

The origin of this tradition dates back to a possible dispute with the nearby town of Miranda de Ebro over the ownership of a rural area in the municipality, Los Riscos de Bilibio, where the celebration is held.

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