Daily Mail

Forget Rio, G ran Can aria is the place to party!

- By Nicholas Kynaston

ON CANTERAS Beach in Las Palmas, capital of Gran Canaria, a bizarre funeral is taking place. Women dressed in widow’s weeds are wailing in Oscar-worthy displays of grief. They are crying about the death of a sardine.

And that’s not the only strange thing about this procession, with trumpeters playing the Eighties rock classic The Final Countdown as a jazzy funeral dirge.

This event marks the end of four weeks of festivitie­s in Las Palmas, when, as in many parts of Spain and South America, an effigy of the fish is burnt to represent the end of Carnival and the beginning of Lent.

In Britain we have Pancake Day to use up the fat that is banned during the Lenten fast, but in the Hispanic world, they go in for Bacchanali­an merry-making.

The theme for this year is Eternal Spring, celebratin­g the city’s benign climate, where the temperatur­e rarely falls below 20c.

The tradition of carnival in the Canaries can be traced back to 1556 when Venetian merchants brought masked parties to the island. Everyone is encouraged to dress up, even those only watching the numerous floats parading through the city.

This year they are channellin­g Flower Power, encouragin­g people to don bellbottom­s, John Lennon glasses, kaftans and do the hippy, hippy shake.

Carnival is from this Friday until March 5, but the highlights are concentrat­ed in the last two weekends. Most events are free, but the gala to find the Carnival Queen is the hot ticket, with extravagan­t costumes reflecting the island’s strong connection­s to South America and the Caribbean.

The Queen of the Carnival’s nemesis is the equally popular Drag Queen Gala, where the island’s menfolk strut their stuff in outrageous, barely there outfits.

It all ends on March 5 with the burying of the sardine and a fireworks display.

The party’s over . . . or is it? Those cunning Canarians stagger the carnivals in the other towns so that as Las Palmas’s festival closes, the fun starts in the south of the island in Maspalomas. So you can take a deep breath and go for it all over again.

 ??  ?? Festival spirit: Carnival-goers in vibrant costume parade the streets of Las Palmas
Festival spirit: Carnival-goers in vibrant costume parade the streets of Las Palmas

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