Castillo San Marcos

Castillo San Marcos
13th-century castle, El Puerto de Santa Maria. That WAS our house to the left and behind the tree!

Monday, May 30, 2016

La Romería de El Rocío

La ermita (The Hermitage) de El Rocío, destination of pilgrims from all over Europe

For years now I’ve heard about La Romería de El Rocío.  When I was first asked if I knew about it, I said, sure, I’ve been to the restaurant Romerijo.  No, laughed Carmen, the romería!  Like El Rocío!  She made a sign for drinking lots and dancing. 

Custom bar in our 4x4

The Romería de El Rocío is probably the most famous pilgrimage in Spain, after the Camino del Santiago.  But you can walk El Camino anytime you want.  El Rocío is special, since from our side (El Puerto, Jerez, Sanlúcar, Chipiona, Arcos) you are allowed special passage through Spain’s largest and most vigorously protected national park, El Parque Nacional Doñana.  You aren’t even allowed to WALK  in Doñana; if you want to visit, you have to take either a boat or a 4x4-drive tour.

The coast of Doñana National Park, the largest in Spain

But once a year, the road through El Coto de Doñana is opened, and thousands of pilgrims stream through on their way to the Hermitage of  El Rocío.  The park resounds with the sound of laughing and clapping, sevillanas rocieras, the whinnies and brays of horses and mules, and the low roar of motorized tractors and four-wheel-drives that replace much of the horse-and oxpower that was used in bygone days.

The mules often have special designed shaved into their coats

The Romería de El Rocío can be traced back to the fourteenth century, when the Hermitage of Santa Maria de las Rocinas was first mentioned, but the pilgrimage didn’t really get going until mid-seventeenth century, when the towns of Almonte, Villamanrique de la Condesa, and Pilas send their brotherhoods to pay their respects to the Virgen, who at this point began to be known as Santa María de El Rocío.   

Our route through the Coto of Doñana National Park

Shortly thereafter they were joined by brotherhoods from La Palma de Condenado, Moguer, and Sanlúcar de Barrameda.  By the beginning of the 19th century, brotherhoods from El Puerto de Santa María and Rota joined in, and now there are more than a hundred hermandades that arrive each year to be presented to the Virgen. 

Loading a simpecao, a miniature version of the Virgen de El Rocio's processional float.
The hermandad brings the simpecao with them through Doñana.

We happened to choose the wettest and muddiest romería in the last 30 years.  Rain was forecast for almost the whole time.  We couldn’t back out—it was now or never—and so we packed our tent in the old Landrover owned by our friends Maria, Enrique, Antonia, Piro, Francisco, and Lola, who have been pilgrimaging every year together for the last quarter-century.   Come hell or high water, we were going to The Rocio!

Dancing the sevillanas with Antonia in front of the loaded Landrover, Enrique on drum and flute

It rained on the way to Sanlúcar, where we parked our car and made our way to the open barge to cross the Rio Guadelete on our way to La Doñana.  It rained in the boat, and my nice purple-and-yellow feria dress did not like that.  

In feria finery despite the rain.  These dresses are indestructible as well as beautiful.

My boots didn't like the wet, either, so I hemmed and hawed when getting on the barge, waiting for the beach wave surge to fall back, when a big Guardia Civil tromped through the shallows and scooped me up onto his shoulder, heaving me aboard, dry boots and all.  

My orange-jumpsuit-clad savior
Piro, Lola, and Antonia battle the weather

It rained while we walked up the sandy slopes to the road where the tractors and carts and SUVs (and I mean REAL SUVs, not those cushy modern things by Mercedes and Porsche) waited to start into the park.  There was no room in Maria’s Landrover—it was packed to the gills and then some, all the necessities for a week on the trail piled high on the roof rack.  So in the rain, Todd and I walked.

Wet but still incredibly beautiful
That is, until a nice carriola passed us by, and Todd waved to them.  The guy hanging off the stairs waved back, and called out, Run!  Run!  So we did, and jumped aboard the moving RV-like thing.  Inside was a full kitchen, a giant long table, and many people eating, drinking, singing, and even dancing sevillanas while going down the trail.  

Click here to see the inside of the carriola

The sombrero-clad pilgrim who had invited us in turned out to be Herman, the director of Todd’s gym, Club Activa.  In typical pilgrim fashion they welcomed us with homemade tortilla de patata, rebujito, fino, jamón, and plenty of singing.  I played my castanets (I still haven’t learned the words to most sevillanas) and enjoyed being out of the rain and in good company.

Rain, rain everywhere
Lucky for us, it stopped raining when we got to the camp site for the night.  We pitched our tent and helped bring out the ample provisions Maria, Lola, and Antonia had prepared.  Despite all the noise and hubbub, the jabali or native wild pigs came snuffling about, squealing in delight when they found abandoned tortilla or picos.   

Wild pig, here known as a jabali, scavenge for food, unafraid of us pilgrims

We sang and ate and drank throughout the evening, but it was too cold and windy to dance.   Around 11 that evening, the Hermandad de Jerez passed right by our camp, their simpecao glittering and mysterious in the lamplight, accompanied by the snorting and whinnies of the horses Jerez is famous for. 


Click here for a couple of sevillanas sung in the night by the Jerez hermandad (from 2014)


Simpecao de Jerez

We were happy not to have been flooded out during the night, and after packing up camp the next morning, we headed over to the improvised altar for mass.  To our surprise, two children, a girl and a boy, were receiving their First Communion right there in the middle of el coto de Doñana.  The priest was funny and kind, and it added a special sense of the religious to the whole experience.


Breakfast on the road in the rain

Todd and I walked back through Doñana to catch the boat back to Sanlúcar and our car.  Rain was forecast for that day and night, and we also couldn’t palm our kids off on our friends indefinitely.  This turned out to be a spectacular bonus.  Fluffy rainclouds crisscrossed the warm sun, raining only occasionally, and we saw more jabali, as well as small Spanish deer, and multitudes of birds in the peaceful coastal forest.  We had the entire Doñana to ourselves for the 90-minute walk.

All the wildlife here is protected

After sending the girls to school on Friday, Todd and I left to drive around to El Rocío, the location of the Hermitage where all the hermandades were heading.  We’d rented a room in nearby Mataslascañas, where Maria and crew were staying, close enough to enjoy the Rocío but still affordable. 

Todd found himself a hat on the trail back to Sanlúcar and became a real rociero.

Entering El Rocío, I was astounded.  There were horses everywhere, wagons, carts, covered wagons, mules, riders, women in their beautiful trajes de gitana and even huge oxen!  

Click here for a little taste of El Rocío

The oxen were probably my favorites, huge enormous beasts with intricate headdresses traveling at about 0.001 km/hr.

The streets were unpaved, their yellow sand wet and puddle-filled.  Horses were hitched to the houses lining the streets, their high facades complete with bells.  I realized suddenly that Americans had not created the image of The American West.  It had come from the Spanish!  Everywhere I looked seemed like something out of a Western, except it was more authentic, somehow more natural.  

Park your horses out front, please.
The riders sat their high-spirited horses without any sign of nervousness or fear, and the drivers wound their wagons skillfully through the crowds.  The simpecaos, surrounded by pilgrims clapping and singing and drawn by huge oxen wearing detailed headdresses, were covered with flowers and creaked by on their way to be presented to the Virgen, followed by the covered wagons in various colors.

One simpecao more beautiful than the next.  These are miniature versions of the Virgen's processional float.

We waited at the Puerto hermandad to greet the incoming pilgrims, then left for Matalascañas to meet up with our friends.  Despite having gotten up at 7 am, we laughed and sang and drank and shared stories until late. 

Todd Eastwood

The following day Todd and I headed into El Rocío again, wandering the streets, which were becoming increasingly crowded with the arrival of each new hermandad.   Suddenly I heard my name:  there were Carmen and Lourdes and Margarita, from my dance class!  

Las guapas de la casa
They’d rented a house right on the main street coming into the hermitage, and invited us to lunch.  We stood on the front porch to watch the hermandad de Jerez parade past, the site impressive.  I tried to capture the sense of color and flowers and fiesta, but it needs to be lived. 

The arrival of the hermandad de Jerez de la Frontera, and its simpecao, with singing and clapping

And you thought covered wagons came from the American West??  Here's the originals.

Flowers, flowers everywhere.  

The most stylish, expert, relaxed riders and horses ever.

Click here to see me play the castanets at El Rocío

Todd and I returned to Puerto that evening.  We’d not seen all of the Rocio—we missed the biggest days, those of visiting the Virgen and singing to her, like my friend Begoña did, and we missed her procession through the streets of El Rocio to visit each hermandad.    

Another hermandad enters the town on its way to be presented to the Virgen.

But we now had a good sense of la romería de El Rocío, with the good company and spirituality, the fiesta and fun, the hardships of the trail and the excitement of coming together in a huge gathering that is, at its heart, very religious.  ¡Viva la virgen de El Rocío!  ¡Viva la reina de las Marismas!  ¡Viva la blanca paloma!  ¡Viva la madre de Dios!

Click here to hear Begoña sing to the Virgen


La Virgen de El Rocío in her hermitage, ready for the procession

Sunday, May 15, 2016

My Last Ferias for a While



At the pescaito de Sevilla, the opening night of the Sevilla feria
I love feria.  I just do.  There are some people who don’t go, who don’t find it enjoyable.  When I sent my brother-in-law, Ethan, a picture of Todd and me at feria, he wrote back, “Better you than me!”  And it can be annoying:  It’s loud, as in top-volume loud, with multiple competing musics, noise and loudspeaker voices.  

Stuck in the Street of Hell, attempting a selfie.  I need earplugs.

It’s also expensive, 3 euros per kid for a amusement-park ride in the aptly-named Calle de Infierno or Street of Hell, expensive and usually mediocre food (unless you know where to look), at times caseta-to-caseta crowds, the enormous amounts of litter that accumulate, and the always-present danger of being run down by a horse-drawn carriage. 

Watch out, wild partygoers ahead!

But I still love it.  I’ve learned to go at times which are not so busy, and to pace myself (I gave up staying out until dawn, because then I can’t rally to show up at the next day of feria!).  This year I didn’t buy any feria dresses, only expensive mantones (shawls) to accent my already-ample dress collection. 

New beautiful shawl from Begoña for our show during the Patio fiesta
Dancing at our pre-feria party with Isaac in another new lovely shawl, a gift from my Badajoz/Jerez friends!

Unfortunately, this year the Rota and Puerto ferias coincided completely, the dates right on top of each other, Puerto starting the night of Wednesday, April 27th, and Rota the next day at noon.  That led to me running from one feria to another, Puerto during the day and then Rota that night, and then Rota the next day for lunch and Puerto that night. 

At the Puerto feria, daytime ops
I showed off my new-found talent of dancing the sevillanas with castanets, known as castañuelas (chestnuts) or palillos.   I had been trying to learn how to play them for over two years, looking on the internet for various sites to help me.  I mean, how hard can it be? 

Castanets as my badge of honor

Well, pretty hard, it turns out.  After zero success, I horned in on my friend Charo’s castanet classes, run by our profesora Veronica.  In two sessions, she had me clackety-clacking away.  By feria time, I could actually dance and play at the same time.  It took an excellent teacher like Veronica to watch what I was doing and make the small adjustments—thumb bent, not straight; don’t curve your fingers; relax your shoulders; move your hand a little; use all four fingers! (I like to cheat and leave out the index finder); keep time with the right hand. 

Queens of feria; but someone stole my castanets that night.  Oh well, easy come, easy go.
Click here to see me dance and play at the same time!!


Rota is a lovely feria, but I am from Puerto.  After two days up at Rota, Puerto called.  We have quite a few friends in Puerto now after 5 years, and that makes Puerto my favorite feria.  It’s not the most beautiful or the most elegant or the most clean, but it’s MY city, and that makes it the most fun for me. 

Heading off to the Puerto feria

I spent Saturday until midnight looking for music, but it was so crowded.  Sunday we went to the presentation of the Fiesta de los Patios awards (we won 5th place, along with our friends the Hannons, for opening our palacios to the city earlier in April).  I hung out for a while with my friend Coco Hutchison, who rules the Tirititran caseta. 

My friend Coco, another Española-Americana who is 1000 times more integrated than me!

But Monday is my favorite day.  All of the out-of-towners are gone, most of Puerto has the day off, and there’s a lot going on, just without the crowds.  My purple-and-yellow dress, given to me by Rowena several years ago when she returned to the States, turned out to be a favorite this year, and I went in search of the bulerías.

Teaching the sevillanas

And did I ever find them!  There was group after group, and I danced, danced, danced, danced, finally understanding.  The bulerías are a type of improvisation within a certain form, and I nailed it this year, feeling comfortable and confident, even though I have a lot of room for improvement.  

Click here to see me dance...yet again...

After going from one friend’s caseta to another, I dragged myself home, ready for a break.

Kids in feria... "Mom, when are we going home???"

Super-feria-style in Converse

But not for long.  Jerez had to overlap BOTH Rota and Puerto’s ferias, with all three coinciding one night.  By Wednesday I had recovered enough to head to Jerez with Begoña, Charo, and Glenda, feeling gorgeous in my new pink silk shawl over my fanciest dress.   Jerez and its horses were extraordinarily beautiful, and the glamour was, as usual, over the top, but still, I didn’t like the crowds, and had trouble squishing forward to get a chance to dance.

A whole new outfit with my new silk shawl (also from Begoña!)

With a gorgeous shawl and enough flowers, anyone is lovely!

My cousin-German-sister Fiona came to visit, and while Jerez got hit with some rain, it cleared up for us by Saturday to have one last day there.  Fiona looked amazing in my green dress.  

Who wore it best?  Clearly Fiona is the winner, 100%!
Together with Glenda, Ana, Mike, and their Colombian friends, we traipsed around Jerez, dancing and eating and drinking until Fiona’s shoes fell apart! 

Green tape to match the green dress


Love my German sister cousin

We have one more feria, this Sunday in Sanlúcar, after which we will be done for quite a while.  But I’m not selling a single dress—I’m packing them all up to take with me back to California, along with all the accoutrements.  Who knows, maybe one day I WILL open a flamenco academy in Imperial Beach!

Our inspiration,  teacher Jaime with his students

Last feria for a while...

Viva la feria!