Fiestas
| From June to September every town and village in Menorca celebrates their fiesta. Fiesta season kicks off in style in Ciutadella at the Fiestas de Sant Joan. By far the most famous and the most traditional, they are renowned throughout Spain. The Maó fiestas in September bring fiesta season to a close and in between almost every weekend sees a smaller-scale celebration in one village or another. | |
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Although religious in origin (the fiesta marks each town’s patron saint’s day) nowadays the fiestas are as good an excuse as any to stop work and party non-stop for several days. While Menorca does have a reputation for being a tranquil, quiet island, when it’s fiesta time the locals really know how to celebrate! Businesses close, streets are cordoned off, fairground rides are set up and young and old turn out onto the streets. In addition to games, races and competitions during the day, there are often concerts at night and firework displays on the final night. But the real focal point of any fiesta is without doubt, the jaleo. |
Every one is welcome at the fiestas and people come from far and wide to take part in these lively street parties, particularly the jaleo, at which black Menorcan breed horses are the stars of the show. The origins of the jaleo date back to medieval times and are steeped in tradition but, once the show starts, the history and original meaning will be lost to most as the band strikes up, crowds spill out on to the streets and into the squares where makeshift bars are set up selling beer and pomada (a potent mix of local gin and lemon). The beautiful back menorcan horses, adorned with ribbons and rosettes, and their riders dressed in back tail coats, white trousers and three-pointed hats, make their way through the throngs into the main square in twos and threes, where, to shouts and cheers from the crowd, they show off their skills, dancing on their hind legs and even jumping, in time to the jaleo melody played by the brass band. It is a spectacle the likes of which you will not see anywhere else in the world. The fiesta atmosphere is infectious. It is impossible not to get caught up in it – before you know it; you too may be making your way into the midst of the masses, reaching up to touch the horses’chests. Note: The jaleo is crowded, noisy and NOT suitable for the very young, the very old or the infirm. |
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| Ciutadella | 23rd and 24th June | Sant Joan |
| Ferreries | 23rd, 24th and 25th August | Sant Bartomeu |
| Es Migjorn Gran | 5th weeken in July or 1st weekend in August | Sant Cristòfol |
| Es Mercadal | 3rd weekend in July | Sant Martí |
| Alaior | 2nd weekend in August | Sant Llorenç |
| Cala'n Porter | 3rd weekend in September | |
| Maó | 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th in September | Mare de Deú de Gràcia |
| Sant Climent | 3rd weekend in August | Sant Climent |
| Llumeçanes | 1st weekend in August | Sant Gaietà |
| Sant Lluís | Last weekend in August | Sant Lluís |
| Es Castell | 24th, 25th and 26th in July | Sant Jaume |

