Carnival with all the family (2)

The Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival, designated a Fiesta of National Tourist Interest, becomes the epicentre of activity for almost a whole month for a city with a different way of living through the winter. People living here are passionate about the event, and it works its charms on visitors who can take advantage of the dates to join the celebrations in the street, and who also attend the great galas in the programme. The Carnival Queen Gala or the famous Drag Queen Gala, followed worldwide, are the identifying features of a fiesta, which, all the same, also sets aside plenty of space in the programme for family events. Indeed, the little ones have a whole calendar of entertainment over these days in the Gran Canaria capital, immersed in its own Carnival culture.

The 2019 festivities, themed around A Night in Rio, in tribute to the Rio de Janeiro carnival celebrations, as a symbol of openness, freedom and integration. And, like every previous year, the schedule planned by the organisers offers a great range of things to do for younger carnival-goers. On the one hand, there are acts which are specifically designed for children. And on the other, there are different events suitable for people of all ages, which can be experienced in the city as a family. This is another characteristic feature of this Carnival which is unique, contemporary and belongs to a city which is not only transformed by Carnival but also transforms itself for Carnival. In this case, from 15 February until 10 March 2019.

The first weekend with children at centre stage

On the first day, when the opening proclamation takes place in Plaza de Santa Ana, right in the historic centre, families can get an advance taste of the festivities with a musical parade proclaiming the start of Carnival, as it passes through the city’s oldest streets. This is only an appetiser for everything that will take place later around the Parque Santa Catalina, where each year a stage is built (designed according to the allegory that the citizens choose each year as the theme for the Carnival): this is where all the great spectacles of the festivities take place.

The first, Saturday 16 February, with the junior comparsas – stage shows – contest (7 pm), where visitors can see for themselves how the Carnival’s youngest talents experience the festivities. On the following day, from 11 am onwards, Santa Catalina brings together a multitude of junior groups as they celebrate their own fancy dress festival. Their families cheer them on from the audience… as do a good crowd of tourists who pass by the stage on their visits to the city: guests at its hotels and apartments, day-trippers from the south of the island… or people on the cruises that have put in at the nearby Santa Catalina Dock, and who are becoming regulars at these events in the park.

Daytime and Pet Carnival

The first full week of the programme is devoted to the murgas and comparsas competitions, although on the Saturday and Sunday, families travelling to the city have other opportunities to join the celebrations. Among these is the Vegueta Daytime Carnival; it’s a good idea to go early if you’re with children, before the multitudinous crowd takes over the streets again. This is the programme for Saturday 23 February: the first of the daytime fiestas that fill so much of the Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival Schedule, which repeats these celebrations in the sunlight on two Sundays, 24 February  and 3 March, and on Carnival Tuesday (5 March) in Santa Catalina Park, and on Saturday 2 March in and around Triana’s Calle Mayor, in the historic heart of the city once again.

Sunday 24 February is also a chance for the little ones to get to know the Dog Carnival (12 pm). The pets in their costumes, together with their owners, gather at Santa Catalina to compete on stage in a unique competition, followed from the stands with the same spirit. What a gathering of Carnival dogs, showing off their costumes in this singular social happening.

The kids’ throne

On that same Sunday, 24, the Parque Santa Catalina is taken over by the candidates for Junior Queen or King (7 pm). A competition with very young contenders for the junior crown of the Carnival. It is no insignificant matter: many of the designers who compete in the big gala with their spectacular designs are also the designers behind the kids’ costumes. This gala is closely followed by the families, and reveals to the visitor the importance in the fiesta of the Queen’s dresses.

A Tuesday for the little ones

On Carnival Tuesday, 5 March, the Gran Canaria capital’s Carnival schedule dedicates a great day to kids. It’s the day of the Junior Parade, which leaves from Castillo de La Luz at 5 pm, and ends in Santa Catalina. It’s the festivities’ great junior procession, where groups with the youngest Carnival participants take part, alongside floats and a multitude of families in fancy dress. The parade ends with a great children’s party in the Parque Santa Catalina, with musical performances. Without a doubt, a great opportunity for the little ones to understand the importance of the Carnival and to join in the fun of the great fancy dress party.


All hail the Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival Royalty! (2)

A popular celebration, a costume party, and a date with the grandest shows. Every year, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival celebrates its galas on an iconic stage risen for the occasion in Santa Catalina Park – heart of the city bordered by the Port of La Luz and Las Palmas, and Las Canteras Beach. This 2019, the Gran Canarian capital pays tribute to Brazil’s notorious festivities with its theme, ‘A Night in Rio’, and Santa Catalina becomes the melting pot where these two cities fuse into the set for its most emblematic contests.

Little over two weeks in, the city has already chosen its Carnival Queen, Erika Echuaca Sebe, who was crowned for her ensemble under the fantasy Volar sin Alas (Flying without wings). The elegant candidate, a second-generation immigrant, will represent Las Palmas de Gran Canaria at tourist promotion events overseas along with Pedro Bethencourt Guerra –also known as Drag Chuchi–, the winner of the world-renowned Drag Queen Gala who over the last few years (included 2019) has been a global trending topic on Twitter and in the limelight for fans worldwide thanks to social media and television. It’s no mystery why tickets get sold out so quickly.

Chuchi took the stage with her show Repite mi nombre (Repeat my name), which ultimately gave her the winning sceptre and the right to participate in the Grand Parade that the city celebrates on 9 March. Everyone will be there; even the Carnival Queen and another royal figure that is a living representation of the importance of these festivities in the Gran Canarian capital.

We’re talking about Luisa Lozano, the Grand Dame of the A Night in Rio Carnival, dressed in Stampa do Brasil, a design fit for the 2019 Carnival. The Junior Queen, Náyade Pérez Castro, with her Mexican-themed fantasy, Serenata para usted, cosita linda (A Serenade for You, pretty thing), led the mass Junior Parade on 5 March, Carnival Tuesday. Both junior and veteran are also part of the Carnival’s great hall of fame.

These reigns are a celebration of all the people that participate intensely in Carnival: designers, sponsors, and contestants who have been working all year for the throne. Although, we shouldn’t forget another key figure in Carnival: all the people showing off their best costumes in Santa Catalina.


How to enjoy Once upon a time at Carnival as a family

Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, 6 February, 2020. The Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival has been the centre of attention on the global map for years: immediately identifiable features such as the striking Drag Queens or the sumptuous dresses worn by the contenders for Carnival Queen are often associated with all the fun offered in the street programme. However, the schedule also has space set aside for the little ones and the family audience. And it’s no small space: in 2020, Once upon a Time at Carnival once again has parties, competitions and parades specially designed for children. Those children are the grass roots which Carnival will grow from, although all of these fixtures give an enthusiastic welcome to visitors in the city over these dates.

As well as this, in this year, the theme chosen as the setting for Carnival could not be more suitable for children: the world of stories and fairy tales. Little Red Riding Hood, Pinocchio, Hansel and Gretel, the Sleeping Beauty, Jack and the Beanstalk… The universe to choose a costume from is practically limitless if what you want is to enjoy the celebrations as a family, and in line with Carnival fashion for 2020. There are plenty of establishments for those passing through if they want, with costumes and complements on sale, in the big shopping centres in the Gran Canaria capital, or in the open air shopping areas like Triana or Mesa y López.

Children’s schedule

Have we got a costume already? In that case, it’s time to take a look at the programme, and to choose the moments when we want to enjoy the children’s Carnival in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. The celebrations start on 7 February, with the Official Opening in Santa Ana Square, right in the heart of the historic centre of the city, preceded by a Carnival Parade which is a good first point of contact (8.30 pm, in the area around the Cathedral).

The competitions for the youngest audience start on Saturday, 8 February, on the huge Santa Catalina stage (a magic place where the stories will unfold). The children’s street bands make their debut there (7 pm) and a large number of groups of children in fancy dress will show themselves off on Sunday, 9 February, at 11 am, in a massive family encounter. As is the case for all the children’s Carnival events, access to the enclosure is free.

The Children’s Gala is scheduled at 6.30 pm on Sunday, 16 February, and boys and girls can compete with their striking outfits for the festivities’ little crown. The same day on which the Dog’s Carnival takes place at 12 pm, another favourite with families.

Big weekend

This is a taster for the big weekend of the celebrations, stretching from Friday 21 to Tuesday 25 February (Carnival Tuesday). Over that long weekend, the Family Carnival is scheduled in Triana (22 Saturday, 12 pm, once again in the historic city centre), the children’s murgas encounter (on Sunday 23 in Santa Catalina, at 11 am) and the children’s Cavalcade, a great event for the youngest audience, in a grand parade of costumes, groups and floats which leaves from León y Castillo Street, the city’s main street, heading for Santa Catalina Park, to round off the party in great style (also on Sunday 23, from 5 pm onwards).

Although there’s nothing to say that families can’t go to the Carnaval al Sol (Sun Carnival) at Las Canteras Beach on Saturday 22, a unique party parade alongside the beach, (starting at 5 pm) or experience the Daytime Carnival at Santa Catalina right in the middle of the holiday Tuesday (12 pm).

The end of the fiesta

The Once upon a time Carnival ends on Saturday 29 February, with a grand cavalcade which the youngest children can watch in its early stages, although later the celebrations turn into something more suitable for the grown-ups. And on 1 March, with the traditional Sardine’s Funeral, where the widows weep over the death of Carnival (Don Carnal), and which also leaves from León y Castillo Street at 7 pm, heading out to Las Canteras Beach, where the fantasy fish is set fire to, and the fireworks dazzle on the beach.


The red carpet that gives us a taste of Carnival

Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, 4 February, 2020. The newly redeveloped Avenida Mesa y López in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria was the scene on Saturday 1 February of an advance taste of Once upon a time at Carnival, which is what the city’s 2020 massive fiesta is called. 64 contenders for crowns in the carnival celebrations paraded in front of 3,000 people at the presentation and the draw to find out the order in which they will take part in the different galas to be held in the Santa Catalina Park. This was an exciting taste of things to come in a Carnival which will have its official opening on 7 February, with the reading of the Opening Speech in Santa Ana Square (9 pm).

Dressed up for the occasion, the 14 contenders for Carnival Queen were a fine sight on the red carpet: their gala will be held on 21 February; likewise the 11 contenders for the junior throne (which will be decided on 16 February) and ten contenders for Grand Dame (gala programmed for 9 February). As well as the 29 Drag Queens who will compete in the Shortlisting on 22 February. The audience cheered each one of the contenders, who paraded on their platforms to find out when they had been drawn: big and small, because in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, the drag queens are real icons of a completely inclusive Carnival.

Contenders of both sexes were applauded with real excitement in this act which took place out in the street, a sign that the audience is all set for a celebration which is dedicated this year to the world of tales and fables. All this was in front of the 2019 Queens and the Drag Queen, who were not going to miss the occasion. Once upon a time…at a Carnival full of princes and princesses seeking their crowns.

Take note, because the Carnival has already started, and the week which begins today, Monday, 3 February, will offer us, as well as the Opening Speech, the junior street band competition, a profusion of rhythm, glitter and colour to demonstrate that the grass roots of the Carnival is alive and well (Saturday 8, 7 pm); the festival of junior costumes, a family show where thousands of children in fancy dress take over the enclosure and applaud the competitors (Sunday 9, 11 am) and the Grand Dame Gala, the act which brings the first ruler of the fiestas to her throne, the queen of the senior citizens (Sunday 9, 8 pm). All the acts are accompanied by live music.


"Once upon a time at Carnival", the allegory of the fiesta in 2020

Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, 3 February, 2020. The 2020 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival runs from 7 February to 1 March, and will be presented with the introductory tag “Once upon a time…”, which is how most popular tales in universal literature begin.

The world of tales, be they children’s or adults’ tales, based on universal literature or television series which either deconstruct the mythical characters, such as the popular “Once upon a Time”, or invent new universes such as “The Handmaid’s Tale”, will bring colour, fun and an infinite number of possibilities both to fans of popular tales, the work of Hans Christian Andersen, the Brothers Grimm or Perrault, and to fans of television sagas based on their tales.

Fantasy will no doubt become reality in the carnival costumes of those taking part, in the leit motiv of the shows, and in the great stage which towers over the Santa Catalina Park.

The stage design, by Sergio Macías, makes clear reference to a dozen popular tales, some of which appear in an allegorical fashion and others more circuitously. “Hansel and Gretel”, “Snow White”, “The Wizard of Oz”, “Alice in Wonderland”, “Rapunzel”, “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” or “Jack and the Beanstalk”, among others, are some of the titles which depict a carefully wrought group scene, with a great wealth of detail.

Above the central body of this staging, a giant magic mirror, inspired by the story of “Snow White”, will turn into a huge screen on which the Carnival characters will make their appearance.


A Carnival for everyone

Mere talk of concepts such as integration or accessibility is never enough. And, that’s the truth, it never is. The Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival took up the challenge of improvement in this aspect many years ago now: the fact is, this aspect is one of the celebration’s identifying features, defending diversity in the widest possible sense, without distinction of physical or mental condition. Freedom and respect are the values of a celebration characteristic of an open city. Its largest fiesta, with nobody left out before it even starts.

That is why every year the Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival celebrates its own Social Integration Gala, where different associations from the island compete in their costumes, in a very emotional contest; the atmosphere is one of solidarity, of great affection… and of an indomitable festive spirit.

This is why the organising team also makes sign language interpreters available at each one of the events (galas and contests) in the Santa Catalina Park, whether they are being broadcast on live television or not. Screens show the translation, so that the Carnival can reach everyone. And everyone wants to take part: Davinia Reyes Lantigua was the candidate presented by the Las Palmas Association for the Deaf (along with Fontanales and the Moya Town Council) for the Gala for 2019 Carnival Queen.

In each of these contests and galas, space is set aside in the first row for persons with reduced mobility, to enable them to enjoy these great moments in the Carnival diary. They also take an even more active part in the celebrations: this is the case with Silvia Arbelo González, candidate in the 2019 costume contest dressed as Apárcame el drama que el carnaval me llama! – “Put the Drama away, it’s time for Carnival!”

Equally emotional is the presence in recent years of Drag Trisómico, Héctor Santana: a candidate who has never been held back from participating in the Drag Queen contest by this genetic trisomy 21, which leads to the appearance of Down’s Syndrome. In 2019 he didn’t make it to the grand finale, after a highly contested preselection with 40 participants. Despite this, Trisómico is part of the history of the Gala, and his father is a regular backstage with his son, lending his support to this devotee of the fiesta.

In that same Drag Queen Gala, gender is not a reason to exclude anyone, and the gala is traditionally associated with freedom when it comes to the expression of sexual condition. Norma Ruíz has been the only woman to take part in recent years’ celebrations of the Gala, with very high quality performances. In fact, Drag Noa was the runner-up in the 2019 Drag Queen Gala, in what has been her farewell appearance in the Carnival. This year there was also another female contestant in the preselection: Esther Pérez Ramón, who had already been Carnival Queen, was the first woman to take part in both contests.

In a wider sense of integration, the Carnival has also brought many participants from overseas into the fiesta, as is appropriate for a city whose history links it to Europe, Africa and America in successive waves of immigration. This diversity is plain to see in contests such as the comparsa shows… although the most outstanding example in 2019 has been that of the Carnival Queen, Erika Echuaca Sebe, who comes from a family which emigrated to the Canaries.

In this effort to avoid any type of discrimination, the Carnival organisers have also modified the rules for its Children’s Gala, and this year a boy has competed for the first time with the rest of the female candidates: Xavier Romero Rivero, who in fact won a prize, as the contest’s Master of Honour, alongside the other three Maids of Honour.

These are only a few examples of the true feeling behind this fiesta, and its spirit of freedom and integration. The Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival makes every effort to ensure that everyone, without exclusion, feels part of the fiesta.


Drag Chuchi is 2019 Drag Queen of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

The Miller Building is what remains to show for an old British agency (Miller & Company), which looked after its vessels at the beginning of the 20th century. Its elegant employees, with their period suits and spectacles, were probably used to dealing with the sailors who tied up at the ever more important neighbouring Port of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. But they would probably have gone into shock if they had contemplated the preparations for shows like the one hosted in this building on the night of Monday, 4 March.

On that evening a total of 16 Drag Queens had readied themselves for the famous Gala held each year by the Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival. The finalists had survived a demanding first round, with 40 participants. And the tension and the excitement were more than evident inside, next to the stage in the Santa Catalina Park. Make-up, props, dancing bodies, incredibly high platforms and great passion for these fiestas – all of this is what these drag queens displayed, as the stars for more than 20 years now of these celebrations, and the flagship for the tolerance and transgression that these carnival celebrations always uphold.

The grand finale was broadcast internationally by the Nova channel. It was also broadcast on the internet, with its Atresplayer platform, and the regional television platform, Televisión Canaria. For over two hours the Drag Queen Gala was a trending topic worldwide on Twitter (#DragQueenLPGC) and the centre of attention for television viewers and people using the social networks. The show that everyone enjoyed at Santa Catalina was absolutely first class and the competition was fierce.

Pedro Bethencourt Guerra, Drag Chuchi, carried off the winner’s sceptre with a costume called Repite mi nombre (Repeat My Name). Drag Noa (the only woman competing), Drag Qurón, Drag Vulcano and Drag Múlciber were also prizewinning finalists. Eastern cultures, current political affairs, the world of superheroes and children’s tales: these were some of the themes chosen by the drag queens for their provocative dance numbers. And Santa Catalina, after the customary speedy process of selling tickets (the tickets sold out very shortly after going on sale at the box office and over the internet), rose to its feet to applaud a show which boasted the great Carlinhos Brown as the master of ceremonies. Long live the Drag Queen Gala!


All hail the Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival Royalty!

A popular celebration, a costume party, and a date with the grandest shows. Every year, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival celebrates its galas on an iconic stage risen for the occasion in Santa Catalina Park – heart of the city bordered by the Port of La Luz and Las Palmas, and Las Canteras Beach. This 2019, the Gran Canarian capital pays tribute to Brazil’s notorious festivities with its theme, ‘A Night in Rio’, and Santa Catalina becomes the melting pot where these two cities fuse into the set for its most emblematic contests.

Little over two weeks in, the city has already chosen its Carnival Queen, Erika Echuaca Sebe, who was crowned for her ensemble under the fantasy Volar sin Alas (Flying without wings). The elegant candidate, a second-generation immigrant, will represent Las Palmas de Gran Canaria at tourist promotion events overseas along with Pedro Bethencourt Guerra –also known as Drag Chuchi–, the winner of the world-renowned Drag Queen Gala who over the last few years (included 2019) has been a global trending topic on Twitter and in the limelight for fans worldwide thanks to social media and television. It’s no mystery why tickets get sold out so quickly.

Chuchi took the stage with her show Repite mi nombre (Repeat my name), which ultimately gave her the winning sceptre and the right to participate in the Grand Parade that the city celebrates on 9 March 9. Everyone will be there; even the Carnival Queen and another royal figure that is a living representation of the importance of these festivities in the Gran Canarian capital.

We’re talking about Luisa Lozano, the Grand Dame of the A Night in Rio Carnival, dressed in Stampa do Brasil, a design fit for the 2019 Carnival. The Junior Queen, Náyade Pérez Castro, with her Mexican-themed fantasy, Serenata para usted, cosita linda (A Serenade for You, pretty thing), led the mass Junior Parade on 5 March, Carnival Tuesday. Both junior and veteran are also part of the Carnival’s great hall of fame.

These reigns are a celebration of all the people that participate intensely in Carnival: designers, sponsors, and contestants who have been working all year for the throne. Although, we shouldn’t forget another key figure in Carnival: all the people showing off their best costumes in Santa Catalina.


Tips for a great weekend (and a long one) at the Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival

The A Night in Rio Carnival, which is being celebrated in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria this 2019, has a weekend that features big in its diary: an intense weekend… and a long one. From Friday 1 March until Tuesday 5, the fiesta holds the events best known outside the Canaries, and it starts its nights of celebration with concerts, carrying on with the celebration of the Daytime Carnival, and even has a great parade devoted to children. If you’re in the city at this time of year, you can’t miss the Carnival, a “fiesta of tourist interest” which visitors find enthralling.

Fiesta nights

The area around Santa Catalina (at the rear of the Park) will hold its fiesta nights with concerts, starting at 10.30 pm at night. They’ll be on Friday 1 March (with performances from local groups), Saturday 2 (with more music and a unique Cock fight – Freestyle Rap) and Monday 4 (Carnival Monday, which includes a performance from a Queen tribute group). These are nights of fun out in the street, in amongst the crowd and the fancy dress.

Nights that also follow on from the great Carnival Galas: the Gala to select the Carnival Queen (Friday 1, at 9 pm) and the internationally famous Preselection Gala and the Drag Queen Gala (Saturday 2 and Monday 4, at 9 pm). The tickets offered by the organising committee for these events are already sold out, although the area around the events, at Santa Catalina, is always very lively.

Celebrations in the classic city

As well as this, the old city resumes the fiesta on Saturday 2, with a daytime celebration in Triana’s Calle Mayor (a leading commercial area) and the Traditional Carnival on the night of Monday 4 (where everyone dresses in white and throws talcum powder at each other in recollection of the Indianos, emigrants who made their fortunes in America before returning home, in a party which the Casa de La Palma started to organise as a tribute to the great traditional celebration which takes place on that island every year.)

Santa Catalina, in the daytime

The Park, the heart of the Carnival in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, doesn’t go quiet during the day. There will be celebrations in the sunlight on Saturday 2 March from 12 pm onwards (at 5 pm, Las Canteras will also have a little sample of the Carnival on that same day), on Sunday 3 March and on Carnival Tuesday, 4 March, with Carlinhos Brown in concert (free entry).

The Children’s Parade

Finally, on Carnival Tuesday again, the great children’s parade features on the programme, winding its way from the Castillo de La Luz (the city’s old fortress defending it from pirate attacks) to Santa Catalina. Groups of children and prizewinners from the Children’s Carnival take part … and a crowd full of families with large numbers of children in fancy dress. This will be from 5 pm onwards, and at 7 pm the Park will be the venue for a grand fiesta for the little ones.

How to get around

The city offers an extensive public transport network with the Guaguas Municipales bus company, which covers journeys between the two ends of the city, Vegueta and the Port (the area in which Santa Catalina is located), with routes that include 12, 17 and 1; visitors can pay the driver directly, at a fare of €1.40, or buy a bus pass (bono de guagua) at newsagents or at the Guaguas Municipales points of sale in the Santa Catalina Park and the Pérez Galdós Theatre area. You can also get around by bike, with the public bicycle hire service, Sitycleta. Or by taxi. In addition, visitors can take a tour on the City Sightseeing bus, with its main stop in Santa Catalina.

Where to eat

Both Vegueta and the Santa Catalina and Las Canteras area are full of eating places frequented by the locals. On festival nights the Carnival refreshment stands provide quicker solutions. Bear in mind that in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, as an urban destination, there do not tend to be places specifically for tourists: the natives mix freely with visitors in bars and restaurants.


Celebrate Carnival in the daytime too in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria

The second week of the A Night in Rio Carnival in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria features two types of groups: murgas and comparsas. These groups will be competing throughout the week in Santa Catalina Park to win the prizes for best performance and best costumes; they make up no small part of the popular identity of these festivities.

The murgas, with their critical and acidic, yet humorous songs, define themselves as the very expression of the Carnival: the target of the subjects they touch on is more often than not the establishment. They take on the traditional Carnival job of criticising issues which cannot always be broached in the same way over the rest of the year, although nowadays that is not so much the case. The contest, with a huge level of participation, holds its heats over this week. The final will be on Saturday 23 February; the tickets which go on sale always sell out. But entrance to the last of the heats, on Wednesday 20 February (8.30 pm), is free.

The comparsas, in turn, vie with each other on Friday 22 February, in a competition with a strong tradition; the groups throw all their passion into their participation. Admission to this final is free (9 pm).

Vegueta Daytime Celebration

Visitors, though, can begin to enjoy things already this weekend with the famous Vegueta Daytime Carnival (on Saturday 23 February from 12 pm), with music a-plenty and heaving with people in the historic quarter of the city: this is one of the festivities’ biggest events, and it’s a must if you’re in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria on these dates. It’s the first of various daytime celebrations: others will take place in Triana and in Santa Catalina (see schedule).

Dog Carnival and Santa Catalina Park Fiesta

To give an example, the celebration that will take place in Santa Catalina Park on Sunday 24 February, from 3 pm onwards. Before that, and on the same stage in the park, there is a Dog Carnival at 12 pm (free admission), an increasingly popular event: another of the Las Palmas de Gran Canaria Carnival attractions for the visitor, which is also fun for all the family. You can’t miss the day when dogs come out in fancy dress!

Getting around

The city offers an extensive public transport network with the Guaguas Municipales bus company, which covers journeys between the two ends of the city, Vegueta and the Port (the area in which Santa Catalina is located), with routes that include 12, 17 and 1; visitors can pay the driver directly, at a fare of €1.40, or buy a bus pass (bono de guagua) at newsagents or at the Guaguas Municipales points of sale in the Santa Catalina Park and the Pérez Galdós Theatre area. You can also get around by bike, with the public bicycle hire service, Sitycleta. Or by taxi. In addition, visitors can take a tour on the City Sightseeing bus, with its main stop in Santa Catalina.

Where to eat

On the days of the Daytime Carnival, the choice of places to eat is wide, both in the historic quarter of the city and in the area around the Santa Catalina Park, or nearby, in Las Canteras. Inside the park there are also different food stalls and little eateries. Visitors can find good quality food, featuring both international or local cuisines, and to suit all pockets; all of these places are frequented by locals too.