Canary Islands Christmas 2006

Here we are in Easter Week and already, our visitors have
shown that they are beginning to think of Christmas 2006 in
the Canary Islands. Of course, one has to make travel plans
in advance, so here are some ideas for you:

Christmas week is said to be the busiest week of the entire
year for tourism in Tenerife. As Christmas Day 2006 will
fall on a Monday, the busiest day for arrivals at the
airport is likely to be the Friday, December 22nd, with a
few more coming on Sunday, December 24th.

Traditional Christmas, Only Warmer ...
and Someone Else Cooks!

If what you want is a British-style Christmas - turkey and
stuffing - with added sun, then you can have that. Many of
the British bars in the resorts put on a Christmas Lunch.
Better ones may require reservations, so make that a
priority on the night you arrive. With satellite TV
available almost everywhere, you can probably still catch
the Queen's Speech too.

If, for a change, you want to catch the King of Spain's
Christmas Message, first you'll need to understand Spanish,
of course, but that is broadcast on Christmas Eve. If you
follow the religious traditions, check out the church in Los
Cristianos to see if they have a multilingual carol service
on Christmas Eve, as they have been known to do in the past.
It's fun.

Prices for Christmas week itself are at a premium, of
course, but that is probably offset by the fact that you
don't need to worry about Christmas food, gifts and
decorations at home and, it's probably worth it just to have
someone else cook the Christmas Dinner!

If you fall asleep on the beach after your Christmas Lunch,
even at Christmas, prepare to be burnt crisper than an
overdone turkey dinner. Toasted tourist isn't very tasty!

Escape the Traditional Christmas Dinner

If you want to escape the whole "traditional Christmas
Dinner" thing, be warned that you may find restaurants
outside of the resort areas closed on Christmas Day. This is
not because the locals are celebrating, it's because they're
resting from having done so the night before. Christmas Eve
is a family gathering, Christmas Day is for recuperation.

Depending on the weather, many locals will head off up the
mountain on Christmas Day. The 3,718 meter high Mount Teide,
the dormant volcano at Tenerife's heart, does often get
snowcapped for Christmas and is a beautiful sight to behold.
As are the Christmas pine trees, seasonal red poinsettias
and other natural "decorations" you'll see on the way.

The ideal conditions are enough snow to play in, but not too
much to close the roads. You will need warm clothing, but
wrap up, throw snowballs, forget the turkey and trimmings
and snack on churros con chocolate and the odd lumumba (hot
chocolate with brandy) for the non-drivers. Barbie a few
prawns when you get back down to the warm coastal air.

New Year, New Clothes

If local street atmosphere is what you want, you would do
better to wait until New Year, with probably an arrival date
of Friday, December 29th. New Year's Eve sees pretty big
street parties in most towns of any size. In Santa Cruz in
the Plaza de España - and in 2006 the chimes will be
televised from Tenerife - will likely be the location for
the busiest party.

Similarly, the church square in Los Cristianos is usually
rocking. Wherever the party, you'll need 12 grapes to eat
along with the chimes. These will be followed by really
superb fireworks displays and either a band or a disco until
around dawn. New clothes are mandatory - this is another
tradition to bring good luck - party hats optional.

Canary Islands Christmas, Like the Canarians Do

But, if you want to see local traditions and celebrate the
season in the Canary Islands, as the Canarians do, then you
need to be here on the evening of January 5th. That date in
2007, is a Friday, so depending on the times of flights, you
may need to have arrived the week before on Friday, December
29th or on the Tuesday, January 2nd, 2007.

In either case, you may actually save money by waiting until
after Christmas week itself, so this offers the best value,
both in seeing something new and getting away from the
January cold. Knowing what I know now, if I had to choose
just one event out of the Christmas Season in the Canary
Islands, I'd choose to be here for this celebration.

What you can expect to find are Los Reyes Magos - The Three
Kings. This is when gifts are brought to children in the
Canary Islands and is the biggest date of the entire winter
holiday season, with parades through the streets in most
towns, large and small. We have a full account of the
parade, along with photos from Los Reyes 2006 in Garachico,
so that you can get an idea of what is involved. It beats
Santa in entertainment value any day!

And no, you don't need to bring or be a kid to enjoy it.
Nobody's granny misses it, but you'll also find that the
local teenagers attend, willingly, without losing their
"street cred". :)

Of course, you can see any of this if you stay on the south
of the island, where most of the tourist accommodation is.
You only need to go to Los Cristianos for one of the biggest
New Year's Eve parties or one of the most spectacular
parades of The Three Kings.

Alternatively, choose to stay in Puerto de la Cruz. The
weather may not be quite so warm as the south, but there
will be all the authentic celebrations right in the town
itself.

To really be in the thick of it, with ringside seats, so to
speak, the pageant at the end of the Three Kings parade in
Garachico is held in the very same square as the Hotel La
Quinta Roja, a restored 16th Century mansion. Just a couple
of streets around the corner and only a hundred or so years
later in construction, is the Hotel San Roque. Having seen
various Three Kings parades in different towns around
Tenerife, Garachico's is still my favorite. Not too big, not
to small, but with lots of atmosphere in glorious
surroundings.


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Read more articles on Christmas in the Canary Islands.
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