Las Fallas was a great experience I will never forget. Every person in the city is in on this. The main events run from March 15 to March 19, but numerous events take place in the nights leading up to this week.
The first of many "mascletàs," as five straight minutes of window-rattling firecracker explosions are set off on March 1st in the Plaza del Ayuntamiento- simply a signal that it's almost party time.
The real action kicks into high gear on the night of March 15th-16th, when the falleros have exactly one night to erect the elaborate and towering Ninot Fallas.You may be asking yourself exactly what is a "falla?" Each year, teams of local artists, designers and architects slave away for months designing and constructing brand-new, giant and elaborate structures of wood and papier-maché.
these massive structures stand up to 15 meters (nearly 50 feet) high and can cost as much as €120,000! Appearing in cartoon-like form, the groups of figures depicted in the fallas are usually of both an ornamental and satirical nature, and are used to make a humorous comment about local, national or international events, personalities or characters from the past year.
Between March 16th and March 19th, herds of locals and tourists gaze up wide-eyed at the hundreds of incredibly crafted fallas, while judges and the falleros themselves award prizes to the cream of the crop. The top falla is then saved from the events of the March 19th and forever preserved in the Museo Fallero (Las Fallas Museum).
What happens on March 19th? When the clock strikes midnight, the Ninots - yes, those elaborate, expensive structures that took months to create - are set ablaze one-by-one in possibly the largest legal pyrotechnic event on earth! The event is not only a one-of-a-kind spectacle, but it also serves as a cleansing activity and a way to say "adios" to the past years events. read more