#Pamplona Tips Sleep-Watch-Party San Fermin Festival

Pamplona running of the bulls 2012 all inclusive tour packages: 3 nights Accommodation + Balcony + Bullfight from €585 per person! Email us

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Pamplona Running of the Bulls Tours

Pamplona Running of the Bulls Tours 2011

via Pamplona Running of the Bulls Tours.

Re-living Pamplona (via Bandi’s Blog)

It gets cold in the early morning & late at night?

Re-living Pamplona Ever since I first read Ernest Hemingway's "Sun Also Rises" as a schoolboy, I have been fascinated by the July feria in Pamplona. I have been devoted to Hemingway and his writing since encountering the Nick Adam … Read More

via Bandi's Blog

winner-goes-to-san-fermin-festival-2011-online-video-competition

Hi all, just found this interesting competition where the winners get a free trip to pamplona running of the bulls 2011.

“Are You the Best Bull?” competition will run from March 7, 2011, thru April 18, 2011

  • national competition
  • creative saving of money during the economic downturn
  • All-expense paid trip for 2 people, to Pamplona Running of the Bulls 2011, Spain
  • 60 seconds Youtube videos

From:http://www.creditunion.usf.edu/bestbull/

Grab some great offers on Pamplona 2011 Tour Packages

Festival of San Fermin 2011 Midwest Girl

It was a pleasure to read your post Midwest Girl about Festival of San Fermin 2011. As the san fermin festival draws closer it will become more difficult to find pamplona accommodations, balconies & bullfight tickets. By march 2011 everything will be sold out!

 

  • Bucket list
  • Even better have you participated?
  • Am I insane?

 

From: http://midwestgirly.blogspot.com/2011/01/festival-of-san-fermin.html

 

Grab some great offers on Pamplona Tour Packages

 

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/07/08/pamplona-bull-run-injures_n_227684.html

really good pamplona running of the bulls info

http://www.sanfermintravelcentral.com

PAMPLONA, Spain — Four people were slightly injured Wednesday in the second day of the running of the bulls in Pamplona, including a Spaniard poked in the buttocks by a charging beast.

The other victims suffered injuries in the ankle, knee or head as runners dashed through the northern city with six fighting bulls and six steers, hospital spokesman Fernando Boneta said.

The Spaniard was not seriously gored, Virgen del Camino hospital said

The run through the old quarter of this northern Spanish town went off largely without incident. The crowd was bigger than on opening day Tuesday, when Spanish Television estimated the thrillseekers at over 2,000.

The bulls stayed in a pack with for much of the half-mile (850-meter) dash, although at several points animals slipped and fell on the cobblestone streets.

“I saw a bull run right past me. It was like a truck,” said Christian McGuigan, 28, from California.

Added Gerrald Toms, 27 and also Californian: “All I saw was horns, and I ran like crazy.”

The bulls came from the Cebada Gago ranch, which has a reputation for raising fierce animals. They have taken part in the San Fermin festival for 24 straight years and gored 38 people, according to the festival’s web site.

Towards the end of the 2 minute, 30 second run, the crowd was so thick that runners were reduced to trotting with the bulls, rather than sprinting.

http://www.debretts.com/social-season/running-of-the-bulls-pamplona.aspx

Good insight into the San Fermin 2011 festival

http://www.sanfermintravelcentral.com

The narrow cobbled streets of Pamplona‘s old town are the setting for one of the most exhilarating – and deadly – festival events in the world.

The encierro – or Running of the Bulls – is the most famous event in the Fiesta of San Fermin, held each July in the northern Spanish town of Pamplona. It began in the mid-1800s, when runners would herd bulls from corrals on the edge of town to the bullring for the afternoon’s corrida.

Today, anyone is allowed to join in this highly dangerous event, in which 14 people have been killed since 1924 and 200-300 are injured every year. Most people prefer the excitement of watching from the sidelines.

The running takes place at 8am on eight consecutive mornings, taking an average of four minutes over a distance of 848 metres (half a mile). Spectators are protected by double barriers along the route (double so that runners can jump over the first fence if necessary).

To get a good view of the Pamplona Bull Run at street level, you need to stake out a place by the outer barrier at least 90 minutes before the start; otherwise, locals rent out their balconies (20-30 euros a day). Within the bullring, the open terrace is free except at weekends, when it’s 5 euros; a tier or upper tier costs 4 euros (5 at weekends). Firecrackers are set off when the bulls are freed into the streets and once they have been led into their pens in the bullring.

The Fiesta, or Sanfermines, which dates back to medieval times, opens with music and fireworks at noon on 7 July and closes at midnight on 14 July with a candlelit rendition ofPobre de Mí (‘Poor Me‘). In-between are a variety of traditional events honouring St Fermin, a funfair, and general revelry involving lots of sangria – at night the town becomes one big party. The first day is the best: an effigy of the saint is carried through the streets, accompanied by huge puppets, plus dancers and street entertainers.

Chiff.com

yes another great San Fermin article!

PamplonaMan

http://www.sanfermintravelcentral.com

It was American writer Ernest Hemingway who helped spread the word of the tradition in such books as The Sun Also Rises and Death in the Afternoon. Today, increasing numbers of tourists join the crowds in Pamplon

http://www.chiff.com/articles/running-bulls.htm

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