29 September 2013

The Rosary of Aurora

On September 22 the Rosary of Aurora (La Rosario de la Aurora) was held in Tomares, in the metropolitan area of Seville. The statue of Our Lady of Sorrows (La Virgen de los Dolores) was carried in procession through the town to the Parish Church of Our Lady of Bethlehem (La Iglesia Parroquia de Nuestra Señora de Belén) for the pleasure and enjoyment of the members of the congregation, the penitents of the Sacramental Brotherhood of Tomares (La Hermandad Sacramental de Tomaresand the guests. 
Our Lady of Sorrows of the Parish Church of Tomares. Photo by José Manzano

The Hail Mary Prayer (Dios te salve, María) was breathtakingly sung by all present:

Hail Mary,
Full of Grace,
The Lord is with thee.
Blessed art thou among women,
and blessed is the fruit
of thy womb, Jesus.
Holy Mary,
Mother of God,
pray for us sinners now,
and at the hour of death.
Amen. 

And it was very solemn and beautiful, as all the processions tend to be in Tomares, in fact. Watch the video by José Javier Comas Rodríguez here and see for yourself!

28 September 2013

When they happen to strike

It's a nuisance when there's a general strike of transport workers in Seville, but it's even worse when there's one hitting refuse collection, street cleaning and other services of the kind. You can always see the streets a bit messy, but with the waste collectors and street cleaning workers on strike, you start seeing them in a real chaos. And, the more stubborn and consistent they are, the messier and smellier it gets. 
Meanwhile in Nervion, on my way to work

People in outdoor cafés not caring about the strike time discomfort. Photo by the news site El País

Street cleaning

It was heavily raining, when I woke up this morning. Now, it wasn't the rain that was the problem. A noisy street cleaning truck was loud enough to wake me. And yes, it was washing the street while it was raining. No surprise, though, it happens every time. As a municipal worker you don't question your duties, you follow orders exactly.

Cleaning workers hosing down the steets. Photo by the news site ABCdesevilla.es

The street cleaning service in Seville provides regular mechanical sweeping and washing of streets on a scheduled basis to produce clean roadways, parking lots and walking spaces. Generally, there's no manual sweeping undertaken - any outdoor surface is to be cleaned by water and other detergents. And, there are no street flushers used on the vehicle-free paved areas for pedestrian use as there's hardly any litter picking. The street flushers are used to wash the fine dust material that remains on the road surface after the mechanical street sweepers have finished removing all the loads of dog mess and litter; from food, plastic carrier bags and bottles, empty snack bags and sweet wrappers to cigarette butts. The jet-washing of streets is a considerable source of waste in local government spending, seeing that it's done using large street cleaning water trucks with high-pressure hoses and wasting tons of water in the process. The municipalities invest, without a second thought, in modern equipment to jet wash the steets and public areas known to be used frequently. All the parts of city, continuing all over the metropolitan area, have standard rubbish bins on the streets. At least that's something, although you can't separate recyclables from other solid waste. Furthermore, waste collectors collect the waste every day and cleaning workers jet wash the streets down every single night, which for me is a waste in human resource and time, since, too often, people are careless and sloppy with no regard for the impact of their behaviour on the street environment and esthetics. Spending time with friends and family in outdoor cafés or wherever, an incredible amount of rubbish is left on the streets. No particular attention is paid to pets walked outside either, so the streets are literally covered in dog mess. Shift in mentality would work wonders for Sevillians.

Washing of containers. Image taken from the official website of Carmona

Washing of tools and equipment. Photo by the open public tenders' site desevilla.org

Wasting in human resources and energy. Photo by the open public tenders' site desevilla.org

As the sign says, potable water is not used for this work. Photo by Carlos Navarro Antolín

27 September 2013

Andalusian folk songs by Antonio Mairena

Here you have some YouTube videos of Antonio Mairena perfoming Andalusian folk art with Gypsy influence (flamenco). 
Por Malagueñas: 


Por Fandangos:


Por Cantiñas:

Gypsy songs by Antonio Mairena

Antonio Cruz García (1909-1983), known as Antonio Mairena, was a noted flamenco singer (cantaor) from Mairena del Alcor, born in a Gypsy family. In his twenties he moved to Seville, where he quickly began to gain fame as a true artist. Antonio Mairena worked with many talented flamenco guitarists (tocaores); like Sevillians Niño Ricardo; Eduardo El de La MalenaPedro Peña, El Lebrijano's brother; Melchor de Marchena and Enrique de Melchor, father and son; Cordovan Juan Muñoz "El Tomate"; Manuel Moreno from Jerez; and, Paco Aguilera from Barcelona.

Antonio Mairena in the Pureza Street (Triana, Seville). Image taken from Garrancho's blog 

Antonio Mairena spending time with cantaores Pepe Torre, El Chocolate and Pepe Pinto. Image taken from Garrancho's blog

Antonio Mairena was a really productive cantaor. There's a wide variety of his work available on the Internet, which is why I divide it into two to present it to you in parts. First, below you have some YouTube videos of him perfoming pure Gypsy folk art (Cante Jondo).

Por Bulerías:


Por Soleá:


Por Seguiriyas:


Por Tangos-Tientos:


Por Tonás, Martinetes y Livianas:


Por Romances:

25 September 2013

Car vs public transport

Having or not a private car in Seville is not a social status issue, but a lifestyle that one can choose to lead when deciding how to better reconcile work and family life. Car will win in many cases. Not in my case since I couldn't possibly stand the annoying process of finding a place to leave it and seeing later that it's been parked in. Can you imagine? Having many things to do, but being completely fenced in at the busiest hour, without any hope to get out. No parking culture whatsoever. So, it's trains and buses to work for me.

All these "lovely" dents on sheet metal

 
Parking on pavement and zebra crossing markings. Photos by ABCdesevilla.es

Double-parked cars in the Torneo Street. Photo by Rocio Ruz published on the ABCdesevilla website

Piled cars in the Feria Street. Reported by Noelia Márquez from the news site DiariodeDevilla

Police taking no action against parking double or triple. Image taken from a forum post  on Sevilla 21.com

24 September 2013

The most densely populated cities and towns in Andalusia

Here's a list of Andalusia's most densely populated municipalities, all ranking in the top 20 with nearly 2000 inhabitants per km². The information about the number of inhabitants comes from the census carried out by the National Statistics Institute in 2011, while the area of each municipality has been taken from the National Geographic Institute. Note that the population density of Spain is 92.13 people per km² (see a map on www.populationlabs.com).

Municipality
Density per km² (people)
1. Cádiz
9. Gines
12. Cájar
15. Granada
18. Camas
8,162.9
7,928.2
7,189.7
5,064.3
4,989.5
4,732.2
4,622.6
4,561.5
4,547.9
3,365.0
3,342.2
2,946.2
2,802.4
2,744.9
2,713.0
2,383.4
2,380.1
2,209.4
1,934.1
1,925.7

Most densely populated municipalities in Andalusia. Image taken from Classora's website

The most populous municipalities of Andalusia

Here's a list of Andalusia's cities and towns put in order based on population (2011). Unsurprisingly, the most populated municipalities of Andalusia are in the Guadalquivir valley (due to its agricultural importance) and on the Costa del Sol (due to tourism).

Municipalicy
Population
7. Huelva
10. Cádiz
12. Jaén
18. Mijas
703,021
568,030
328,659
240,099
210,861
190,349
148,918
138,662
127,375
124,892
117,810
116,781
96,894
89,851
88,917
83,774
79,839
79,262
77,004
74,054

Andalusia's most populated municipalities. Image taken from Classora's website

22 September 2013

Seville in its pure awesomeness

No doubt you have been surprised to have had no posts from me lately but I've been in the September mode. The beginning of autumn is such an exhaustingly fun time in Seville. You should jump on the first plane and come and see me. Literally. Come and get your batteries charged! First, it's beautiful here. But there's more, it's still nice and warm and not humid yet at all, which is fantastic. An autumn break to a sunny darling of Europe would do just right. September is a real treat for travellers in search of the less-discovered that the street vibes of Seville certainly are. Not to be missed if you are looking for seeing natural appeal of this place - Andalusians in their element, in the street. Of course, you could also go sightseeing, the postcard views of the metropolitan are stunning, but they only show you the surface. I assure you, you don't want to run around here and there to make sure everything's going as planned. The less plans, the better. Find a bar, grab a drink, sit down, shut up and let you bask in the pure awesomeness (in the true sense of the word) that is the street life in Seville. Take it all in. No neurotic tourism. Enjoy the scenic attractions bathing in the sunshine and relaxing.

Being that I just can't get enough of showing the world the goodies of my beloved city of Seville, here's another set of photos for you to enjoy.


Posted images, like the previous ones, taken from Facebook page Para vivir, yo sólo quiero Sevilla (To live I just want Seville).