The first you thing you should know is that there are rules in Colombia. The second is that nobody actually follows them. Nowhere was this as clear as Villa de Leyva during the Festival of Lights.
Home to just over 4,000 inhabitants, the town was heaving when we arrived after a 4-hour bus ride from Bogota. Although there was a light drizzle, the streets were packed with visitors, and there was a buzz about the place. We had come expecting a low-key village celebration, but it was clear this was something bigger.
We camped in the back garden of a hotel two blocks from the main plaza- Colombia’s largest.
Friday night passed quietly; since the big festivities were Saturday, we decided to zip up our sleeping bags early. The next morning it was obvious others hadn’t shared our foresight. Returning to the plaza, there were teenagers sleeping on the cobbles with empty bottles of aguardiente (Colombia’s aniseed-flavoured alcohol) as pillows.
We spent Saturday walking up one of the mountains near town. A steady climb took us past farms and increasingly isolated homes, until we reached the top. The view extended past the tiny village to red and brown-tinted mountains across the valley. Returning, we came across bizarre formations that I can only describe as brain coral on land.
Back in town, the morning’s hangover had lifted, and the people were back into party mode. Buildings were lit up, music blared out of every doorway, and once again the alcohol was flowing. We wandered through the dozens of handicraft shops that populate its streets. Every few minutes or so, the electric grid gave in to the demands placed upon it, and the entire town was plunged into temporary darkness. This happened five times in an hour, and each power outage followed a similar pattern. The lights went off, followed by a few screams, and then brief silence accompanied the complete darkness. Next came nervous laughter and murmuring until the lights returned, the music rang out again, and everybody shouted their approval.
The real chaos, however, began later in the plaza. Hundreds of people crammed around the enormous square, awaiting the festival’s eponymous light show. After a delay of over an hour (one of Colombia’s few rules that is unfailingly followed) the bedlam began. South American equivalents to Catherine’s wheels erupted in each corner of the plaza, spewing explosives in every direction. Children as young as five were throwing bottle rockets into the centre, and if they didn’t detonate to their liking they chased after them and investigate the bottle like Wile E. Coyote. These were a prelude to the main fireworks.
In every pyrotechnic event I’ve attended, the fireworks have been detonated at a safe distance from the crowd, to be enjoyed but not necessarily interacted with. Villa de Leyvans are made of sterner stuff. The fireworks were lit and shot in the square, maybe 50 yards from the crowd. As everybody else ooh-ed and aah-ed, my girlfriend and I ran for cover under the eaves of the surrounding buildings. The light show at such a precarious distance was spectacular, if a little terrifying. Afterwards, there was live music, which, along with the beer, helped soothe our nerves. By the morning, we were able to laugh at the ashes on our tent, a reminder of the previous night’s peril.
This is great, Tyson, I feel as if I've been there myself! I enjoy your narrative style, it makes for easy reading. Thanks and I'm looking forward to the next instalment
ReplyDeleteI followed your link after you kindly replied to my query about honeymooning in Colombia on the Guardian travel website.... and I am incredibly impressed! A fantastic blog, and an even more amazing travelling experience. Thank you for sharing and getting me even more excited about our forthcoming adventure
ReplyDeleteSimon & Marissa
UUUULLLLLLTTTTTTRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAA GGGGGGGGGGAAAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYYY
ReplyDeletechristan in spanish class wrote that hes gay
ReplyDeleteit wasnt me i told on the guy who did that
ReplyDeletejosh beesly lives in glen rose texas hes mexican
ReplyDelete