The Nit de les Ánimes was postponed because of a storm — today lanterns, children's face painting and an intense correfoc come together in Parc Sa Riera. A good opportunity to ask: Are our festivals weatherproof enough?
Night of Souls today in Parc Sa Riera: When tradition meets severe weather
The small-town atmosphere of Palma smells today of wet pavement and hot chocolate. After the heavy storm in recent days the Nit de les Ánimes was moved outdoors — or rather to a new date: From 4:30 PM today Parc Sa Riera fills with lanterns, craft tables and children's face painting. The city sensibly postponed the event. But that very postponement raises a larger question: How resilient are our local festivals against extreme weather?
Family evening with lanterns — and a spark of excitement
Strolling along the park paths you hear drums, children's laughter and the occasional clatter of umbrellas. It is a typical Mallorcan scene: neighbors leaning over hot chestnuts, parents trying to manage face painting without stains, and teenagers parading down the avenue with homemade lanterns. The family part of the evening is simple and well organized — lantern workshops, participatory activities and a quiet corner for the little ones are ideal for passing on the tradition.
The real highlight remains the Correfoc, the fire run. Fire figures, showers of sparks and drum rhythms create atmosphere and adrenaline at the same time. Here, too, romance and risk sit close together. Barriers and stewards are present, but on wet grass conditions change quickly — slippery paths, damp protective clothing, flickering fire pits.
The key question: Are postponements and warning signs enough?
The short-term rescheduling was the right move. But postponements are only a short-term answer. The central question remains: Will we plan more proactively in the future? In many municipalities procedures work well — but in other cases generators, weatherproof stages or alternative venues are scarce. This is not a theoretical debate. As rain and storms increase, cultural events are particularly vulnerable. A festival should no longer be a gamble.
There are concrete measures that are often neglected: permanent emergency checklists for outdoor events, mobile canopies for craft stalls, certified fire zones for Correfoc groups and mandatory protective clothing for participants. Equally important are clear communication chains: announcements, SMS alerts and updated social media feeds that inform visitors in time. Volunteers and stewards need regular training — not just on the day of the event.
What the city could do better
Some possible steps: a small dedicated fund for the restoration of park areas after storms; a shared rental pool for weatherproof stages and tents that municipalities can use together; stricter requirements for pyrotechnic props in the Correfoc and mandatory safety checks before performances. Also long-term measures: improved drainage at event sites so lawns don't turn into mud for weeks.
That may sound bureaucratic — but it's pragmatic. Tradition lives from repetition and reliability. If parents can be sure that lantern festivals will take place without the next storm sweeping everything away, the tradition stays alive. If residents see that the city not only reacts but plans ahead, trust in public events grows.
Practical tips for visitors today
Come early if you want good spots. Wear sturdy shoes — Parc Sa Riera has sandy paths and wet patches. Keep your distance from cordoned-off areas during the Correfoc and follow the stewards' instructions. No sparklers for children, no selfie stunts right in front of the fire figures. And if you have a blanket: perfect for a break with hot chocolate while drums carry the evening.
In the end the Nit de les Ánimes is more than an event: it is a moment when community becomes visible. But community needs planning — not just heart. If we close the small and large safety gaps, we can preserve old rituals even in stormier times. I'll be in the park today with a thermos and one eye on the sparks. See you later under the lanterns.
Read, researched, and newly interpreted for you: Source
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