Pamplona trip for running of the bulls

823 Views | 10 Replies | Last: 12 yr ago by iloveAP
Flack
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My brother, a good friend of ours, and I want to do the running of the bulls in Pamplona this year.

We are thinking of doing a tour group that stays at a camp site as hotels are insanely expensive and a group will probably be more fun.

Has anyone does this before? Anyone know of any legit tour groups? I'm kind of skeptical of just handing over some money to someone who threw up a website without getting some solid feed back from someone who is not a possible shill.

Any good info, suggestions, or recommendations will be greatly appreciated.
FHKPLEX03
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I've done business with Pamplona Posse before so I know they're trustworthy. They're a couple British guys who have been going down there for years and eventually made a side business of it. They may have something to offer.
drumboy
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Can't speak to the travel groups but I want last year and had a blast. I'm jealous.
Flack
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Did you stay in a hotel? We are also looking at maybe staying in a hostil but even those are pretty expensive.
drumboy
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Yes, we stayed at the Alma Pamplona hotel. Our friends booked it somehow for less than 200 Euro per night and invited us. We couldn't find anything in town for a reasonable price and my wife is really freaking picky about hotels so we ended up crashing in their room. It was a huge room with two small beds and we weren't there much anyway.

If you want tickets for the bull fighting you can either buy them from scalpers (all gypsies) or stand in line with them the day before the fights when they go on sale. I think I remember them going on sale at 7 or 8PM but you'll need to be in line a couple hours early. ~15 minutes before the windows open a few gypsies will cut each line and if you start shlt with one you'll have 4 more people to deal with. We got the cheapest seats for around 22 Euro each and even though they weren't the shaded seats we were in the shade for about half of it.

Here's the view:


You will look like this afterwards cause those fools throw Sangria early & often. Oh yeah, if you yell 'Happy Birthday' at someone people will throw Sangria at them. If you use your phone during the fights people will throw fruit at you. (I wish we did this at football games)


One last thing, if you're going to run with the bulls you have to be in the paddock area by some old church early. We were just waiting in the street thinking that was cool until cops started clearing everyone off. My buddy talked to a cop and told us that we needed to be way up the street so we sprinted maybe 10 blocks and squeezed between the wood rail thing and got it. Smelliest mass of people I've ever experienced cause half of those fools are sleeping in parks or campgrounds.
Flack
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Thanks for the post. I think a hostil might be better than a tour group that stays at a camp ground... hadn't considered the BO factor.
iloveAP
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I helped out a tour company with the beginning 3 days of San Fermin in 2012. Although it was a cool experience, it was also totally insane and like nothing I've ever experienced. Imagine a drunk night on stinky/dirty Bourbon St. or a drunk, muddy time at something like Chilifest...and then multiply that by a lot.

The need for a tour company depends on what kind of travelers you are. It can easily be done without and would likely save you lots of money. I wouldn't have spent money on the tour company that I was helping out, except the cool thing was they had an apartment on Calle Estafeta, which is on the route of the encierro each morning. The apartment had two balconies so I had a sweet view of it all. The crappy thing was it was so.damn.loud the entire time because the party is all hours of the day and night...let's just say I didn't any sleep until I was on the train leaving Pamplona heading to Madrid!

Only those of us working with the company slept (or tried to) at the apartment. The guests stayed at a hotel a good distance away from the craziness, so it was quiet where they were. They did, however, get to come to the apartment to watch the bulls run, watch it on tv, eat breakfast, etc. as it was set up as a hospitality room.

Some other things we (as guides) did with the guests: greeted them upon arrival and helped get them to their hotel, took them on a walking tour of the area the day before opening ceremonies (before the streets were full), had a happy hour/dinner their first night there, hospitality room at the apartment, went to the bull fight together, was a point of contact with anything else they needed/wanted help with. A t-shirt, red scarf, canteen, bullfight tickets and not sure what else were included in the package. There were I think 3 waves of guests that came for about 3-4 days at a time, so some were there for the beginning, some during the middle, and some for the end.

That being said, and of course depending on what kind of travelers you are, you could easily do this trip without a tour company. You should book a hostel, hotel, something. Although there are many people that sleep on the ground, on park benches, etc., at some point, a bed, bathroom and shower might be nice. Although many people use the streets as a bathroom - no joke. It's gross and smelly (worse that stinky Bourbon St.!). The bus system in Pamplona is really easy to use. You can easily take a bus from the train station to get to your hostel/hotel, or a nearby stop and walk some. There are also taxis you could always use. There are TONS of places to buy red/white clothing if you don't come prepared or want something that specifically says Pamplona or San Fermin on it. You can buy bullfight tickets once you're there. You just might not have a cool balcony view of the encierro. Obviously, if you're running, you're street level, but even if you're not running (or you want to watch the first morning and wait to run the next) you can buy an inexpensive ticket to be inside the arean for when the bulls run and arrive in the morning.

Make sure you have your train tickets purchased in advance because they'll be sold out with people leaving Pamplona...in other words, don't expect to be able to arrive to the train station when you're ready to leave Pamplona and just buy a ticket and go. Buy it at the station or online ahead of time.

As for packing...anything you take to be worn during San Fermin, plan on it getting dirty, stained from sangria, and leaving behind! Take white pants/shorts, white shirts, red bandanas/scarves, a hat (for sun and/or keep sangria from getting in your eyes, hair or all over your face!), sneakers that you're prepared to ditch - they will be GROSS after walking the streets of Pamplona! The most brilliant hat I saw when there was one of those miniature umbrella hats. Money belt to wear under your clothing - you won't want to carry any sort of bag/purse with you if you plan to walk the super crowded streets. Maybe a draw-string bag, something that's small and you can keep close on your body. Zip-locs for your phone/camera (even if in your pocket) - there's a great chance you'll take a sangria shower at some point.

Be sure to look up the rules for running...some are pretty specific and you have to be in certain places in the morning in order to get in. You're not supposed to have any kind of camera, phone, go pro, can't be (too) drunk, etc. So just check the website and I think they have rules posted near the route. If you have any questions, feel free to email me! (goldentista03 AT gmail DOT com). Good luck!
Flack
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Hey thanks for the post, I sent you an email
AggieOO
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quote:
You will look like this afterwards cause those fools throw Sangria early & often


its not sangria. its kalimotxo.

when i went, i just slept in the park...there were hundreds of people camping in the park.

[This message has been edited by AggieOO (edited 3/18/2014 11:57a).]
Seven Costanza
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moses1084ever
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quote:
paddock area


Are you Australian????
iloveAP
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quote:
Don't worry about bringing the white pants/shirt or red bandana/sash; you can buy them there for almost nothing. You're going to put it in the trash before you go home anyway, because it will smell like urine and BO by the time you leave (as does the entire town).

Agreed, you can easily buy red/white clothes and accessories for super cheap in Pamplona, but if you pack it and bring it with you, that's one less thing to mess with once you arrive. And depending on when you arrive in Pamplona, the absolute crazy might have already begun. Your clothes will definitely be disgusting and you'll want nothing more than to leave it behind, no doubt. And then catch a train to San Sebastián and relax on the beach!
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