MEASURES are going to be in place to allow for safe festivities during the night of San Juan in Marbella, which will take place on June 23.
The regulations establish a series of special safety, environmental and coexistence measures, with the aim of guaranteeing the safety of one of the busiest festivities of the year.
The councillor delegate of the area, has detailed that controlled bonfires will be allowed on several beaches of the municipality.
Specifically, the authorised places are San Pedro Alcantara, Nueva Andalucia, El Cable, El Pinillo, Alicate and Real de Zaragoza, including specific locations such as Los Tamarindos square and the surroundings of the Siroco beach bar.
Bonfires will be lit on many marbella beaches. (Photo: Pixabay)
In addition, beach bars will be able to light bonfires in their locations, but they have to be extinguished and removed by 4am on June 24.
Among the conditions established in the decree, it’s specified that only wood may be used as fuel, and the burning of plastics, glass or other polluting or dangerous materials is strictly prohibited.
JUST outside of Spain’s capital, you’ll find vast agricultural lands, rolling hills and history all to be enjoyed with some of the country’s best wine in hand.
To the southeast of Madrid, you’ll find the Las Vegas and Alcarria regions, made up of municipalities such as Aranjuez, Villarejo de Salvanés, and Carabaña.
“These municipalities contribute greatly to its history and generate tourist appeal due to their surroundings, authenticity, and simplicity,” the region’s tourist specialist Soraya Belinchón told 20minutos.
More than half of the wine produced under the Vinos de Madrid sign of origin is grown and made in these two regions.
The landscapes are also covered with olive trees, and you can taste different varieties of the oils produced in ancient olive oil mills. For example, at Oleum Laguna in Villaconejos you can sample different tastes of oils while you are toured around the premises to learn about the production process.
To learn even more about the agriculture of the region, stop by La Almazara, the Olive Oil Museum in Brea de Tajo, where you can also take part in workshops.
Local produce is offered at restaurants throughout the region, many will specifically featuring zero-mile ingredients on the menus where the food was harvested that morning.
As you travel through the regions, you’ll pass through historic villages that offer a glimpse into Spain’s past. White-washed walls, cottages, cave dwellings and Castilian squares all a different sight from bustling Madrid.
Take the Ciempozuelos to Villar del Olmo route and you’ll pass through seas of wheat and waving poppies.
If you enjoy travelling at a slower pace, there are numerous cycling and hiking trails across the regions, where you can pass through orchards, and ride next to the Tajo, Jarama, and Tajuña rivers, stopping for a dip to cool off.
New study reveals surprising results about bedroom habits across the region – but which lesser-known province takes the crown?
WHILE everyone might be rushing to live in Malaga or Cadiz, if you want to be active in the sack then perhaps you should look to one of Andalucia’s lesser-heralded provinces.
Jaen has just been crowned the most sexually active in Andalucia, according to a new national study.
The research, carried out by sexual health experts Diversual in April 2025, has revealed some rather eye-opening statistics about Spain’s bedroom habits.
And the results show that Jaen residents are getting frisky an impressive 8.06 days per month on average – making it not only Andalucia’s randiest province, but the second most active in the entire country.
Only Teruel managed to pip Jaen to the post, with residents there managing 8.10 days of passion per month.
The comprehensive study, based on responses from 4,794 people aged between 18 and over 60, was designed by attractively job-titled sexologists Lucía Jiménez and Bárbara Montes from the Diversual team to analyse multiple aspects of Spanish sexual behaviour.
But it’s not just Jaen flying the flag for Andalucia.
The region as a whole is clearly keeping busy between the sheets, with six out of eight provinces scoring well above the national average of 6.3 days per month.
After Jaen’s impressive showing, Malaga comes in second place within Andalucia with 7.11 days monthly, followed closely by Granada at 7.07 days.
Almería and Cadiz are tied at 7.06 days each, whilst Huelva records a respectable 6.84 days per month.
Sevilla, perhaps surprisingly given its size and nightlife reputation, sits at 6.56 days monthly.
Meanwhile, Cordoba brings up the rear as Andalucia’s least amorous province, with just 5.30 days per month – the only Andalucian province to fall below the national average.
At a national level, the top five most sexually active provinces are Teruel, Jaen, Caceres (8.01 days), Ciudad Real (7.88 days), and Avila (7.79 days).
Poor old Girona languishes at the bottom of the table with just five days of activity per month.
So whether you’re a long-term Andalucian resident or considering a move to Spain’s steamiest region, it seems the south is definitely where the action is. Just remember – it’s not a competition… or is it?
SPANISH doctors downed tools today – the first nationwide strike in five years – as medics across the country protested what they describe as ‘precarious working conditions.’
Protesters in the Canary Islands carried banners reading ‘Exploited doctor, mistreated patient’ and ‘Deficient staffing, risk to patients.’
At the heart of the dispute is the government’s proposed framework regulating working conditions for health service staff.
The medical unions argue it fails to recognise the unique nature of medical work and perpetuates poor conditions that have persisted for decades.
Doctors and medical professionals protesting in Tenerife. Picture: Medicos Tenerife
Carmen Truyols, an anaesthesiology specialist at a Madrid public hospital, delivered a damning assessment of current working conditions during protests outside the Spanish parliament.
“We continue in conditions not just from 2003, but from more than 50 years ago,” she told demonstrators, adding that doctors are working in what amounts to a ‘regime of slavery.’
The strike led to the suspension of all non-urgent surgical operations across participating hospitals, with emergency services maintained to ensure patient safety.
One doctor at Vigo’s Álvaro Cunqueiro hospital confirmed that ‘all surgical interventions have been suspended except emergencies,’ with similar situations reported at medical centres nationwide.
The strike saw varying levels of support across Spain’s regions, with some areas reporting participation rates as high as 95% whilst others recorded much lower figures.
In the Valencia region, strike organisers claimed between 80 and 100% participation depending on the province, with Castellón seeing 90 % support, Alicante between 95 and 100%, and Valencia around 80%. The Balearic Islands reported ‘massive’ support with hospital participation reaching 85-90%.
However, the Basque Country saw significantly lower participation, with just under 10% of doctors in the Osakidetza health service joining the action.
The local medical union there said the call to strike had arrived ‘too late’ for proper organisation.
Doctors are particularly angry about proposed mandatory exclusivity requirements for specialists in their first five years of public service, as well as for department heads and coordinators.
They argue this creates a professional classification system that ‘equates them with other graduates, devaluing the specific training and responsibility of their profession.’
The medical profession is also frustrated by the omission of any reference to retirement regulation or the counting of on-call hours for pension purposes, issues that have been longstanding concerns for overworked hospital staff.
Health Minister Mónica García has defended the proposed statute, claiming it ‘will respond to the needs of professionals’ whilst keeping dialogue open with all unions.
However, the strength of yesterday’s action suggests significant opposition remains within the medical community.
The dispute has broader backing beyond the striking unions, with support from the Medical Profession Forum, which brings together major sector organisations including the General Council of Official Medical Colleges and the Spanish Federation of Medical Scientific Associations.
For Spain’s foreign residents who rely on the public health system, the strike highlights ongoing pressures within Spanish healthcare that could affect service quality and availability.
The medical unions are demanding not just better working conditions but also reduced weekly hours, better work-life balance, and proper recognition of the demanding nature of medical work.
The last national doctors’ strike took place five years ago, making yesterday’s action a significant escalation in the ongoing dispute over healthcare working conditions in Spain.