Rincon de la Victoria. Credit: TE en la educación especial/ Creative Commons
Last week, Rincon de la Victoria got its moment in the spotlight.
The usually breezy seaside town near Malaga became the hottest spot in Spain. It clocked some record-breaking autumn temperatures because of the Terral wind. For three days straight, from Monday 20 to Wednesday 22 October, locals roasted in over 30C heat, officially turning their town into Andalusia’s boiling point.
What is Terral, Spain’s weirdest heatwave?
Terral is a notorious wind blowing from land to sea along Spain’s southern coast, especially in Malaga, usually at night or early morning. Unlike normal sea breezes, it drags hot, dry inland air to the coast. That’s basically a desert-mode hairdryer.
And here’s why: land cools faster than the sea at night, making its air denser. That heavy air rushes toward the coast, and as it rolls over Malaga’s mountains, it heats up even more thanks to the Foehn effect.
So what’s happening? You wake up sweating, with zero humidity, no breeze, and a sky so aggressively blue it hurts your eyes.
Hotter than anywhere else in Spain
According to Spain’s national weather agency AEMET, Rincon de la Victoria hit 33.5C last Tuesday (October 21), the highest temperature in the entire country. Even by Wednesday, it was still 32C, keeping Rincon firmly at the top of the national heat charts.
Velez-Malaga wasn’t far behind, though. On 23 October, the Axarquia biggest town nearly melted thermometers with 34.9C, just below Manilva’s 35.5C on the Costa del Sol. Nearby towns like Algarrobo and Coin also joined the club, hovering around 31C.
Nights too hot to sleep
The bad news? It didn’t stop when the sun went down. Rincon de la Victoria logged four tropical nights, when temperatures didn’t dip below 20C. Velez-Malaga had three nights of those, including one so stifling that it barely fell under 28C. Locals joked that they could fry eggs on their balconies, while sleep was called “a lost cause”.
Relief on the horizon
But there’s hope, as always. AEMET forecasts cooler days and the first real autumn rains starting soon, with showers moving in from the Atlantic. The heatwave’s finally set to break, just in time for locals in Axarquia to stop melting and start complaining about normal things, such as the humidity.
Still, for one surreal week in October, Rincon de la Victoria wasn’t just another sunny beach town. It was the hottest place in Spain, and maybe the only one where you could say “too much sun” wasn’t just a joke.
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