Gaiman: Welsh Tea and Memories of Lady Di
As soon the season of whale
watching or penguins
arrival at the Valdés
Peninsula area begins, thousands of visitors
arrive in Puerto
Madryn to see them.
A unique display of the awesome beauty of the natural world... Unforgettable...
But, not everyone knows that very close to this place there is
an exotic and special corner of Patagonia: Gaiman, land
of the Welsh,
full of traditions,
old and new. This article will inform you of what an expert traveler
of Patagonia should know about this fascinating region.
Gaiman is one of the towns that was founded by the Welsh
settlers of the coast
of Patagonia at the end of the 19th century.
This town seems stuck in time: streets with irrigation ditches that water
trees not native to Patagonia, buildings transplanted from far away lands,
like the chapels that were constructed by the Welsh upon arriving at this corner
of the world. There are also customs that also come from afar, such as the
traditional Welsh tea, accompanied by pastry, cakes and delicacies.
Among these traditions today we want to talk about two in particular, one
that dates from the days of the foundation and another more modern one, which
has become one of the attractions that
winter brings to this region, and that
arose from the visit of Lady Diana Spencer, before her unexpected death.
The 28th of July is the the Festival of the Landing or Gwyl Glaniad, which
is centered in the chapels. It is a community ceremony in which the descendents
of the original settlers and all of the towns’ population (as well as
the occasional visitors) participate. They serve Welsh tea for all and in the
courtyards of the chapels they organize a variety of contests, including equestrian
ones. At night, there is a concert of traditional music that closes the day’s
festivities.
Another
tradition that is more modern occurs each August 31st which honors Princess
Diana of Wales, who visited the town and drank tea in a traditional
tea house. The owners of the tea house have conserved the tea set that the
Princess used in a glass case, with her photograph and other mementos of the
day. The 31st of August, the day that she tragically died in Paris, people
place flowers in the case to honor her.
According to the owner of the place, they do not want to do a preplanned event
or anything exploitative, but rather what happened is that the people who knew
that she had visited the house congregated there and started this new custom.
The day that Lady Di visited the tea house of Ty Te Caerdydd a children’s
choir sang a few Welsh songs for her and she then talked with them in English
and shook the hand of each one of them. Then, she drank a tea and ate a raspberry
tart. Upon leaving, in spite of her being forbidden to accept flowers with
thorns for security reasons, she took a red rose from a bouquet.
These small gestures displayed her sympathy and love for the people, and
gave birth to a new tradition that is yet another reason to visit Gaiman,
a small
Welsh village in Patagonia, that awaits you nearby the whales and penguins.
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