Article Main Image
May 26, 2015

Behind the Scenes of Siena’s Palio

Two standard bearers of the Seashell neighbourhood, before the race. ©Pedro Prats
If you have not been introduced to the rules of the Palio, you’ll be lost! ©Federico Soffici
The tables have been laid for the dinner to be held in this contrada. ©Joe Shlabotnik
The Giraffe and Valley of the Ram represented here by two jockeys. ©Kiki99
People of all ages attend the colourful and very stressful Palio race. ©Nuno Neves
Members of the Unicorn team – the one which my daughter has sided with! ©Paolo Fefé
Each of the 17 teams parades from its contrada to the Piazza del Campo. ©Russ2009
This neighbourhood hasn’t won the race, but hey, the food is just great! ©Mike

 

– Mummy, I want to “vote” for the Leocorno, my daughter told me with big round eyes.
– The Unicorn? You want to support the Unicorn team?
– Yes! And George says he wants to support the Elephant!
– Well… I’m afraid there is no Elephant team in the race, darling.
– Ah… I’ll go tell him to support something else then.
– Good idea.

You may remember that I told you, in a previous article, about the spectacular Palio Horse Race, held in Siena twice a year – on July 2 and August 16 – and disputed by 17 participating teams, each representing a Sienese contrada (an Italian word meaning “neighbourhood”). The three-lap Palio race around the magnificent Piazza del Campo barely lasts more than 60 seconds. But for the residents of Siena, the preparations for this big event are part of their daily life, all year round.

That, and much more, is what I learned during the Palio expert tour which I took just a few weeks ago, and which we, at Trust&Travel, have especially tailored for our clientele. So if you can’t be in Siena on either day of the Palio, you and your children, if you have any, will undoubtedly have a great time hearing and learning about this colourful horse race during this guided visit – hosted by our friendly and knowledgeable Elena, a thoroughbred Sienese. The tour will take you from Piazza del Campo through some of Siena’s most beautiful contrade.

That day, when I took the tour, I was with my family, and two good friends of ours, a couple, who were in Siena with their little son George. To our kids’ delight, the tour started more or less as a “treasure hunt”. Elena told them to look out for animal symbols perched on fountains and window sills, or painted on street number plates.

It didn’t take five minutes: when she saw the unicorns adorning the fountains and wall plates of the Leocorno neighbourhood, my daughter decided that she would champion the Unicorn Contrada for the rest of her life! And that’s when George, way ahead of us, shouted that he was going to stand up for the Elephants. When my daughter announced to him that no elephant team was running in the race, he was disheartened. But Elena told him she had something up her sleeve for him. She led us all to the neighbourhood lying south-east of the Piazza del Campo, the Contrada della Torre, and asked little George : “Do you see anything interesting, young man?”

George jumped for joy when he realized that the symbol of this neighbourhood was a tower carried by… an elephant! And besides, the lovely playground in this part of Siena boasts a wooden elephant designed for kids to climb on, which is exactly what George did when he saw it.

As for me, well… I love to collect, during our Tuscan hikes, the beautiful black and white quills of porcupines. So I naturally decided to take sides with the Istrice, the Crested Porcupine… And you, which of the 17 contrade will you choose to support when you are in Siena: the Eagle, the Snail, the Giraffe, the Little Owl?…

For further details on our Palio Guided Tour, and to make reservations, please contact our most agreeable Katja.

No, sorry, there’s no “Hippopotamus Contrada” either in the Palio…

 

Katharina's Italy