Sure Travel Journey Vol 4.1 Summer 2018 | Page 24

THE NIGHT OF FIRE T . O M O L E F E G O E S T O S I T G E S A N D F I N D S A F I E R Y L G B T F E S T I VA L B Y T H E S P A N I S H S E A S I D E Like our honeybee counterparts, the numbers of queer men like me who flit openly from lover to lover are in perilous decline. We – call us pollinators – are an important part of the LGBTQ ecosystem, ensuring all receive the love and affection they need to prosper, however brief the tryst. Scientists suggest that the decline in our numbers is due to the mistake of basing our fight for acceptance in society on showing non-LGBTQ people that we conform to their stated-but-seldom- practiced mores on sex and relationships. That we are “decent”, whatever that means, just like them. OK, ok. No scientists actaully say this, 24 // MAKE MEMORIES FOR LIFE I think. It’s just my theory. Many friends of my age are disappearing into marriage, parenting and general heteronormativity, such as monogamy – at least in word, if not always in practice. Which is why Sitges, an LGBTQ-friendly seaside town just 30 minutes southwest of Barcelona, Spain, was a precious find. Perhaps calling it merely “friendly” is an understatement. Sitges is a seaside paradise that courts and proudly welcomes all LGBTQ people. We (my partner and I) arrived just after Bear Week, billed as Europe’s largest gathering of bears – burly, hairy, bearded queer men. However, the town is famed for catering all year round to LGBTQ travellers, no matter which subculture of the community they identify with. Even we pollinators felt at home. The restaurants, promenade, beaches and bars were filled with all kinds of queers – albeit fewer of colour than would be expected, even for a European city. We also arrived in time for the Festa Major of Santa Tecla, a two-day celebration of the town’s patron saint. The festival’s namesake, Saint Tecla, a follower of Paul the Apostle and an apparent virgin, is famed for encouraging women to live lives of chastity – a message which has thankfully fallen by the wayside in the celebrations. While the standard bearer during the festival is always a woman,