florianópolis/br

The clothing-optional Praia da Galheta, by Whatsinaname


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samba dancers and music until 4am.
2013 Carnival in Florianopolis

February 8, 2013 includes one of one of Brazil's biggest gay festivals with 40-50 thousand tourists joining in - a mixed crowd of gay, lesbian and straight people mix it up with fun and frolics. Pop Gay at Tancredo Neves Square is a contest for drag queens performers, and live bands lead inspire partiers on almost every street corner.

facebook.com/pages/Florianopolis-Gay-Carnival/173124359399650
Associação de Empreendedores GLBTS de Santa Catarina
Semana da Diversidade | Pride Florianopolis

Early September, 2013, annual Sunday afternoon parade down Avenida Beira Mar Norte, music and dance parties.

www.aeglbts.org.br
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Beaches:

Florianopolis straddles a small peninsula on the mainland and the 18 by 54km island of Santa Catarina. With a subtropical climate, the island has a coastline of over 100km, and some of Brazil's most beautiful beaches. Many of these are accessible by bus from the city center.

Northern beach resorts Brava, Canasvieiras, Daniela, and Jurerê, get very busy in summer. They offer plenty of urban pleasures, with hotels, restaurants and clubs beside calm bayside waters, good for relaxed swimming. The nearby Praia dos Ingleses has rougher waves. Lagoinha, a small fishing village, has a pretty beach and great sunset vistas between Praia dos Ingleses and Canasvieiras. Praia do Santinho is another small beach next to a large resort.

The east coast has the best surfing spots with powerful Atlantic swells: Barra da Lagoa, for beginners; Praia da Joaquina, once the site for international surfing competitions; Praia Mole, popular with young people, and for gay weekend and Carnaval dance parties; and Praia da Galheta, a clothing-optional, surfing, and gay cruising beach, accessible only by foot on trails through dunes at the north end of Praia Mole. Praia do Moçambique, a favorite of those craving solitude, is screened by thick vegetation alongside the 19km of wide open beachfront and strong ocean currents.

To the south Campeche, Armação and Morro das Pedras is each very beautiful, also with good surfing. The isolated and pristine beaches, Lagoinha do Leste and Naufragados can only be reached by trail. Lagoa da Conceição is a lake at island center, relatively shallow and warm, with high winds that make it a windsurfers' favorite. The quieter Peri Lagoon is good for nature walks.
Many more beaches lie a short drive away, along the mainland coast, including the world famous Praia da Silveira, Praia Rosa, Imbituba (Garopaba), and the beautiful Guarda do Embaú with powerful breaks.

Capoeira & quilombos:

Capoeira is the Brazilian martial art of quick, complex moves, powerful leg sweeps, dance and music. It developed mainly among the descendants of African slaves, perhaps with Brazilian native influences, during the 16th century. It's said the skills were originally practiced in the hope of survival for escaped slaves in a hostile, unknown countryside, being pursued by armed and mounted colonial agents.

Lucky escapees might later join or establish quilombo settlements that grew up at a distance from the Portuguese towns. Brazilian natives and Europeans in trouble with the law or the church might also arrive. Some quilombos took on the trappings of a small independent multi-ethnic state, and their militias would sometimes raid estates -- until slavery was abolished, May 13, 1888.

Many former slaves were marginalized in the workforce of this new society. Capoeira developed into a recreational sport as well as a martial art and some adepts became bodyguards, mercenaries, and enforcers. But when groups known as maltas began to terrorize Rio de Janeiro, the new Brazilian Republic moved to prohibit Capoeira in 1890, and the practice went underground.

By 1937 things had changed, as Mestre Bimba founded his school, Centro de Cultura Física e Luta Regional. It was with the official permission of Salvador’s Secretary of Education that he began to teach Capoeira to the elite, and in 1940 it became legal.

Music, integral to Capoeira, sets the tempo and style of game to be played. Rhythm is kept on a berimbau instrument, sometimes slow or very fast, depending on the style of the roda. A circle is formed by capoeiristas and musicians, singing and clapping as two players enter to play until one leaves or calls an end to the game. The game usually focuses less on knock-down destruction of the opponent, than on displays of skill. In old times the singing and dancing masked the true significance of the art -- even the intruments could be used as weapons in a real fight.

Samba de roda, a traditional Afro-Brazilian dance & musical form has been associated with Capoeira for many decades, accompanied by intruments, singing and clapping. Maculelê an indigenous armed fighting style using two sticks or a machete is a folkloric dance with heavy Afro-Brazilian percussion is also included by many Capoeira groups in their presentations. Outfits such as Brazil Trails offer camps for visitors to learn the techniques of Capoeira.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capoeira

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