|
|
|||||
|
|
|||||
| Super-Barracas | |||||
|
|
|||||
Brazil content © Christopher Van Buren, used from Moon Handbooks Brazil, 1st edition. |
|||||
![]() |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
Super-Barracas The super-barracas host all kinds of activities: Most notably, they have continuous stage shows (from morning to sundown), featuring different types of music and dancing. The have several environments for drinking and eating, including service on the sandy beach where there are plenty of lounge chairs and shade umbrellas. The activities spill out onto the beach and even to the ocean where you can usually partake of water sports, like kite surfing and banana-boat rides. It’s non-stop high energy and it’s all sponsored by the super-barraca. There are three super-barracas on the north coast: Tóa Tóa is the first one, located at Praia Mundaí about six kilometers from town. Axé Moi is next, located at Praia Taperapuã about seven kilometers from town. The farthest is Barramares at Praia Barramares, about 10 kilometers away. It’s difficult to say which is better or worse since they all have about the same kind of activities and attract the same type of large crowds during the daymostly young, adolescent Brazilians and a few scattered international tourists. The question is not which barraca is best, but whether or not you like the super-barraca scene at all. To best answer this question, its worth visiting one of these megabeach bars during the day. If you don’t like the energy there, you can probably find a smaller, cozier beach bar nearby, or (if you have a car or don’t mind paying for a taxi) continue north to the more charming beaches near Santa Cruz de Cabrália and Santo Antônio. On weeknights, the barracas have a rotating schedule to produce super-luau beach parties. Each of the three super-barracas has a different night and they never overlap. They even coordinate nights with other clubs in town. The night scene is a mega-version of the day scene. They generally break out the main stage for the axé dancing groups and get ready for crowds that number into the thousands during peak season. To keep the ugly masses out, there is a cover charge to enter the luau (around R$25, but women usually get a heavy discount). The barracas encourage you to purchase your tickets through a tour guide or at your hotel. This is partially to respect the vacation-packaging system of Porto Seguro. |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
site copyright © Avalon Publishing Group, Inc. |
|||||