Contact Us
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BARCELONA BOATS Email
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BARCELONA BOATS WhatsApp
SAN SEBASTIAN SURF HOUSE WhatsApp
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CAMPSITE ADDRESS
Camping Haro
Avenida de Miranda 1
26200
Haro
La Rioja
HOW TO GET THERE
We have Stoke buses running from and return to Barcelona, Madrid, San Sebastian and Lisbon direct to our campsite. If you wish to jump on one of these buses, make sure to add it to your booking or reach out to us and we’ll add it for you. Plus we have special accommodation deals in each of these cities if you arrive a few days earlier.
If you want to make your own way, check Omio for the best deals on flights, buses and trains. If you choose to fly either Bilbao or Biarritz are the best airports. From Bilbao and Biarritz airport there are regular buses to San Sebastian, you can then reach Haro from San Sebastian-Donostia by bus or train.
You get these extras included:
- Traditional White Spanish Fiesta Outfit (usually €40)
Plus all these standard inclusions:
- Welcome drink on arrival.
- Hot breakfast paired with unlimited mimosas every morning from 09:00–11:00.
- Coffee and tea station from 8:00–11:00.
- Camping accommodation: pre-pitched tent with sleeping mat , sleeping bag, and ear plugs.
- Access to all campsite facilities including hot showers, a pool, laundry, bar, and restaurant.
- Bus trips to and from the wine fight.
- Festival info & tips
- Plenty of red wine to spray, chug, and swim in for the big fight.
- Guided Yoga (Pool/River-side and Drunk options)
OPEN BAR
- Unlimited beer and sangria available for only €15 a day
Optional ADD-ONS
- Solo tent upgrade – €30 per night
- BYO Campervan (no additional charge)
- Bus trip to and from the fiesta
- from Barcelona (€60 return)
- from Madrid (€40 return)
- from San Sebastian (€30 return)
- from Lisbon (€100 return)
- Pre or post fiesta surf house trip (San Sebastian or Portugal locations available)
- Accommodation options in Madrid and Barcelona also available
Select your add-ons during the booking process and we’ll reach out to you to confirm details.
For add-ons not available in the booking stage, please reach out to us to enquire (some add-ons are subject to limited availability)
Don’t Forget
- When you arrive follow the signs to the Stoke Travel check in desk.
- There isn’t an ATM at the campsite, so grab your cash before you arrive.
- Tent’s allocated on arrival – we’ll be able to accommodate to make sure you can share with your friends.
- We can cater for dietary requirements, please email us info@stoketravel.com to let us know.
- Make sure you email us with the email address of all parties in your group booking.
Be A Guru (Should knows)
- Unlimited booze open bar of beer, sangria, soft drink, tea and coffee for €15/day.
- If you’re travelling solo we will tent you with someone of the same sex. You can purchase a solo tent upgrade for €30/night.
- You can purchase a traditional San Vino white outfit for the fight at the campsite for €50 or €40 before you arrive.
- Going to the wine fight there is a bus that takes you to the bottom of the hill, but there is a bit of a walk to get to the top where the fight is. It is not uncommon for partygoers to pay locals for a ride and jump in the back of their cars and trucks/utes and share wine with the locals. It’s super safe and heaps of fun!
- Throw wine only. It is disrespectful (and would really hurt) to throw anything else, that includes food, mud, shoes and your friends.
- We will try our best to wake you up in the morning, but if you sleep through our screams we can’t be held responsible for you missing the fight!
- If you’re not sure how to find the main campsite for check in, follow the big ‘ol Stoke Travel signs to our check-in which is located at the back of the campsite.
- If you’re a night owl and arrive between the hours of 11pm – 8am, you’ll be an overnight check-in. You’ll need to give your passport to our security when you get to camp, and we’ll return it to you in the morning when reception is open, and we can check you in properly and give you your wristbands.
- SHARE YOUR PICS! WE WANNA SEE YOUR FACES! When you upload pics to TikTok or the gram, hashtag #stoketravel, #sanvino, and tag @stoketravel to share the love and maybe even find that cutie you’d been eyeing off…
Facilities
- Bathrooms & hot showers
- Tea & coffee facilities
- Restaurant
- Summer terrace
- Shop
- Laundry facilities on site
- Drinking water at all the water outlets
- Swimming Pool with slides
- WiFi is available at campsite reception for a cost
- The campsite is just a 5-minute walk to town
- Stoke Bar on site with unlimited beer and sangria for €15 per person per day
EXTRA
The Bodega quarters
Just a 5 minute walk from the campsite, you can visit a unique cluster of centuries-old bodegas, where you can taste the great wines of Rioja.
Wine museum
8 kilometres from Haro, in the municipality of Briones, you will find the Museum of culture with regard to Dinastía Vivanco wine.
Stoke Travel’s Common Sense Guide To Staying Safe
*If at any time you feel unsafe, please don’t hesitate to contact the onsite Noble Security team, or any member of the Stoke Travel crew.
As far as situations go, a Stoke Travel trip is amongst the safest. Unlike in the ‘real’ world, everybody here is intent on having a good time with new and old friends – your fellow Stokies are way more likely to hold your hair back while you puke than steal your wallet.
That being so, we’re more in danger of hurting ourselves while on a Stoke Travel trip than falling foul of our fellow travellers. Here’s a quick little guide to partying safe with Stoke Travel.
- Drink plenty of water.
You’re going to drink heaps of beer and sangria, and you’re going to have a plenty big hangover, but you can really limit it by smashing a few cups of water throughout the day and evening. - Remember to eat!
We’re going to hook you up with a hearty cooked brunch, and as the bare minimum that should keep your stomach lined and engine running. Do not skip these these meals, even if you are suffering horrifically from one of the aforementioned hangovers. We also strongly advise getting a lunch and dinner in there too, at the campsite restaurant or any of the many amazing bars and restaurants in town. Maybe even do this every day. - Zip your tent up when you’re in it and when you leave it.
Seems basic, but you’d be surprised how often drunk us forgets to do this. When you get in your tent at night make sure you zip it up to prevent unexpected rain showers from disturbing your slumber. Same goes for when you leave your tent. It’ll take two seconds to zip it up, but that’ll save you from wet clothes, chafe, and maybe even pneumonia. If you also brought your favourite pair of socks and want to make sure they’re safe, you can purchase a lock from the guru tent for only €5. - Don’t be a creep.
Like, seriously, has that ever worked out for you? Similarly, if you see somebody being a creep and making people uncomfortable let us know and we’ll have a friendly word to them. Sometimes they just don’t realise how gross they are. - Only yes means yes, consent matters.
At a very basic level if you hit on somebody and they say no then you’ve just got to cop that. They’re just not that into you. It sucks for about three seconds, but you’re literally surrounded by hundreds of young, like-minded travellers. Suck it up and move on. When you do find somebody who’s into you and you want to move through the bases, make sure you get consent. It really, really, really, really, really does matter. - Leave the mixing to our DJs
We have a zero-tolerance approach to drugs on our campsites – but if you do happen to be dipping into the bags or popping pills, don’t overdo it. View Tripsit’s resource here regarding mixing substances, and maybe give some of these harm reduction articles a geeze before you have to tackle the comedown in one of our shitty tents. - If you see somebody having a bad time, make sure they’re ok.
We are all brothers and sisters and gender non-specific relations out here. If you see somebody struggling in any way, check on them, grab a Stoke staff member and just do what any decent human being would do. - Make sure you have travel insurance.
We work our asses off to create the most epic and safest party environment for you. But let’s be real: this is a massive, wild festival, and sometimes shit goes wrong. We’re hooking you up with a budget-friendly trip, but hospital bills are not budget. Don’t be that person who goes home with a life-changing debt instead of a killer hangover. Be smart and sort out your travel insurance. Seriously. Make sure you’re covered for any medical bills or lost gear. It’s a non-negotiable.
Staying safe at Stoke Travel is super easy, but sometimes we get a little out of control and forget the basics. If you ever find yourself in any kind of situation do not hesitate to contact Stoke staff, and we’ll sort you out immediately. We’re here to help – help you have the best time possible. Mwah.
What to Bring
- Cash. Being a campsite, finding a card machine to pay on can be hard work sometimes.
- Your best party shirt
- Warm clothes (it can get a bit chilly at night)
- Bring shoes that are either waterproof or that you can throw out after the wine fight because they will be destroyed by the end of it!
- A towel (we don’t sell or rent them on-site)
- Portable phone charger
- A pillow if your backpack won’t do
- Condoms or other protection (better safe than sorry, right?)
- Your swimmers to cool off in the pool and work on your tan
- Sunscreen! Looking like a lobster is only cute if you’re actually a lobster.
- A water bottle to fill up. You’ll be saving the environment and staying hydrated all at the same time! How good!
Guides Guide
A battle so fierce that the vineyard and surrounding hillsides turn red. So violent that the weary and wounded stumble away from the fighting, covered from head to toe in what looks like blood, but what is in fact delicious red wine… This is the wine fight, La Batalla del Vino de Haro, our favourite festival.
The celebrations find their origins in a centuries old land dispute between Haro and neighbouring Miranda de Ebro, that over the years descended into the Wine Fight (read more about the Wine Fight’s history here). These days the dispute has been solved, but the Batalla de Vino remains, with locals young and old coming from Haro and the surrounding region to fight with each other and with travellers. The battle is fought on a hillside overlooking La Rioja’s vineyards, and battlers use buckets, water pistols and any other device that can carry and throw wine. And don’t worry, wine lovers, it’s not a waste! This is the wine that wasn’t good enough to be bottled, and when the battle’s over the rivers of wine run back down the mountain and into the vineyards to fertilise them. The Wine Fight is an up-and-coming Spanish fiesta, and one that you must visit if you’re a wine lover, party animal or a lover of unique travelling experiences.
The wine fight is, literally, a fight with wine. Think buckets and water pistols, basically anything that carries liquids, filled with the local red wine and thrown and poured on anyone and everyone who enters the splashing fields. There is so much wine that literally everybody, and every part of said bodies, will be absolutely soaked in red wine and maybe a little drunk from it soaking through their pores. It’s like La Tomatina, Valencia’s world-famous tomato fight, but instead of being pelted with tomatoes, a salad vegetable that isn’t universally loved, we’re splashed and soaked in red wine, a product that only psychopaths dislike.
What time does the party finish?
The party continues to the early hours (4-5am) of the morning with an array of local and international bands and DJs in Plaza de la Paz. This is where everyone, both local and tourist, come together to celebrate San Juan and the La Batalla del Vino.
Where are these parties you speak of?
The main fiesta is situated in the Plaza de la Paz. This is where everyone comes together to celebrate. Come enjoy a beer in the square with a plethora of bars encircling the plaza to choose from.
Itinerary
The beauty about Stoke is we don’t tie you down with strict itineraries to follow so this is a rough guide to your time at San Vino.
The local events are based off last year’s schedule, we’ll have 2026’s schedule when we arrive on site.
June 28
11am – Meet us at the Stoke San Vino Campsite. Check in will open from 11am.
7pm- CAMPSITE KICK-OFF PARTY This is it. Grab a drink (or five) and find your footing. What better way to get to know the absolute legends you’ll be partying with than sinking unlimited beers and sangria and throwing down a solid boogey while our international DJs spin bangers?
10pm-WE UNLEASH YOU ON HAROThink we’re done? Not even close. We’re just shutting down the campsite party to roll 5 minutes down the road and dive head-first into the centre of Haro. The entire town goes feral, and we’re joining the locals for their legendary, all-night street fiesta. Get amongst it.
6:30pm – 8:30pm – Campsite Parties! Before we head into Plaza del Paz (an easy 5 min walk away) to get amongst the festivities of the locals
The Town has a bunch of festivities planned in the lead up to the Wine Fight – we’ll update once we have that information, but here’s an example of what they’ve had going on in the past!
Midday – In the El Mazo Pediments, Tortilla (Spanish Omelette) Competition. Locals gather in the square to taste their native dishes and are judged based on their cooking abilities
8pm – In the Plaza de la Paz a parade is put on through the town celebrating San Juan by the locals where food and music is rife on to enjoy
10pm – In the Herradura, musical animation tour by RocKalean. RocKalean is an itinerant rock group that makes versions of rock and pop songs in Spanish, Basque and English
11:30pm – In La Herradura, a parade is put on by charanga de la Peña. Where people come to meet, eat and celebrate San Juan
11:45pm and onwards – In the Plaza de la Paz enjoy music from live acts
June 29
6am – 7am – Quick breakfast of muffins and fruits to prepare for the wine fight at the Stoke Campsite
Around 7am – Walk up the hill and partake in enormous wine fight
12pm – 2pm – Recover with a late brunch back on our campsite
Afternoon – Chill out, get showered and de-purple yourself whilst enjoying our unlimited beer and sangria (if you can stomach it)
THINGS YOU DON’T WANNA MISS IN THE TOWN SQUARE:
9.30pm – Come down and watch the iconic Toro De Fuego aka the firework bull where they ‘release a fake bull with fireworks’ throughout the crowds to celebrate local traditions.
11:00pm – In the Plaza de la Paz, a musical concert with local and international bands and lots of people dancing. During the performance at 12am, several fake bulls will be released. Fires that will end the holidays. The approximate hours of action are:
June 30
9am – 11am – Cooked brunch, paired with more bottomless mimosas, at the Stoke Campsite
11am – time to check-out and hit the road – we’re off to either San Fermin, our San Sebastian Surf House or our Portugal Surf Camp if you wanna join us?