Forget glitter, this Carnival party in southern Brazil is all about mud - NEO MAG

ShowBiz & Sports Celebs Lifestyle

Hot

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Forget glitter, this Carnival party in southern Brazil is all about mud

Forget glitter, this Carnival party in southern Brazil is all about mud

PARATY, Brazil (AP) — Revelers heading to Carnival parties inBraziltypically don colorful, skimpy outfits and splatter glitter everywhere, but near an old colonial town in the south of the country people cover themselves in something very different – mud.

Associated Press Revelers share a kiss during the Mud Block carnival party in Paraty, Brazil, Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Andre Penner) A reveler wears a Grinch mask during the Mud Block carnival party in Paraty, Brazil, Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Andre Penner) A reveler celebrates during the Mud Block carnival party in Paraty, Brazil, Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Andre Penner) Revelers pose in their customs on the shore during the Mud Block carnival party in Paraty, Brazil, Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Andre Penner) Revelers cheer during the Mud Block carnival party in Paraty, Brazil, Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Andre Penner)

Brazil Carnival

Partakers in this unusualCarnival partyin Paraty drape gray sludge on themselves and roll around in the silty shallows of a beach, forming a unified mass.

"Everyone is kind of the same (…), those who have money and those who don't: everyone comes here to jump into the mud," said Charles Garcia Pessoa, a 37-year-old entrepreneur.

Under a blazing sun, the mud-covered partygoers danced and grunted cavemen chants — "Uga! Uga!" — while marching along the sand, accompanied by musicians.

Advertisement

The tradition started in 1986, according to Paraty's tourism site. Friends were playing in the mangroves at Jabaquara Beach, and realized they weren't recognizable. They went strolling into the city's historic center and caused a stir.

The next year, a group lathered themselves up with mud to present themselves as a prehistoric tribe for Carnival. They carried skulls, vines and bones as they uttered their chants, the site said.

And so the mud party was born. And in the years since, it has become a beloved tradition.

Matt Bloomfield, a New Zealander who runs a film festival, decided to come to Paraty for the mud party after seeingcoverageof last year's event.

"Everyone's being so creative, you see people around decorating themselves with leaves," he said. "It's a great alternate version of Carnival."