Monday 6 July to Sunday 12 July 2026
Some summer weeks feel almost too full to choose from. This is one of them.
From Monday 6 July to Sunday 12 July 2026, the world seems to offer a different kind of invitation every day: white-and-red crowds in Pamplona, paper wishes in Japan, food beside Lake Michigan, a thoughtful festival on a Slovakian airfield, electronic music by the Adriatic, jazz in Rotterdam, and the final day of the Calgary Stampede.
It is a week that proves peak summer does not have to mean lying still. Sometimes the best way to meet the season is to follow the noise.
Pamplona: the rocket that changes everything
I have never forgotten the first time I saw Pamplona before San Fermín. It was strangely calm, as if the city knew what was coming and had decided to save its breath.
Then the white clothes appeared. Red scarves were folded, tied and adjusted. Streets that had felt ordinary the day before began to feel like a stage.
San Fermín begins on Monday 6 July 2026 and runs until 14 July, with the opening chupinazo listed for noon at Pamplona’s Town Hall. The first bull run follows on 7 July at 8am, with daily runs continuing through the festival.
San Fermín is famous around the world for the running of the bulls, but I think travel writing does Pamplona a disservice when it reduces the festival to that one image. The city is full of other rhythms: giants and big-heads, bands in the streets, fireworks, processions, family events, late meals and people singing with the confidence of those who know the words by heart.
It is intense, crowded and is not a casual city break. Anyone visiting should understand the risks, respect local rules, and make clear choices about what they do and do not want to attend. You do not have to run to experience San Fermín. You do not even have to make the bulls your focus.
For me, the better travel angle is Pamplona itself: a handsome, walkable city with serious food culture, links to the Camino de Santiago, and easy routes towards northern Spain’s mountains and wine regions. San Fermín gives the trip its fire, but Navarra gives it depth.
Japan: a wish tied to bamboo
After Pamplona, Tanabata feels like turning down the volume.
Celebrated in many parts of Japan on 7 July, Tanabata is linked to the story of Orihime and Hikoboshi, represented by the stars Vega and Altair, who are said to meet across the Milky Way once a year. A familiar custom is writing wishes on strips of paper and tying them to bamboo.
I like the smallness of that. Travel is often sold through big views and famous buildings, but sometimes the moment that stays with you is a coloured paper strip moving in the heat outside a shrine.
Japan in July is hot and humid, so this is not a trip to rush. Plan early mornings, shaded gardens, museums, trains with good air-conditioning, and slow evenings. Tokyo, Kyoto and many regional cities can all give visitors a glimpse of Tanabata traditions, though some of Japan’s largest Tanabata festivals take place later in the summer, depending on the calendar used locally.
What Tanabata offers is not spectacle in the loudest sense. It offers mood: bamboo, paper, lanterns, yukata, festival snacks, neighbourhood streets and the gentle optimism of writing down a wish where others can see it.
Chicago: eating your way through the city
By Wednesday 8 July, the calendar crosses to the United States for Taste of Chicago, which runs in Grant Park from 8 to 12 July 2026. Choose Chicago lists it as a free-admission food and music event, with local vendors, live performances, family activities and a lakefront setting.
Chicago is one of those cities I always seem to understand first through food. Not just the famous things, though the deep-dish pizza and hot dogs do their work well enough. It is the neighbourhood cooking, the bakeries, the barbecue smoke, the Mexican food, the old-school diners, the new arrivals, and the way people talk about restaurants as if they are part of the family.
Taste of Chicago gives that appetite a centre. You can spend the morning at the Art Institute, take an architecture boat tour in the afternoon, then drift into Grant Park for food and music as the lake breeze starts to matter.
It is one of the easiest events of the week for families, but it works just as well for couples or friends who want a big American city without defaulting to New York or Los Angeles. Chicago in July has beaches, baseball, blues clubs, rooftop bars and some of the best skyline views in North America. The festival is the reason to go, but the city is the reason to stay.
Trenčín: a festival with a softer centre
The week’s most interesting surprise may be Pohoda Festival in Slovakia. Its official site lists 8 and 9–11 July 2026, with the main festival unfolding at Trenčín Airport.
I have a soft spot for festivals that feel as if they were built around more than a line-up. Pohoda has that reputation: music, yes, but also theatre, debate, visual arts, social conscience and an atmosphere that seems to matter as much as the headline names.
Trenčín itself helps. It is not an obvious stop on the European summer circuit, which is exactly the appeal. There is a castle above the town, a manageable centre, and a sense that you are somewhere many travellers still pass by on their way between bigger names.
A Pohoda trip could easily become a broader Slovakian holiday: Bratislava, spa towns, caves, folk villages, or the High Tatras if there is time. That is what makes it such a good travel hook. It gives curious festival-goers a reason to choose somewhere fresh.
This is not the festival for someone who only wants maximum scale and minimum thought. It is for travellers who like music with conversation around it.
Split: late nights beside the Adriatic
On Friday 10 July, the mood shifts sharply to Croatia. Ultra Europe runs from 10 to 12 July 2026 at Park Mladeži in Split, with the official festival site listing those dates and location.
Split is made for the combination: ancient stone by day, basslines by night, and ferries waiting in the harbour for anyone who wants to turn a festival weekend into an island-hopping holiday.
The old town grows around Diocletian’s Palace, but Split never feels trapped by its history. Cafés fill the lanes, swimmers head for the rocks, boats leave for Brač, Hvar and Vis, and summer evenings seem to stretch well past the point where sensible plans are supposed to end.
Ultra Europe is not a gentle retreat. It is high-production, high-energy and built for late nights. For the right traveller, that is the point. I would arrive a day or two early, see Split before the festival schedule takes over, then stay on afterwards for the islands or the coast road towards Dubrovnik.
A beach holiday becomes a festival trip. A festival trip becomes a proper Adriatic journey.
Rotterdam: jazz in a city of angles
Also running from 10 to 12 July 2026 is the North Sea Jazz Festival in Rotterdam, with weekend tickets listed for those three dates.
Rotterdam is a perfect host for a festival with jazz at its centre but a much wider musical reach. It is modern, multicultural, architectural and still slightly underestimated by visitors who head straight to Amsterdam.
I like Rotterdam because it does not try to be pretty in the usual Dutch way. It has edges, bridges, water, glass, food halls, design museums and a port-city confidence. A North Sea Jazz weekend can be surprisingly comfortable: hotels rather than tents, public transport rather than muddy tracks, and music spread across an indoor festival setting.
Build the trip around the festival, then add the Markthal, the Cube Houses, the Depot Boijmans Van Beuningen, harbour views and perhaps a day trip to Delft, The Hague or Kinderdijk.
This is the choice for travellers who want music, but also a good bed, a sharp city and a plate of something excellent afterwards.
Calgary: one last Stampede day
The week closes on Sunday 12 July with the final day of the Calgary Stampede, which runs from 3 to 12 July 2026.
By the last day, Calgary has usually given itself over completely: hats, boots, rodeo crowds, chuckwagons, midway rides, concerts, pancakes, and that western energy the city wears with surprising ease.
The Stampede is big and busy, but it works beautifully as the opening chapter of a western Canada trip. Spend a few days in Calgary, then head for Banff, Lake Louise or the Icefields Parkway. The contrast is the gift: grandstand noise followed by mountain quiet.
For families and groups of friends, the Stampede has enough variety to carry several days. For couples or solo travellers, the best version may be shorter: catch the final-day atmosphere, then leave room for the Rockies.
Seven ways to spend one summer week
What makes this week so strong is its range.
Choose Pamplona for tradition, intensity and northern Spain. Visit Japan for seasonal ritual and quieter beauty. Chicago is for food, music and lakefront summer. While Slovakia offers thoughtful festival somewhere less expected. Opt for Split for electronic music and island escapes. Rotterdam offers jazz, design and city comfort. Choose Calgary for rodeo energy and mountain roads.
Not everyone wants the same summer. This week understands that.
Some travellers want to dance until dawn. Others want to write a wish on paper. Many want to eat with their hands in a park, hear jazz indoors, watch fireworks, or stand in a crowd as a city changes shape around them.
Between 6 and 12 July 2026, the calendar offers all of it. The only real question is what kind of story you want to bring home.
Photo by San Fermin Pamplona – Navarra on Unsplash