Dancing to the sound of a rhythmic drum group, they set off their fireworks among crowds of spectators.
The spectators that participate dress to protect themselves against small burns and attempt to get as close as possible to the devils, running with the fire.
In Sitges, it is common for a crowd to line a street, while participants run through a tunnel of fireworks.
[4] Another typical Catalan folkloric expression of this sort takes place in L'Arboç.
For nearly half an hour, "devils" burn their carretilles (carts), jumping around ceaselessly, while a large "sceptre of Lucifer" and the "pitchfork of the Diablessa (she-devil)" shoot fire-jets and other pyrotechnics.