Travel Day
3 de abril de 2025, Estados Unidos ⋅ ☁️ 52 °F
I fly tonight!
Lisbon Arrival Day
4 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ 🌬 63 °F
I had a smooth flight to Lisbon. I got to our Airbnb, had nap and will be heading out to find some food soon. We are staying in the oldest part of Lisbon, the Alfama district. The streets are a maze, all up and down hills, crazy twists and turns, and cobblestone. They are like a mess of spaghetti. Unfortunately, Jayme is delayed, and I can't get my Sim card working, so I would have GPS or a friend to help me find my way. So, this with be a test of my inate directional skills!Leer más

Noelle WalksSounds like yummy spaghetti! I hope your spot is cozy and you get good sleep and nourishment. 🩵 so glad you are there!

ViajeroI will take pictures tomorrow. It was cool and a bitvrainy when I was out, and that made me not want to take the camera out of my bag. But tomorrow forvsure
Touring Lisbon
5 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 63 °F
Jayme has arrived. We spent the day going to the Igreja da Santiago which is the historic start of the Camino. But, since the church is now closed most people start at the Se de Lisboa and get their first stamp. After we did this, we stopped for lunch, a couple drinks and then dinner in between wandering the streets, climbing hill after hill, and seeing an art exhibit in a convent with a great roof deck. We are now safely in our Airbnb, doing laundry and resting up for tomorrow.Leer más
First Day Walking
6 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 63 °F
What a day! It was filled with many firsts. It was the first time I ever carried a full backpack (13.5lbs) for somewhere between 11 and 13 miles (mine and Jayme's watches have a difference of opinion) First time on the Camino, first rainy walking day, my first arrow, my first Buen Camino 😍, and my first Portuguese coffee and pastel de nata.
We started out a bit before 9 walking through the Alfama district of Lisbon. We stopped after about 2 hours for a coffee and pastry. We then broke into what looked like an abandoned business yard because we needed to pee and there was no where else, we were still in the City. I was quick about it but Jayme nearly got caught with her pants down by a very young and handsome security guard, who threw us out. A short while later we came across our first arrow. It was a highlight of the day! Finding them is a bit like finding Waldo. After a little while we got to the river and then to Parque de Nacoes which is an exhibition and shopping area. It had been drizzling all morning, and we decided to have some lunch while in PdN. As soon as we sat down it began to pour! By the time we were done, so was the rain .From there the path took us back down to the river and up onto the never-ending boardwalk. From the beginning to the first exit was over 4 miles! It was especially tiring because Google added an addition 1.5 miles to the end of our day when it said there was an off ramp on the boardwalk that didn't exist. But now we are preparing for bed and hoping for a good day tomorrow. Good night all!Leer más
Day Two
7 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 61 °F
The blister has reduced in size and did not slow me down today. But, not sleeping before 6:30 am this morning and then only for 2 hours, the late start from not waking up until 8:30, and the a trekking day in the 70's in full sun all day, did. It was a tough day. We did a little over 8 miles and then took a train for the last 4 (where we missed our stop and had to backtrack) to our hostel tonight. We are in Vila Franca de Xira. Really cute town. Staying in the same hostel are 4 ladies we met yesterday from the UK.. we went for drinks and dinner with them, which was great fun. Along the path today we met Jan from Holland who pointed out a great little lunch spot and a different Camino app. He started from Lisbon this morning so is staying a few towns back. I'm sure he will catch up with us tomorrow. And, we met Lawrence from France who also started in Lisbon. He came across us having an electrolyte break. His advice was to sip water every 15 minutes and if your pee is not clear, to drink more. Also, he reminded us that the Camino is not a race and be sure to enjoy it and make it our own. Then, he left us in the dust. He will probably be in Santiago a week before us!
So, all in all another good day. The heat and no break from the sun was really tough, but we did what we could and then did what we needed to stay strong and healthy. Today I did 16, 866 steps, or about 8 miles and Jayme did 19,580 or 9.5 miles. We can't figure out why my watch is consistently lower, but if the actual is somewhere in the middle, I'm still happy.Leer más

ViajeroSounded like a great day! Meeting so many people w the same goal, is rewarding and/or soul boosting. Only three days of walking and so many experiences. The body adjustments, you knew would come. But that’s what they are, adjustments. Sending you lots of blue physical healing energy. You’ve got this! Love you💞
Call Me Richard
8 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 77 °F
I lost my sunglasses. And only 3 days into my walk. I will need to get new ones. If you know my husband, you know why today's post is titled this way.
Today's journey took us from Vila Franca de Xira to Azambuja, about 14 miles. It was the worst walking day yet. It was very hot, 81 degrees, and no shade again. We were in the same industrial zone as yesterday, but yesterday the river was to our right and there were boardwalks so there was some prettiness. Today's walk was more similar to walking the New Jersey Turnpike through Newark. Well the highway was only one lane going in each direction, but there was no shoulder to move away from all the huge trucks barreling right beside you at 50-60 miles an hour. And the airplanes overhead were not commercial jets, but were small planes spraying who knows what. But the density of industry was pretty similar. There was not a single store or restaurant for the first 5 or 6 miles where we could get a water or snacks or go to the bathroom. We did finally find one small restaurant next to the train station where we stopped for lunch. The waitress asked if we ate chicken, so with no more conversation, we were brought a couple of fried chicken breast cutlets and French fries, no other option was given.
Anyway, add to all this, hitting the body ache wall, me with my sciatica kicking up and Jayme having painfull hip and leg, we called Uber. Gotta love modern convenience! Of the 14 mile distance, we finished about 8.
The good part of getting to the stay early is we got to do our laundry. I devised a system. I plug the bottom of the shower with all my clothes under my feet. I let all the soapy water from washing my hair and body fill into the bottom. I walk all over my clothes like I am stomping grapes. Then I drain the water. Do a little direct soap application on pits and crotch of items. Then I rinse, wring, wring again inside a towel, and hang to dry. (note the hiking pole set up for small items) Voila! Clean clothes !
Hopefully tomorrow will go better, but I'm not discouraged or unhappy yet.Leer más

ViajeroCan’t really call you Richard. Somehow or another, he always seems to find his lost things🤷♀️. Oh I hope you have some Advil w you. Nothing like a fried lunch w a cold beer to keep you going. I love your shower/washer ingenuity. Here’s hoping you get some good rest and a prettier walk tomorrow. Although by the time you read this it might be close to your bedtime already. Love and power to you and Jayme. 💞
The Beauty Outweighs the Pain
9 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 81 °F
Thank you, Jayme for today's title! This is the perfect description of my day. The day started out beautifully, clear, sunny and cool, perfect for walking. But my sciatica was still a bother, and my blister was rubbing, then my back was hurting. But we left the industry of yesterday and entered into the farmlands and small vineyards. After a bit my body aches lessened and the beauty distracted me from any annoyances left over. It did get very hot and humid again this afternoon, but not enough to require a ride. We are now in Valada, at a small pension owned by an Urkainian woman who came here to escape the war 3 years ago. She made us a dinner which was yummy and has a wonderful patio to hang out and relax. Be sure to check out the captions on my photos to get the details of my day filled in.Leer más

Noelle Walks
That’s funny! And yet my safety pins arrive tomorrow for just that purpose!

Noelle Walks
That must have felt so freeing! And much quieter than your previous days.
I'm in "WTF am I doing" mode.
10 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 75 °F
So, I chose to walk the Camino at this time of year, to avoid the heat of summer. Today was predicted to be in the high 70's with overcast skies all day and a 20% chance of rain. It started out overcast, but not cool and by noon was 80 and humid. By midday it was perfectly clear, 82, still oppressively humid and our walk was through farms and vineyards. Not a place to find shade. The constantness of being in the hot humid sun all day is beginning to take its toll. I am exhausted and having a hard time ignoring the piddly pains that come and go during the walk. Pilgrims say these days are the ones where the Camino challenges your brain. Today, my brain won out and convinced me it was just too hard.
We made it Santerem, had a shower, a little rest, and dinner, and I am now ready to continue this challenge. But a few hours ago, I was ready to give up.
Today we met an older gentleman from Amsterdam walking alone, a young man named La from So Korea, a group of about 20 Portuguese pilgrims from a church group on their way to Fatima, and 5 Australians and Canadians traveling together who were the least friendly pilgrims we have met til today.
We also had our very first pilgrims meal. Bread, olives, water or wine, steak with an egg on top, French fries and rice, dessert and coffee or tea for 12,50euro. We added a salad and 2 cokes for an additional 3 50 euro. And it was a lovely restaurant with the nicest wait staff.
Now that I am snuggled in bed with the ac on, all is once again right in my world. Ultreia!Leer más
I'm fired.
11–15 abr. 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 63 °F
Today we walked from Santerem to Vale de Figueira. The beginning of the trail today took us outside the city walls and down a steep path into the valley. It had rained the night before and the path was very rocky and slippery. My hiking poles saved me from tumbling a few times. It was a 2 mile hike down to the bottom and back into the vineyards. And just then it began to rain again, making the whole route one huge puddle of slimy, slippery mud. Again, my poles kept me from falling a few times. This went on for about 4 or 5 miles before we hit asphalt, and coincidentally the rain finally stopped. What was amazing though, was how easy the hike was and how our packs felt like nothing on our backs. The last mile or so was uphill, and back into the sunshine and heat.
This stage of the Camino is actually over 20 miles long, and after Vale de Figueira, there is nothing until Azinhaga, another 12 miles. There is also nothing but a café in V de F, so we decided to Uber to a town off the Camino to a hostel, then Uber back and continue tomorrow. Well I booked the hotel, and I swear I do not know how I did this, but I thought it was 3.5 miles away, turns out it was back past Santerem and another dozen or so miles away for a total of about 21 miles!!!!! And the booking is non-refundable. So, tonight we are in Alpiarca and tomorrow we will go back to the train station in Santerem and take the train to rejoin the Camino. And Jayme has fired me from ever booking our stays again!
But, it is a cute town and we met a friendly bartender/pizza guy who spoke some English, served an incredibly large and tasty gin and tonic (for 5 euro) and was very interested in our story.
One screw up, but overall a pretty good day.Leer más
Back on Track
12–17 abr. 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 64 °F
This morning we caught the 7:58 train to Tomar, and reconnected with the Camino one block away from the train station. We ate some breakfast, and started hiking. It was supposed to rain and be cool and overcast, but again, just drizzled on us a bit then got sunny and humid. The way took us through woods along a river, then we started going up and up. The last hill, right before our albergue in Colvinos, was about 1/2 a mile 10% grade hill. I will attach a couple photos, but they can't do the steepness justice.
Tonight we are staying in an albergue with 10 beds. There are five of us here, so we all got a bottom bunk. Beside me and Jayme, there is Yve from France, Alex from Denmark and Esther from Germany. There is nowhere to eat here but if you ask at the bar (the only business in Colvinos) the bartender unlocks a storage room in the back, filled with groceries. A few people shopped and brought back some rice, tomatoes, peppers, zucchini, mushroom, onions, garlic, stewed tomatoes and chickpeas, and on the single hotplate with only two saucepan, I made rice, veggies and a garlic tomato chickpea sauce . Yve had some bread and cheese to round out the meal, and it was delicious!
It looks like the next few days we will be in little towns and going up and down hills all day, but we have gotten so much stronger in this past week. I am sure we can do it!Leer más

ViajeroSounds like you are rising yo the challenge and having a great adventure. I can’t wait to join the fun!!

Noelle WalksCooking for others must have done your heart some good. 🩵 a little “normalcy” in a new adventure…including two pans on one hotplate! Love your company!
Tiredly Trekking
13 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 63 °F
Such a day. Ups and downs in moods and energy as well as over terrain.
We had breakfast at the hostel with the other pilgrims, all setting out to the same destination, but at our own paces. Jayme and I were tired today and slow. And just in case we didn't realize it when our three hostel-mates disappeared before we got out of the gate, along came Bob. Bob must be 80, carries an umbrella and an enormous backpack and wears jeans and a plaid workshirt (remind you of anyone?). Anyway, Bob stopped to say good morning, then took off at his ridiculously fast sprint. And was gone. We were again at the end of the pack.
We trudged quite slowly through a couple small towns with roads like roller coaster tracks, until we got to the woods. We had a choice of the high road or the low road along the river. We opted for the high road because we are just those kind of people, but also because it was shorter kilometers to the point where the roads come together again. We knew it was steep, but had no idea how long the climb would go on. We literally climbed, using sticks to help lift ourselves, for at least a mile and a little more. The path eventually became more of rolling type hills, so they were much more manageable and we were able to enjoy the beauty. The forest was full of eucalyptus trees and it smelled like a spa walking. We saw lovely flowers and cork trees that had been debarked. I want to learn about that process. Lunch was another ham and cheese sandwich on the side of the road.
Though we are still not discouraged, today was a really tough day walking. We were tired and our bodies were hurting all over. Or, as Bob said, first it hurts here and then I feel it there and forget about the last pain, but then this new hurt goes on until a new one distracts you from that one and on and on. I also had my first panic attack since I have been here. We were coming down a steep hill and it suddenly hit me. I needed to drop my poles, take off my pack, change my shirt, pace, try to breath and ultimately take a pill. It eventually passed and I carried on, but it was no fun.
They say The Camino Provides and she really did. We needed a good night, and were able to get a reservation for a private room with our own bathroom in Alvaiazere, in the most sought after albergue. As a matter of fact, all of last nights house mates are here as well as 5 or 6 other pilgrims we have met along the way. This place is NOT fancy. It kind of looks like a frat house. But the guy who runs it does a little stamp ceremony with wax, and creates something special for everyone. He picked white for the color of my jacket and my heart and blue for the light in my blue eyes. He also arranged for a restaurant to open again (they all closed early on Palm Sunday) for all the pilgrims, and drove me and Jayme there and then picked us up when we were finished. He then gave us a private tour of his workshop where he makes tables and stools from 100 year old poplar trees. Then he showed us where he is making a pool, terrace and lounge for the pilgrims, which he says will be ready next year. In two years, he will walk the Camino for the first time. He is waiting for his son to graduate so he can help his wife run the albergue while he is gone. His name is Carlos Pinheiros. He made what could have been a pretty tough day into something special.Leer más
Ask and you shall receive
14 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 52 °F
We have been asking for rain to relieve us from the heat and humidity. Today we got it! No warmth and rain all day, with the exception of about an hour when we ate lunch and took pictures.
We started early, and the kitchen at the albergue was small and overly crowded with all the young guys getting nourished before their 30+ kilometers treks. So we decided to stop in a café with room to sit for our morning beverage and sweet. Sadly, we didn't come across one so breakfast was some chocolate sugar cookies and water, sitting on our packs on the side of the road, watching all last nights house-mates pass us by, with full tummies and tons of energy. No matter we were soon on our way also.
The path today was primarily through woods with the occasional pop out to walk through some tiny village. This whole area is a series of ups and downs. We certainly got a good work out. It also rained harder than it has as yet, and nearly all day. It made the hills, especially in the woods, difficult to navigate with puddles, slippery mud and slick loose rocks. To say it was slow going would be an understatement. We did meet an ever so cute dog, a pilgrim heading back, walking in the opposite direction and Yve, our French friend, pulling his little trolley packed with his stuff ( he doesn't carry a back pack) We came across a few places where pilgrims were showing their devotion, like a couple cairns and two shrines, one devoted solely to the Virgin Mary and the other to both Mary and Jesus. Most of the day was me, Jayme and nature. We arrived in Ansaio soaked through to the skin. Somehow, I didn't even mind. Even in the midst of all the things I would run from at home, I had fun.
After we got into our hotel, we packed up all our wet clothes, both the ones we were wearing and the ones in our packs that have not fully dried over the last couple days, and got some laundry done. It is such a pleasure to be able to put on clean dry clothes tomorrow!
We also went down the street for our pilgrims meal. It was way more food than I could eat, but for 15euro I had olives and bread to start, then a bowl of vegetable soup, the main of veal with French fries and rice and a " glass" of wine served in a little carafe that i can't finish, and ended with mousse for dessert and a cup of coffee. No wonder you can walk 400 miles and only lose a pound or two!
Yesterday Jayme picked some eucalyptus while we were walking in the forest. Today I got some oil and we made our own massage oil. I think our feet are going to love this treat!
It looks like it will be raining the next few days , so apologies in advance for what I anticipate to be low picture days. I am trying not to expose my phone to too much moisture.Leer más

ViajeroWhat a day and amazing what you and Jayme are trekking through. Can’t wait to meet up with you and soon ❤️

Noelle WalksThis is a great story for the day! You two are true pilgrims. I especially enjoy the stories of your encounters with other people and more importantly with the puppies!
Double post tomorrow
15–20 abr. 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 52 °F
I wrote nearly the whole of today's post and dropped my phone and lost it! Too tired to redo now, but I will catch up tomorrow.
Good night!
I need to make this short so I can post tonight's footprint, so short story....
SO much more rain, including two thunderstorms. SO many more hills, I commented to someone tonight that I feel like I should be in heaven by now, I keep climbing and barely walk downhill. But the beauty! It is bountiful!
The day ended in a tiny albergue with 4 beds. We stayed with Mano from France. He was up and out before we woke up! Anyway, the albergue was a bunkhouse attached to a family home. We ate dinner in their home and they brought us breakfast in our bunkhouse. Dinner may have been the best food since arriving in Portugal.tomato and pumpkin soup, bread, olives, cabbage cooked Dutch style, big salad, mashed potatoes and a gravy with mushrooms and small chunks of beef, something good but I am not remembering and fresh fruit for dessert.
I slept in the top bunk and needed to get up to pee 3 times. ChallengingLeer más

Noelle Walks
Yikes! Let us know how the middle of the night runs to a casa de banho go!

ViajeroPretty impressed that you can climb up after all that walking! So proud of you
Birth
16–20 abr. 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 59 °F
Forty nine years ago today, I gave birth to my first son, Jeffrey. I remember every moment of that day as if it were yesterday. It was a day that not only changed the course of my life, but changed me as a person. It wasn't only Jeff being born that day, a new version of Arlene was born. I remember thinking the pain was something I could never imagine doing again, and yet I was somehow able to forget it after all and remember only the good that came into my life, this wonderful person who entered my life, but also this newer improved person I had become.
As I walk this Camino, putting myself through all this pain , purposely walking and climbing further than it feels my body can endure, I cannot imagine ever doing this again. And yet, like after childbirth, each night I remember I was in pain but I forget what it actually felt like. What stays with me is the pride I feel for being able to do this, the new appreciation I feel for all they beauty in this world, both in nature and people, the overwhelming gratitude I feel to be able to enjoy this. And there is something else that I cannot quite name growing in me and changing me. And instinctively, I know whatever this thing is, I will cherish it as much as I do my role as mother. There is a reason people have been doing this walk for centuries, some people multiple times. I am beginning to understand why. We all forget the physical pain and only remember the wonder.
Tonight I am in Cominbriga after yet another day of hills and rain. But today was maybe the most beautiful day on the Camino so far. I walked with a sense of peace and serenity that I cannot remember ever feeling before. I also experienced my first donativo. A donativo is a gift someone makes to a pilgrim to support them on their way. If the pilgrim can make a donation to help support future giving, he can. If he cannot, he doesn't. The donativo I came across offered water, coffee or tea, cookies and fruit, and a shelter and chairs to rest for a bit. There were also little shrines and places to meditate or pray. It was lovely, and every pilgrim I met there, with the exception of the pilgrim running the donativo, I had already met and recognized. Tonight I am sleeping in a dorm with 8 other people and I have a bottom bunk. Jayme and I went to dinner with a man from the Netherlands, the only other English speaker in the dorm. We ate at Tenesee's, burgers and wings! I am looking forward to Porto and some fish. It is all meat here in south!Leer más

ViajeroThat was a very thoughtful, heartfelt remembrance of your day and a time 49 years ago. I know that you were on your own back then and while I was with you in thought, I was not there for that scared 19 year in person. It seems like we have come full circle and you are in your own again but are a much stronger person capable of doing most anything you put your mind to. Congrats on your progress so far and remember I am with you in spirit and soon to be in person.

ViajeroI cannot wait to see you! And your support has meant the world to me throughout this journey. Thank you!

Noelle WalksI love you two very much. This exchange touched me deeply. Thank you for sharing your words and your journey and yourself. May your peace spread within and with out. 🩵
Its like a smoothie
17 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 61 °F
The days are blending together with just a small bit of variety, maybe like a strawberry that escapes the blender blade and adds a bit of something to remember.
Today it was more hills, more rain (though much lighter), more small villages , abandoned homes, flowers and trees, and ham and cheese for lunch. But each day has its nugget of goodness that sets it apart from the others. Today it was sweet Antonio. He is an old man we ran into somewhere along the path. We were going one way and on the opposite side of the street he was pushing his walker with the little seat rest, going the other way. I greeted him as I do everyone we pass with a " bom dia". He was so excited to see us, or maybe he would have received any pilgrim the same way. He motioned for us to wait and hurriedly (not) shuffled across the street. He doesn't really speak English but asked "London?" I said no, United States. He then asked Santiago? To which we answered yes. He grasped our hand and kissed them, then pulled each of us in for the European kiss on both cheeks. He was literally glowing with happiness to wish us " bom viage". This simple act of kindness and recognition truly lightened my spirit and made my walk a bit easier.
Tonight we are in a lovely tiny rental which gives me and Jayme a bit of private space, something we have not experienced in 2 weeks. The rental is in the middle of old town, a perfect location to explore Coimbra from on our rest day. I look forward to experiencing how the Portuguese honor Good Friday.Leer más
Good Friday and a Good Rest
18–21 abr. 2025, Portugal ⋅ 🌧 55 °F
We stayed in Coimbra today for a rest day. This has been a hard Camino with the first few days excessively hot and humid and all the others with rain of varying lengths and intensities. To make it harder, Jayme has had a cold for days now and it seems to be at its worst right now. And the last two days, I am battling not to get sick also as I feel symptoms coming on. I hope today's rest will give us the strength we need to continue tomorrow with renewed energy.
We are staying in a little apartment on a narrow cobblestone street in old town, we are in the heart of everything, less than a 5 minute walk to the Cathedral. We had a leisurely start to the day with a real breakfast then a tour of the Se Velha Da Coimbra. Very beautiful as so many of these old Cathedrals are. Being there on Good Friday was especially moving. I lit candles for my parents at the Shrine of the Virgin Mary.
We then had to visit the tourist info center to get info on an open pharmacy as most places are closed for Good Friday. We bought cough syrup, nose spray, throat lozengers and ibuprofen . This should be enough to kick this cold but the rain we will be walking in again for the next few days could be a challenge to recovery.
We visited another very old church dedicated to Mary. While not as ornate as the Cathedral it was very beautiful in its own way. We were sitting and looking at a statue of Mary when almost simultaneously both Jayme and I noticed the opposite sides of Mary. Face on, she is loving and accepting and reaching out with such kindness in her demeanor. Then you see the shadow cast by the shadow, and Mary appears so sad and dejected. In that same church, to the left of the altar is buried the first king of Portugal, and on the right side, his son.
After that, it was naptime. I slept two solid hours and felt I could sleep til morning, but we were hungry. We returned to Restaurant Maria where we had dined last night. Dinner was just as good. We ate a chickpea salad, beef and eggplant. Then walked 3 minutes back to our apartment in pouring rain.
The only disappointment for me was that I missed the Funeral Procession for the Dead Lord, kind of a reenactment of the procession to bury Jesus. It started at the Cathedral which would have been perfect if it wasn't at 9:30pm in the pouring rain after I had gotten back from dinner and climbed into bed.
Tomorrow we will take a train to get a bit closer to Porto, and then begin walking again around noon.Leer más
It's a Sick Day
19–28 abr. 2025, Portugal ⋅ 🌩️ 52 °F
Sadly, Jayme is feeling much worse. She sounds terrible and can't get warm. And today, it is only 50 degrees, is windy and rainy and just started thundering. It is never fun to walk when you are sick, but it is just plain miserable when the weather is bad. So, we decided to take a train to get to a good place to walk from tomorrow and be able to meet the others in Porto on Tuesday. Hopefully she will feel better tomorrow.
I have the same scratchy throat I had yesterday, but so far I am no worse. I hope not being in the cold and rain will keep my cold at bay.Leer más
Easter on the Camino
20–26 abr. 2025, Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 54 °F
It rained on us again, or is it still? But it was a bit warmer and the rain was not as drenching, so that was good. Jayme is beginning to improve though you might not believe it to hear her cough. I am holding steady, no better, no worse. With the report out of the way, let me tell you about my day.
It was a fairly easy walk today which left lots of time for observation and reflection. And being Easter morning, it was hard not to think long and hard about my religious faith, which has been pretty much non-existent for a long time. If you know me, you know I am convicted in my spiritual beliefs. But today, religion was everywhere, and I had not a single negative thought. It was really, really nice to feel that long closed door crack open a bit. It started with nearly every single business being closed down, shops, whole malls, restaurants, pharmacies, even gas stations. This country is all about allowing the people to worship something other than making the next dollar. And the people do! We are not quite positive this actually happened since neither of us speak Portuguese, but Jayme greeted a man this morning saying "bom dia". Normally people will respond in the same way and then offer a "bom camino" or "bom viage". But this guy started to speak to her as if he were admonishing her. We both seemed to understand that he did not think she should be walking on the Camino today, but should instead be in mass. Anyway, it seemed the whole country was decorating their houses, all dressed up and out visiting , eating Easter dinners together, and yes, going to mass. The sense of community around this day and its traditions was palpable.
On my walk today, I must have passed dozens of shrines on lawns or built into the walls of people homes dedicated to Mary. And there were three chapels built in her honor, just on our route alone. And when I went to mass this evening (yes I did) they began the mass to the Risen Lord with a procession and blessing with incense and song to her.
The church was packed, barely a seat to be had at a 7pm mass when I would have expected most people to be in front of the TV or too full from dinner to get up and out. But, it truly seemed the whole town was there.
Somehow, in that sea of worshipers, we stood out. Immediately after the mass was over, a young man named Pedro approached me and offered to tell me about and show me around the actual church and give a bit of history and some info about the procession. It seems that for hundreds of years the youth of the parish volunteer to go to every single home in the parish and announce that Jesus is risen. They carry poles with crosses and are welcomed by the people they visit.
I loved the spirit around this shared belief in Jesus. I'm not sure I'm ready to rejoin, but I do admire the way they all join in community and celebration of a shared belief.Leer más

ViajeroI loved your blog today! You’re so observant and an excellent writer I’m glad Easter was so special today for you and you really saw their culture in a new way! ✝️💕

ViajeroYour description of this day mirror many of my feelings! At the end of the day faith remains even if a tiny ember. The chapels and reminders of the Holy Mother are something that touches me and they are everywhere in Ireland too!
I'm in Porto
21 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 55 °F
Grijo to Porto today. And guess what? It was cold and rainy most of the day. But we are champions and pushed on.
Most of the route was through towns and villages. But there was a rather steep and long and muddy and rocky forest section. Yep, that hill had it all! An equally treacherous descent was fun. Check out my pics and zoom in on Jayme and you will be able to see the inclines a bit better. Hills are so hard to capture on camera.
During our day, we met a couple of our pilgrim friends, Mano from France and a lot of other places, and La from South Korea. It is always a spirit boost to stop and talk with friends, even if you need to use a translation app!
We learned the Pope died today while we were having tea and waiting for the pharmacy to open. Jayme now has conjunctivitis with her cold.
We did our laundry so we are not stinky and smelly when we meet up with Richard, Noelle and Deb tomorrow. And we went to dinner and had an excellent meal for 25 Euro each. Now medicated, I am getting ready to sleep.
We are on the other side of the river from where the cathedral is and where our stay is in Porto. We thought we were about 4-5 miles from there, but turns out our hostel is close to the bridge we need to cross and where we need to be is close to the other end. So, only a little over a mile distance! Happily, we won't have to get up too soon, and will be able to sleep in a bit. More than half way to Santago!Leer más
Our Campanions Have Arrived
22 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 63 °F
Today I woke up in the hostel just across the river from where we are meeting Richard, Noelle and Deb. It was only about a mile and a half from them, but we just didn't have the energy to get there. So we took a car and met them at the rental office where we left backpacks and poles while we waited for our unit to be readied. We went to lunch at Time Out Market. It was great as we could all go to a different vendor and get just what we wanted. Afterward, we went to the Cathedral. The newbies got their first stamp while Jayme and I got another stamp and another credential. The ones we have are already nearly full. Next we went to Sport Zone and got hiking poles for Deb and Noelle. By then our rental was ready. It is very cute, 3 beds 2 baths in the middle of old town with a washer and outdoor space. And the weather has completely changed so we can enjoy. Everyone napped and we're still too tired to go out for dinner, so we ate pizza and salad. Now I am in bed again and exhausted. Hopefully, we will be able to explore Porto a bit tomorrow before we move on.Leer más
Sick Day for Me
23 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F
Whatever this cold bug is, it got the better of me today. Still a sore throat and coughing, but developed a head ache and stomach issues. So, while everyone else went out touring, I sat on the patio baking in the sun and reading. By the end of the afternoon I was feeling better enough to go out to dinner with everyone. We went to a very cool bar high above the Douro River and ate on the terrace while watching the sunset. Afterward, we came back to the apartment and Noelle did tarot card readings for Jayme and Deb. Now it is time for bed. Tomorrow my walk resumes.Leer más
Its been a while
27 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 66 °F
I have been sick and struggling to continue my walk. But, that hasn't left me with the energy to write my posts. I have been crashing each night. Though I have much more recuperating to go, I do feel better. A short day today helped also. We switched from the coastal to the central route, and took a car to span them. It would have been about a 30 mile walk and we don't have time for that. But we did walk about 8 miles today after we got to the Central.
We left Porto on Thursday morning. Jayme headed on the Central path and the rest of us took the coastal. The first three days along the coast were a mixture of things. We walked miles and miles of boardwalk, through small towns and on a couple trails. The terrain was pretty flat, but it seemed we were either being battered by the wind and sea spray or burnt to a crisp by the unrelenting sun. But the coast is beautiful and wild and I am so happy we did it. It truly reminded me of the Maine coast. Along the way we stayed a night in Perafita in an old woman's house with rooms that had decks facing the ocean and listened to the waves crash all night. Next we stayed in a 2 bedroom apartment right in the middle of old town Vila do Conde, a very nice place. And last night we stayed in private rooms at the Albergue Santiago de Coste in Apulia. We stayed in the private rooms because it only cost 5 euro more than the dorm bunks with 14 other people. And tonight we are in a private apartment with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen, living room, and dining, balcony around 2 sides of the apartment, and some strange 4th bedroom that is the size of a cell and has no windows. Lucky we don't need that room. But the place is huge, quite nice and only .5 miles from downtown, all for 106,14 euro!
The path has become so much more populated since leaving Porto. It is getting difficult to pop behind a bush for a quick pee because there is always someone coming along to see you. But, everyone is friendly and happy and there is a good energy. And the locals have all been wonderful. When leaving Porto we net a man named Francisco who spoke with Noelle in Spanish and Portuguese. He asked where she learned to speak Portuguese and was greatly amused when she said "you tube"! He was so proud of his city and the park we were walking in. He gave us a history of how it was built. And, he made my day when he was awed that I had been walking since Lisbon.
Sorry this is just a quick recap. We are out at 6:30 tomorrow morning. We have a lot of miles and the majority a straight uphill. I need rest for what is ahead. And in case you don't hear from me, I will be in bed sleeping, I am sure.Leer más

ViajeroGreat recap and pictures. You have been unbelievably well and I am in awe of you and your stamina.
Seeing What Stuff I Am Made Of
28 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 79 °F
I left the cutest little town today, Ponte de Lima. It was such a pretty, peaceful walk out of town for our destination of Rubiaeus. Thank goodness I had no idea what lay ahead, or I may never have left! I left town along the river, crossed the ancient pedestrian bridge, and made my way into the fields, then the forest, then the mountain! The fields were fun with stone walkways running just inches from the stream, with water so clear you almost didn't know it was there. The forest started going uphill almost immediately, but it would be a pretty good inclines and then it would level off for a while so you could catch your breath before the next one. This went on for miles and as the top of the mountain got closer, the steeper the climb got. Amazingly, there were many mountain bikers riding up along side us. It is crazy to see them driving up over the rocks and roots and loose dirt! Then came the unexpected, the unimaginable, indescribable. It was a half mile climb, so steep it was like trying to climb stairs, but with rocks and boulders and rivulets of water running down and trees and roots everywhere, and at points climbing through sections where the twisty turny path was only about 18 inches wide with walls of rock and earth up to your thighs. This was certainly not the "easy" Portuguese Camino I thought I was going to be doing. But, guess what. I made it, unscathed and so full of a sense of accomplishment, I was on cloud nine! I have never in my life challenged myself like this. It was a huge test of strength, stamina, and will power. And, it was a bigger test of challenging and facing my fears. There was a good chance I could get hurt, and if I did, I couldn't just call 911. There was no one coming for me. This is the best I can do to describe how great I felt about this, still do actually. But if you feel anything in my retelling of this adventure, multiply by 100 to imagine how good it really felt for me.
And then, I got to go all the way down the other side! You think this would be easy, but the downside was equally steep and the trail had all loose dirt and pebbles. And it was very long. It was tough on my knees and I felt like gravity was pulling my 14 lbs backpack and my body along with it, all the way to the bottom.
Once we got to the bottom and back into civilization, we discovered the power outage in Portugal and Spain. While on the mountain we were too busy to realize we had no service. But once down, when we all were trying to get cold drinks and food, we discovered the problem. There were no restaurants or cafes open, but we were able to find a few provisions in a tiny market and were able to make pasta with red sauce, zucchini and olives. Lucky for us our albergue had a gas stove. Not going out to a dinner made and served to us by restaurant staff somehow seemed to be the perfect end to this wonderously hard day. We were once again proving we were capable and creative and able to overcome hardship.
I really am as strong as I think I am!Leer más

ViajeroAs I sit down to read your entry, this song “Shooting Star” by Bad Company came on Pandora. Its refrain is “Don’t you know you are a shooting star”. I am chuckling as messages always appear💞
Last Day in Portugal
29 de abril de 2025, Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 79 °F
Today I walked from Rubiaeus to Valenca, the last city in Portugal. It is separated from Tui, Spain by the Minho River. The walk was pretty uneventful after our hike yesterday. It was fairly flat with lots of towns with cafes to stop and some bits of forest walking to keep us reminded of the beauty of nature. Portugal truly is a gorgeous country. We met a few people we have met frequently along the way, and it is nice recognizing faces and learning bits about them. The only drawback to the day, in my opinion, was the heat and humidity. It is exhausting to walk in. I do miss the rain.
When we arrived in Valenca, we found Kenny waiting by the fountain of the town center. He is the last to join our group and will finish the walk to Santiago with us. We are staying within the walls of the Fortress of Valenca. I always love these walled cities, but this one feels special. Maybe it is the 2000 year history of the fortress, or maybe the sentimentality of knowing tomorrow I will say goodbye to country that has welcomed me and supported me on this journey. Or maybe it is just my really comfy bed for the night! Whatever it is, I am very happy and grateful we get to spend the night here.
Tomorrow we are only walking to the north end of Tui. I have walked carrying my backpack for over somewhere around 255 miles and almost a month now. I am tired. So tomorrow we will only go about 5 miles and just rest a bit. And Noelle and Richard seem to be getting colds so it will probably be good for us all. Oh, and we lose an hour when we cross into Spain.Leer más
Portugal to Spain, just a bridge crossed
30 abr.–4 may. 2025, España ⋅ 🌧 61 °F
Today we walked less than 4 miles. I am tired, Ken hasn't quite adjusted to the time difference, and Richard, Noelle and Deb are all coming down with colds. It was also raining. So we slept in then did the short walk across the bridge from Portugal to Spain and checked into a hotel. The others spent most of the day sleeping, so after my short nap I had plenty of alone time to just think.
I am sad. I miss Portugal. I really love it there. The people are so warm and friendly and supportive of the pilgrims. The landscapes are beyond beautiful. And I just felt so peaceful and at home there, even without understanding the language. I can't stand that I have no idea when I might get another delicious bowl of soup or a pastel de nata. Crossing into Spain made the end of my Camino seem way to close and way too real. And I am not ready for it to end. This has been grueling and incredibly hard, but also energizing and uplifting. I wrote before about how in childbirth you forget the pain and only remember the good stuff. Well I am only remembering the good stuff now. The hard stuff is just a passing memory with no feeling attached to it. The good stuff is in my heart and soul and felt deeply.
Tomorrow I will begin walking in Spain, and I am sure within a day or two I will feel as strongly for Spain as I do Portugal. But tonight I feel I have left a very good friend behind.Leer más

Noelle WalksPortugal delivered for us. I loved that county too. And yes, the end is feeling too near. 🩵


























































































































































































































































































































Viajero
Good luck. Will miss you!
ViajeroSo proud of you Lene!!!