• Grace SHANNON
  • Chris Shannon
  • Grace SHANNON
  • Chris Shannon

Grace & Chris’ Camino 2025

Un’avventura di 50 giorni di Grace & Chris Leggi altro
  • Day 38 - Portomarin to Eirexe (Airexe)

    29 luglio 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    The Camino has it all. Flat lands and mountains. Hot and cold weather. Dry and wet conditions (usually). Tiny towns and large cities. And, as Grace noted, empty sections and crowded sections.

    Yesterday we stayed in a city that is a usual stopping point for peregrinos only walking the final 100 km, so we left with the crowds. Tonight we're staying "off-stage" and the one restaurant in town is empty except for me and my glass of wine as 6 pm approaches. Grace hit the high and low-lights so I'll just add some photos.

    AllTrails

    French Way: Portomarín - Palas de Rei
    https://www.alltrails.com/explore/recording/mor…

    Buen Camino!
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  • Day 39 - Eirexe to Melide

    30 luglio 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    The morning involved lots of open churches but closed bars. One had an "OPEN" sign but no one inside. I said that meant it was self-service but Grace disagreed. It was about 8 km and after 8 am before our first nourishment. We almost missed the non-peregrino bar that was off to the side with no tables, but someone exited and we heard the wonderful sounds of clinking glasses. It was a long 23 km day but we stopped several times for refreshments after that.

    It was laundry day but while I was out I picked up a €5 set of swimming trunks so I could go into the hotel's swimming pool and hot tub. Also, the change machine at the laundry mat was good for getting more €1 coins for Grace's candle addiction.

    AllTrails
    Afternoon hike
    https://www.alltrails.com/explore/recording/aft…

    Buen Camino!
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  • Day 40 - Melide to As Quintas

    31 luglio 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    We started the day with a breakfast of churros and chocolate along with our usual café con leche. The walk today was mostly beautiful nature but fairly unremarkable. We did stop at one river to soak our feet.

    While we were soaking in the river a group of guarda civil was nearby giving out sellos and doing some community policing. They were assisted by French and Italian officers who come to Spain in the summer to assist along the Camino.

    We're staying in a smaller albergue tonight that only hosts up to 10 people and has a communal dinner. There's no bar nearby so we have snacked on our leftover pizza and pack of nuts and dried fruit. Only a day and a half left, but the emergency rations are gone until we pass by a store.

    With no bar or other attractions to see, we're relaxing in the shady large yard with the chicken and cats.

    AllTrails

    French Way: Melide to Arzúa
    https://www.alltrails.com/explore/recording/aft…

    Buen Camino!
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  • This is difficult

    1 agosto 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    When talking to people about the Camino before we started I would joke that it was just a long bar and café stroll. I was underplaying how hard it might be to others and myself. I have had an easier time than Grace in the physical aspects of the Camino, but I'll admit that my feet are very sore. I've been lucky to only have a few blisters and a few bed bug bites.

    Personally, the harder parts have been the almost constant movement. We wake up early and finish packing away things. Then we hit the trail for 6-10 hours with breaks. Once you arrive, then it's checking in, showering, unpacking, and laundry. After this is finding dinner if not provided at the albergue, obtaining supplies for the next day, and figuring out the walking plan and accommodations for the next day. Squeezed in there might be a few hours to visit places, spend time with new friends, sleep, or finally having some time alone. There will definitely not be enough time to do them all, or for a great length of time.

    I had dreams/delusions of studying more Spanish each day, but I've often just done a single lesson of DuoLingo and rarely looked at other study materials. I had hopes of journaling each day, but this blog will have to do.

    And for the last few days the homesickness has set in. Partly for the people, partly for our home, and partly for being part of the real world. My heart breaks at everything going on and I long to do something, anything to make things better. The Camino has given me time to think about how I can do this, how to find peace with whatever I might be able to do for the most vulnerable even if it feels like a drop in the bucket that's needed to stop the world from burning.

    I said before that this wasn't so much of a pilgrimage for me. To an extent it has become one, not to reach a destination and collect a certificate, but to figure out where I am in relation to God, the universe, and everyone else. Maybe it takes 40+ days on the Camino to get there, maybe it doesn't, but I'm thankful for the journey even though I look forward to its end.

    Buen Camino!
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  • Day 41 - As Quintas to A Lavacolla

    1 agosto 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Last night's small albergue was full with nine people. Everyone else had come from other Camino routes that merge with the Camino Frances. The salmon dinner and company were enjoyable. Unfortunately, all the snoring wasn't. Grace slept fine with her CPAP, but it was a restless night for me. Fortunately, good coffee was only a kilometer away in the morning.

    We had a 24 km day so stopped several times for refreshments. We had "the best tortilla on the Camino" and it actually was. We saw the guarda civil group again and stopped for a beer and Aquarius before the last big hill. No churches or other points of interest on this day so we still made it to our albergue before it opened at 2 p.m.

    Tonight's albergue is very big with sectioned off bunks and a bit empty so it should be a better night for sleeping. It has a beautiful garden and backyard.

    It seems a bit unreal to finally be walking into Santiago tomorrow, and it's only a 10 km walk.

    AllTrails

    French Way: A Calzada - Santiago de Compostela
    https://www.alltrails.com/explore/recording/aft…

    Buen Camino!
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  • Why old ruins never get old

    1 agosto 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

    I feel the need to balance the difficulties of the Camino with the wonder we've experienced so let's see if I can do that.

    There's something special walking the path where others have walked and lived for centuries. Regardless of your religious, spiritual, political, or other beliefs, there's no denying the energy that was put into these places. Whether that energy is still there I leave to your imagination.

    The ruins we see now might have been home to a family or a business. Families, farmers, merchants, artisans, and others lived and worked there. Still others built the walls that border so much of the Camino as part of their farms or grazing fields. Devotees built churches and decorated them with art. They put their energy into the creation of something.

    It's not just the Camino though. For me, ruins and older structures fascinate me in a multitude of ways that maintains my interest even after having seen so many of them. Sometimes it's the history and the stories around the site. When that isn't known or is incomplete, the scientific and creative gears of my brain happily spin trying to figure it out or imagine stories that fit the circumstances. The Lego building engineer in me marvels at the what, why, and how of various objects and structures. Often there is a simple beauty about the older structures missing in many modern utilitarian buildings and bridges. And, yes, the fantasy geek in me does imagine the impossible and giggle with joy at the sights.
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  • It’s time to go!

    2 agosto 2025, Spagna ⋅ 🌙 16 °C

    I woke up at 4 AM, an hour before our alarm. Most of it was that Christmas morning feeling of excitement, but the fact that a fellow Albergue inhabitant was packing up for his very early morning flight home also played a part as did the fact that the plastic mattress and pillow covers our place uses in the Camino-wide fight against bedbugs makes for a hot and sweaty night.

    So I’m up and packed and drinking vending machine coffee and pastry before walking our last 10.3 km and waiting until 5 to finish getting ready since nothing in Santiago will be open before 7.

    As I pack up for my last stage of the Camino, I’ll finish with a list of things I’ve left behind — intentionally, unintentionally, and aspirationally:
    Left behind intentionally:
    —a pair of walking shoes
    —9 pairs of socks
    —a pair of “fancy” after hike sandals
    —three boxes of Nun Cookies

    Left behind unintentionally:
    —my newer, nicer sunshirt (never made it off the clothesline in Lédigos)
    —my custom anti-teeth grinding mouth guard (left on a bathroom counter in Atapuerca…I’ve been texting our host there and am hoping he kept his promise to mail it to Santiago. We’ll find out soon…)
    —my tin of body wash/shampoo bar (forgotten in Vega de Valcarce, where we made pasta with the Germans)

    What I hope I’ve left behind:
    -self-doubt
    -guilt and shame
    -my tendency to keep going till I drop
    -comparing myself to others

    Next stop:Santiago
    Ultreia
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  • Day 42 - Santiago de Compostela

    2 agosto 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    We made it!

    Another early start and only a 10 km walk meant we had the cathedral plaza to ourselves. Later there would be hundreds of pilgrims and other tourists on the plaza all day. It also meant we were one of the first 10 people in line to receive our certificates so we received free lunch at the hotel next to the cathedral. It was fine, but the meal we had with Natalia for dinner was wonderful.

    Six weeks of adventure and emotion are swirling in my head and nothing coherent is spilling forth tonight.

    Buen Camino!
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  • ¡Hasta la próxima, Santiago!

    4 agosto 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    Chris and I are spending the next few days sightseeing and readjusting to post-Camino life in Barcelona, and then we fly home on Thursday. We’ve been in Barcelona for almost 24 hours now, and we’re enjoying this vibrant, busy, beautiful city. Even so, Santiago and the Camino are rarely far from my mind.

    I had heard from my fellow pilgrims that Santiago was an underwhelming city with an underwhelming cathedral. Many people I talked to or heard from in books and podcasts described feeling disappointed when they arrived at Kilometer Zero after days and weeks of walking, but that wasn’t my experience at all.

    Walking through the tunnel and out onto the Santiago’s main square and getting my first full view of the cathedral’s western facade completely overwhelmed me: I felt so grateful and so accomplished, and like I had arrived at the right place, in the right way, and in the right time. I was in tears or on the verge of tears for most of our time in Santiago, thinking not only about the journey and all it meant, but also a very deep gratitude for all who supported us along the way: everyone who prayed for us or wished us well, or who helped with logistical details at home and on the road.

    Many of the people we’d walked with continued the Camino on to Fisterre, the westernmost point on the Iberian peninsula and the “end of the known world” during Roman and medieval times. Chris and I had not budgeted enough time to extend our Camino and walk for another 3-4 days, but we had discussed taking a bus tour to Fisterre and other points along the coast. However, within an hour of arriving in Santiago, we turned to each other and agreed that Fisterre would have to wait for another time; we were done moving and wanted to soak in what it meant to be in Santiago. Who knows? It might be our next Camino.

    Our guidebook alerted us to the fact that the alpha and omega are inverted in the Chi-Ro (the early, round rosette-style symbol of Christ formed by overlaying the Greek first two letters of his name) over the cathedral’s south door, the one that’s now used as an entrance.

    We’d seen a few of these Chi-Rho with inverted Alphas and Omegas at other cathedrals along the Way. Most people think they happened because Jewish and Muslim stone masons helped build many churches and cathedrals in medieval Spain, and both Hebrew and Arabic are read from right to left and so would write the letters that way.

    Our guide book invited us to think about the reversal in Santiago in this way:

    “Recalling that alpha and omega mean the beginning and the end, to represent Christ, here the church fathers add that being in reverse on this spot at Kilometer 0 means that as a pilgrim you have reached the omega (end) of your Camino, but that the reverse Chi-Rho is a reminder that at the end, you begin again.

    It is a nice symbol of this lived truth: now you step forward into new territory, courtesy of all that has altered and shaped you, plus all the grace you have gathered, on this pilgrimage.”

    There is a real sense that we’re stepping into new territory now, that we have more to learn and process from this experience. Thanks, dear friends and readers, for sharing the journey with us.
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  • ¡BUEN CAMINO!

    4 agosto 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

    The cynical side of me doubted there would be much to this phrase after watching videos and reading books, but it quickly found meaning as we walked westward. It literally means good journey, but it's one of those phrases that means hello and goodbye. It also recognizes the journey that the person is on and wishes them good luck in that journey. From one peregrino to another it acknowledges the shared journey on the Camino with a capital C, the companionship that comes from heading to the same destination--even if they are only going part of the way this time.

    The reality is that we are all on the journey of life. Some of us have a clear destination in mind while some of us are wandering until we learn where our heart is taking us. To our family and friends that have followed us on this journey I wish you ¡BUEN CAMINO! on whatever journey you might be on.

    Thus ends this particular Camino, the Camino Frances, for me. The Camino of life lies ahead and I know I'll walk it differently after this experience.

    There will be some pictures of Barcelona in the next few days if you want to pop back in.

    ¡BUEN CAMINO!
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  • …And that’s a wrap!

    7 agosto 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☀️ 28 °C

    Playing tourist in Barcelona has been fun, but we’re more than ready to be home. I think this is the first trip or vacation where I haven’t faced the prospect of returning home with at least a little sadness.

    I know I’ll be processing my Camino for a good long while (and I beg forgiveness in advance if I talk about it too much), but I’m also ready to face the next chapter of my “regular” life.

    Here are some of the pictures I took in Barcelona. As always, Chris took more and better pictures.
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  • Bye bye Barcelona

    7 agosto 2025, Spagna ⋅ ☀️ 30 °C

    Just some photos from the last few days. I'll just say that everything we saw by Antoni Gaudí was wonderful, in the literally full of wonder way. The Moco modern art museum was great. Dinner by the beach last night was delicious and great, too. Brain is dead so no good writing. Looking forward to being home.Leggi altro

    Fine del viaggio
    7 agosto 2025