• Valdenoceda to Pesquera de Ebro

    30 September 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

    My tracks for the day:

    https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/valdenoce…

    Another wonderful walk — how is it possible?! The morning started off with a couple of good omens— first, that I was able to figure out how to use mapy.com to get me reunited with the Camino without going back on the highway as I had come. Immediately after rejoining the Camino, poof, there in front of me was another beautiful Romanesque church. I would love to get inside a couple of these places, but this one just had late afternoon visiting hours.

    After the town of El Alminé came the Calzada medieval, an old trade route that brought sheep and other livestock from the Meseta to the coastal towns. With its ascent of about 300 m, the grade was quite good, 13%, the historical authenticity unsurpassed. But it was murder on my feet.

    Some of it was really spectacular though, because you could see how the builders had raised the level of the road in certain spots by as much as 18 or 20 feet to avoid dips. When I got to the top, there was a church of mish-mash styles emerging from the mist. Very nice.

    The next 10 or so kilometers were mainly along roads —no traffic, no scenery, no cars. The one great diversion was a detour off the Camino to see the Dolmen de Cotarrita. Adding another 1.5 km to a day’s walk is not something to be undertaken lately, but I had heard good things about this site and thought that my day was in pretty good shape.

    Estimates are that the dolmen is 5500 years old. The information plaque told me that they had found 15 bodies buried there, some of them with little pieces of pottery or amulets carved from bones. I took a good shoes-off break there and am sad to report that I got no great answers to life’s big questions. I did reflect, though, on the fact that I had been really silly to worry that the GPS tracks I had followed were too “old” — from 2012 — while this dolmen hadn’t moved in 5500 years.

    I’m in a little hotel in the town with more coats of arms on its houses than any other town in Castilla and León. Some are quite impressive and one dates from the 13th century. In my experience, that’s very unusual — typically 16th and 17th century.

    After lunch, I walked out to the mirador/viewpoint of the Cañón del Ebro. I will be walking along the river tomorrow, but I will be down at river level, and this viewpoint was from up high.

    I can’t believe how great the weather has been. Some clouds, but always sun, temps no higher than the mid 70s. I know this area is still in a terrible drought, so I wouldn’t be upset with a rainy day or two.
    Baca selengkapnya

  • Montes, montañas and bosques

    29 September 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

    This post will probably only be of interest to Janet and anyone else who is curious about the semantic nuances of the Spanish language.

    A few days ago, I wrote that I was walking through the “montes“ of Burgos. And that my understanding was that these montes were somewhere in between hills and mountains, with the villages nearby having been ceded the rights to determine permitted uses. Janet wrote that she thought that the term meant “forest.” I didn’t give it much thought, but today as I walked over what was clearly one singular hill/mountain/monte, I noticed that at several different points along the way there were signs indicating that I was going from the monte of one village to the monte of another village. But yet I was still on the same hill/mountain.

    I ran into a couple who were out for the morning walk and decided to hear it from “the locals.” After the usual pleasantries, which always involve convincing others that I am not in mortal danger walking alone, I asked them what the word monte meant to them. And they said well it is where we are right now — we are up out of the village, there’s forest, there’s some cattle, lots of hardwood trees. And no, a monte is not as big as a montaña. The señora explained that since there were several villages in different spots on this particular monte, each village got a certain designated area that is in their jurisdiction. They can decide to preserve it, to use it, to cut the timber, to earn a few euros by allowing ranchers to graze cattle on it. It just depends on the village. With some ultimate superior authority located in someplace unknown to her but probably in the capital.

    So, I asked, does the word Monte refer to the ground or to what’s growing on it. That question did not make a lot of sense to her and she said– in this monte there are many montes. Meaning, I think, that the word monte refers to all of the things that Janet and I had thought.

    She also told me that sometimes bitter conflicts arise when villagers don’t agree. She told of one village whose residents were split over whether to earn revenue from cutting down the timber, and then opening up the deforested land for cattle grazing.

    The Señora thought these conflicts were very sad and unnecessary, and told me she was very glad her village of 11 people had decided to leave these beautiful trees alone. They do get a little revenue from grazing rights for the few cattle that I saw as I was walking, but they don’t interfere with the trees. She also told me I would have to come back in a few weeks because the montes would be blazing yellow.

    Who thought that one word could be so interesting and the source of such a nice conversation!
    Baca selengkapnya

  • Trespaderne to Valdenoceda

    28 September 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

    My tracks:

    https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/trespader…

    Perfect day in all ways! Any day that starts out with crossing a long medieval bridge, a visit to a sixth century hermitage in the rocks, and then proceeds to climb up and up on a forest trail whose grade is gentle is destined to be a great day.

    I left a little before eight and it was still dark. Having a 30 km day with 750 m elevation, I knew that would mean a late arrival. But I didn’t set the alarm last night and felt great when I woke up at a little after seven. The sun doesn’t rise till 8 AM anyway!

    The walk is superb- the big ascent and descent have occasional lookout spots for oohing and aahing over the many different rock formations. The gorges are dramatic— sometimes the rock is colorful, sometimes it’s just gray, but always they are beautiful. The landscape changed on the other side of this monte, with lots of small villages and cultivated fields. I didn’t pass many other people, but those I did inevitably said hello and started a conversation.

    I knew that the camino went past San Pedro de Tejada, one of the most acclaimed Romanesque churches in the province. I also knew that not only is it usually closed, but that there is a gate all around that prevents you from a close-up look at the exterior.

    A local woman and her husband who were picking walnuts off the ground told me that when she was a kid, the church was always open — until the inevitable thefts happened. She also told me to look in the fence around at the back left side and that I would find a hole that I could squeeze through. Sure enough!!! It would have been embarrassing to have been caught in the act, but there was no way I was going to pass this option up. It’s beautiful, just beautiful, and it’s hard to believe that the corbels are original. They are all in such perfect condition, even the x-rated ones. I would have loved to get inside, but being able to sit and enjoy this jewel from the outside was reward enough.

    I went a couple of kilometers off-camino to get to a nice little casa rural. Unfortunately, my food planning has left a lot to be desired. Grocery store closed yesterday, no grocery store here, restaurant closed here, which left me with the option of a bocadillo at the bar. I will survive!
    Baca selengkapnya

  • Oña to Trespaderne

    28 September 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 22 °C

    I would agree with what a Camino friend said about this stage – not spectacular, but fine. After the last three days, the bar is set pretty high.

    https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/ona-to-tr…

    I was happy to confirm that the route through the gorge from Oña to Trespaderne has indeed been finished. The one piece left hanging for many months/years??? was a wooden footbridge over the Ebro river. This is part of the never finished railway line that was supposed to go from Santander in the north to Valencia on the Mediterranean. Some small sections apparently became operational, but for the most part, it was never used. Now it’s being repurposed as a walking/cycling route. And today, being Sunday, there were tons of people. And portions of this route were really beautiful, with those reddish tinted cliffs, going way up on either side.

    I had hoped to add a big loop at the end that would take me way up high. I started out from the train station and made it up a couple of K to the fortress ruins that date to the 6 th C. Beautiful views, nice place for a rest. At that point, I had tracks to climb up to a peak about 500 m above me. I started up, but the trail was extremely steep and extremely narrow and extremely rocky. After five or 10 minutes, having sampled what it would be like for me going down, I decided to turn around and head back down.

    Since it was still early, I decided to keep walking forward on the rail path just to see what was out there. About a half a kilometer further on, I saw another sign pointing up to the fortress. Even though I had already been up there, I figured it wouldn’t hurt to go up from a different angle. This was a much nicer path than the first one, shaded and nicely graded.

    When I got up there, I was surprised to see that there was a whole section of the fortress walls that I hadn’t seen on my first ascent, and the views were definitely more spectacular. So even though I didn’t make it up to the peak I was hoping to get to, I was glad to have made the effort to go back up to the fortress. And I had plenty of time to sit and enjoy the views.

    The town where I’m staying, Trespaderne, doesn’t have much in the way of charm or interest. The people at the old-style Hostal are very nice, and the restaurant below had a decent meal.

    I am looking forward to a good nights sleep tonight. Last night my window was right above an outdoor café. Even with my earplugs, it was too loud for me to sleep till after two. Today, when I arrived at the Hostal, the woman checking me in asked me if I would prefer a rear room that doesn’t look out onto the street and would be quieter. Maybe I looked like I needed some peace and quiet, but in any event, I took her up on her offer!
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  • From Frías to Oña

    27 September 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

    https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/castillo-…

    I am back on the official Camino Olvidado. The last few days I have been walking through the “Montes“ of the province of Burgos. Montes are bigger than hills but not big enough to be called “montañas.” In my experience, they are usually in the 700 to 1000 m range (that is about 2 to 3000 feet above sea level). This Camino takes a route that goes up and down and across them rather than around them, meaning that most days there are several multi-hundred meter ascents. The montes are owned by the towns and villages in the area. In the old days, they were a source of firewood for the villagers, sometimes mushrooms. Today they are sometimes used for timbering or recreation like hiking or rock-climbing.

    I saw on my tracks that I had three of these ascents today, each one between 250 and 300 m. The walk was gorgeous, nothing spectacular, just one beautiful mountain forest after another. No eucalyptus trees, just oak, pines, and beech trees that were starting to turn yellow.

    When I got to the top of my second high point, looking down on my second descent, I noticed that my tracks showed another path. This one looked like it stayed up on the ridge (thanks to Clare for teaching me how to read contour lines) and avoided not only the second descent, but also the third ascent. My Camino friends know how reluctant I am to take shortcuts, and it is true that I started down with the thought that these meters are good for me. But then I came to a sign that said “ No pasar— trabajos forestales.” But it wasn’t until I googled “Saint Martin Church in Penches” and learned that it did not have anything that I would have been likely to ooh and ah over, that I bit the bullet, skipped the descent, and stayed up on the ridge line. That saved me about a kilometer and a half, so I arrived in Oña pretty early.

    I’m staying in a cute little hotel in a room that is, shall we say, colorful? The three people working downstairs — one in the bar, one in hotel reception, and one in the restaurant— are most definitely related, since they all have the same surly face and monosyllabic lexicon. But the restaurant gets good reviews, so I will eat here! My first proper meal since I arrived in Spain. And I will visit the monastery after my late lunch —founded in the 11th century, but with few Romanesque vestiges. El Cid has been here, and several Castillian kings are buried here, so it should be an interesting visit.
    Baca selengkapnya

  • Pancorbo to Frías

    26 September 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/pancorbo-…

    https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/mirador-d…

    Another day, another beautiful walk, and another beautiful town. Up and over the mountain on a forest dirt path, then around and about on a bunch of different regional hiking paths that were all connected.

    Frías, my destination, is one of the “pueblos más bonitos de España.” And it surely is. I could see the town, its Castle, its church, all spread out up on top of a big rock, from about 12 kms away.

    I got to my hotel, and after the normal routine, I decided to walk to a small town, Tobera, about 3 km away. The Camino will pass by there tomorrow, but I wanted to have plenty of time to see the church and the waterfalls.

    As I was getting ready to leave, I decided I should probably bring my fleece with me since it really cools off at night. My fleece? Where was it? Back in the hotel restaurant, where I must’ve left it last night draped over the back of my chair. I called the Hostal and sure enough there it was. I asked if they could try to find someone who might want to drive it over here for me. They said they’d call me in a few hours. So I asked our hotel owner if she had any ideas about someone who might want to do it.

    As I was walking back to Frías from the town with the waterfalls, I got a call from the hotel owner. She told me her husband just arrived from Bilbao (where they live), and that he would be happy to drive me over.

    Well, not only did he drive me over and back, but he took a circle route to show me different things. We climbed up to the top of a lookout point, saw some castle ruins, and gazed down at the herd where he says the best beef in the area comes from. Of course, I could not convince him to take any money, and once again I am the beneficiary of such tremendous kindness. I could not imagine how I was ever going to get my fleece back, since there are no taxi cabs for at least 50 miles, and I also couldn’t imagine how I could keep on walking Caminos without that fleece.
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  • First day walking —to Pancorbo

    25 September 2025, Spanyol ⋅ 🌙 13 °C

    https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/pena-del-…

    https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/miranda-d…

    What a superb, wonderful, happy day. Alun and I left Miranda around 7:30 and walked through a beautiful gorge and into the village of Pancorbo. Olga met us in town and after a good long shoes-off break and an obligatory Kas de Limón (for me) and café con leche (for them) we said goodbye and off they went.

    I had found a local loop hiking trail, about 15 km long, that went up to the medieval castle first and then started a substantial ascent to the site of the 17th century fort, Santa Engracia, Now totally in ruins but with some amazing views and raptors! I met a couple of local people who were out for a walk and we had some nice chats. They told me that the town is alive mainly because there are lots of good jobs in the city of Vitoria, about 40 km away. The town still has a school, still has children being born, still has some young families, even though there are fewer than 500 residents.

    I was definitely starting to drag by the end of this walk. And it was after four when I rolled into the Hostal Pancorbo. Nothing fancy, perfectly adequate, clean, and only €40. Actually, a few years ago this place probably would’ve gone for 20 or 30, but there has definitely been a substantial price increase since Covid.

    After a shower and washing clothes, I decided to take a walk up to a mirador a couple of kms above town. Late afternoon sun made dramatic shadows and more raptors appeared.

    On the way down, I stopped to watch large numbers of (mostly) young people maneuvering their way on what is called a Via Ferrata. Rock climbing with chains, swaying wooden slat bridges, all sorts of stairs up and down, and at the end, a zip line! The locals say it brings a lot of people to town, and the setting is surely spectacular.

    37 km and 1050 m is a lot for this old body, even though 6 km were pack-free. I’m going to take it a little easier tomorrow, but I feel fine and am happy to have met the challenge and enjoyed so much incredible natural beauty. Grateful is the word of the hour.
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  • Travel day #2

    24 September 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    This is a familiar routine for me. It makes me feel comfortable and like I’m going to the right place. I arrived in Madrid at about nine in the morning, having had a few hours of good sleep. Because of my Irish (EU) passport, I was able to zip through passport control. From the airport, I hopped on the commuter train to the Chamartín train station and was there in about 15 minutes. The station continues in its state of renovation chaos.

    I had a few hours before my train to Miranda, and so I was able to walk around the area and buy my Spanish SIM card, get my fruit, snacks, and water for walking, and even buy some stamps to send postcards home to the grandkids!

    My train left Chamartín at about noon. No fast trains, but it was comfortable. I had to change trains in Valladolid, and I remembered how much I had enjoyed spending two days in that city years ago when I walked the Camino de Madrid. Unfortunately, there was a very long stop of over an hour for “problemas técnicos.” But I got there!

    Miranda is a fairly bleak place, but like all Spanish cities, it has its ambiente — lots of people out and about, up and down the main street, enjoying what feels like the beginning of fall weather. I am staying in charmless, modern chain hotel, but it’s clean and comfortable.

    The highlight of the day was being reunited with Alun and Olga. They drove up to see me for a quick visit. Alun’s going to walk with me tomorrow, which promises to be a pretty day through a gorge. We walked up to the castle and around the casco histórico and had a vino tinto. Now I am hoping for a good sleep and the banishment of jet lag.
    Baca selengkapnya

  • Off to Miranda de Ebro

    23 September 2025, Amerika Serikat ⋅ ☁️ 25 °C

    I know this is crazy, but I have not yet managed to finish my 2025 Camino Viejo. I still have about 9 walking days, and I decided that I just didn’t want to wait till next spring. Things are stable here, the trip will be short, and I was able to get a good ticket … so I am off again!

    I ended my walk this summer in Miranda de Ebro, a not so beautiful small city about four hours north of Madrid, and so that’s where I will start. This last part probably won’t be as spectacular as the earlier stages, with all the monasteries, castles, gorges, and MOUNTAINS, but I’m excited!

    This segment, which ends in another unknown, small Spanish city, Aguilar de Campóo, spends most of its time near the meandering Ebro River. Lots of gorges, beautiful little villages, more Romanesque, a monastery or two, and a few peaks to climb. I have good information about off-route loop walks that will mean shorter forward progress, but more elevation and more natural beauty, at least if I can do it.

    I have officially entered the 4th quarter now, if you think it begins at 75. Or if you think it begins at 76, I still have one year of middle age left. In either case, I have to seize whatever opportunities I have to enjoy the Camino beauty that will be out of range for me very soon.

    So off I go, with my new backpack (weighing 10 pounds before food and water!!!) and my ancient green fleece. The fleece was a present from my son for my first Camino in 2000, and I have worn it on every Camino since then. I can’t imagine walking without it.

    Flying Iberia from Ohare
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  • Back to Madrid

    30 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

    Last night we walked around Cangas, and David was sad to see that his favorite restaurant had closed. We also walked over the bouncy suspension bridge, which made me kind of queasy. Finally, the temperature started to cool off. Charlie wanted a pizza, and David’s go-to place was still there.

    Since our flight leaves tomorrow morning, we had to spend a lot of today getting back to Madrid. First a 6:30 bus to Oviedo, and from there a train to Madrid. I had never seen the new train station from the outside, since I am usually just there to transfer from one train to another, but this time we took a cab into town so I could see the new building. Pretty spiffy, but who knows how long all this construction will take

    I’ve bought turrones for all the staff at Joe’s place, and the “boys” are enjoying the pool at the hotel. We will brave the heat one more time for some last-minute shopping, then one more dinner, then home tomorrow.

    I thought a lot about Charlie’s Camino and how he was able to power through even though it was hard for him sometimes. The three days we walked were not easy; they had a lot of elevation gain. Here are our wikiloc tracks for the three days:

    Day one. Salas to Tineo
    https://www.wikiloc.com/wikiloc/spatialArtifact…

    Day two. Tineo to Colinas de Arriba
    https://www.wikiloc.com/wikiloc/spatialArtifact…

    Day three. Colinas de Arriba to Puerto del Palo
    https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/colinas-d…

    Never too early to start thinking about the next Camino, and I do have the Viejo from Miranda De Ebro to finish up!
    Baca selengkapnya

  • Colina de Arriba to Puerto del Palo

    30 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    We did it! We’re done walking!

    Poor Charlie had another bad night sleeping. But he was a trooper and got up and had breakfast. A little before eight, and we were on the way up. It was a tough walk, but once we got to the top of the first ascent, Charlie seemed to take off. He stopped only when he had to navigate around a horse or a cow.

    It was a sunny day, with a nice breeze, and we didn’t mind the temperature at all. When we got to the Puerto Del Palo, we were done. I know that Charlie was very glad to stop walking, but I hope he realizes what a great job he did and how he should feel like he really nailed it! I am going to wait a little while to ask him if he would like to try a longer Camino next time😀😀.

    We had a taxi take us down to Pola De Allande, where we met Antonio. Antonio had essentially been David’s boss 20 years ago when David came as an English language assistant in the high school in Cangas del Narcea.

    After lunch in the Allandesa (local restaurant/hotel of great renown), we went up to António’s little town of Celón. I learned the legend of the local Romanesque Church. Years ago, a serpent was eating the remains of all of the people buried in the crypt. No one could figure out how to kill this serpent. A pilgrim passing through asked a neighbor to cook a rosquilla (circular bread). He put the warm bread next to the hole where the serpent had descended, and the smell lured it out. He promptly killed it and was so admired by the locals that they put a sculpture commemorating his feat in the wall of the church.

    In Antonio’s house, the first order of business was to ask Antonio’s wife to remove a tick from the back of my ear, which she expertly did. We met many members of his family, including his sister Carmen. She had married a member of the Longoria family and was living in the Palacio de los Longoria. If you know about CNN’s show on Spanish cuisine, Carmen is probably the only non-chef in the series. She told me she just made her fabada the way she always does, and that Eva Longoria was extremely personable and encouraging. It was the 25 member camera crew and all the other staff that had her kind of freaked out!

    From there, Antonio took us down to Cangas del Narcea, the town where David had spent a year working in the high school. It is HOT here - way out of whack in a place where the temperature rarely goes above 80°F.

    We have taken a walk around town and went back to the dorm-like place where David lived (for students from small towns in the area who were too far away for a daily bus, and also for teachers who came to teach during the week and then went back to Oviedo on the weekend).

    We’re planning to meet Antonio for a light supper. We have a 6:30 departure from Cangas tomorrow.
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  • Tineo to Colinas de Arriba

    28 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    The weather predictions were dire. In the 90s Fahrenheit for today. And we knew that there was a lot of elevation and no services for the first 13 km. But we brought a lot of water and took a lot of rests, and we were fine.

    Charlie didn’t have a great night sleep-wise, so he slept in a little. We were on the road shortly after 8:00, and it was another beautiful off-road walk. We were so grateful for all the shade, and the occasional sunny road stretch was penitential. The views all around were beautiful.

    We had a long break in Campiello, home of Herminia’s empire. She wasn’t working, but her husband (?) was behind the bar. He was kind of grumpy but softened up when I told him I had stayed at Herminia’s albergue in 2009. I told him I remembered the breakfast vividly — piles of crusty thick bread slices, fried in oil, and served with several big jars of homemade preserves. I didn’t tell him that when I first saw it, I thought it looked gross. But it was absolutely delicious. Sadly, he told me that they stopped serving that breakfast years ago. Just too much work, he said. Today they have a bigger albergue, a Casa Rural, a bar, and grocery store. They also own the local grass bowling court, but I don’t think that takes much work What a shame about the fried bread— it was really terrific.

    From Campiello, it was about 6 more kilometers. Those were hard, it was really hot, there were a couple hundred meters of ascent, and there were some stretches on the side of a sunny road. We got to Colinas de Arriba at about 3, where I had reserved a 3-bed apartment. It has an equipped kitchen, but who wants to carry food for 6 km in 92 F/ 33C heat?! I wanted Charlie to at least see an albergue, and there is a nice one here. We are going to have a communal dinner, which will also be nice.
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  • Salas to Tineo

    28 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    I knew we would have only three days to walk, so I thought long and hard about which pieces to pick. We want to get close to Pola de Allande on our last day, to see another good friend of David’s, and I’m hoping we can walk Hospitales. So it just made sense to skip ahead from Oviedo and start a few days in. And Gronze agreed with me, giving this description to the stage we just walked today: “Primera de las tres etapas que definen el carácter y esencia del Camino Primitivo.”

    We took a taxi to Salas, had a coffee, and off (or more accurately, up) we went a little after eight. It’s really a beautiful walk. Classic hilly, green Asturian countryside, frequently with the mountains in the background.

    I am so proud of Charlie and so happy with how well this first day went. There were a few mild complaints when we started out, but he quickly got into the flow and only said he was going to die about four times, but always in jest. He’s never done anything like this, and it wasn’t always easy, but we had a great walk. 21 km may not sound like much to my hard-core Camino friends, but with about 650 m elevation gain, it was not a walk in the park. Luckily virtually all of this stage is off-road, and a huge majority was shaded.

    I had predicted a 4 PM arrival, and I was way off. We were checking in to the hotel at a little after 2:30. We had stopped for a drink in La Espina, and then a couple of hours later took a lunch break with some sandwiches we had bought there. Lots of water was consumed, because it is hot.

    There is a medieval festival out in the main Square. I don’t think we will be partaking of many of the festivities, but there should be some good food around.
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  • To the coast

    27 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

    Yesterday both David and I got to join up with old friends. For me, it was Helena, whom I originally met in Lisbon in, I think, 2009. She has since moved to Oviedo and even though I see her about once every five years, it’s always wonderful to reconnect. And David was able to see a good friend from the year he lived in the dorm here in Oviedo as a junior in college

    Today we decided to take Charlie up to the coast—the Asturian coast is just stunningly beautiful, and it was a sunny cloudless morning. We went first to the Playa del Silencio and Cabo Vidio, both with just gorgeous coastal views. And then we spent a few hours in Cudillero, eating lunch and walking around this picture postcard town.

    How could I go to Oviedo and not visit the churches in Naranco?! Since they were open till 7:00, I hightailed it up there as soon as we got back to town. It was really hot, a harbinger of things to come in the next few days, I’m afraid. But visiting the churches, as always, is such a beautiful treat — how often do you get to stand inside buildings from the 600s? One was a palace originally, and there is a lot they don’t know about what went on there. I spent about an hour between the two places, and then walked as fast as I could back to town. Charlie needed a couple of items for the Camino – hat, sunglasses, sunscreen. We’ve got all that, we’re packing up our bags, and we will be out of here tomorrow morning.

    Unfortunately, it’s going to be very hot. But we will deal with it!
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  • To Oviedo

    26 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

    Yesterday, as we were walking around the city, I came across a restaurant that I had been unable to find the week before. I remembered it as a place with varied food, nothing gourmet, but a very nice atmosphere. There are about six of these restaurants scattered around Madrid, Lamucca. I had a Poké bowl, Charlie had a pizza, and David had some sort of stuffed pasta. Not very Spanish, you might say, but we started with a great serving of patatas bravas and some very authentic croquetas de jamón. After dinner, we walked back to the Plaza Santa Ana, which is where David and Shannon got engaged. Unfortunately the square is under construction, but the cafés were up and running, and the saxophone busker was happily doing his thing. Still blue sky at 10 PM!

    The day started out with a taxi to the train station. This station is undergoing massive renovations, but we somehow happily landed in the right departure point. Our destination was Oviedo, “starting point” for the Camino Primitivo. It’s also the city where David spent a year as an undergraduate, and the home of one of my dearest Camino friends. A good destination in so many ways.

    Although we weren’t on the fastest train, our Alvia did go through the controversial Pajares Tunnel. It connects León to Oviedo through the mountains (which all Salvador pilgrims love), but it has had some horrible environmental impacts on the towns on the León side. For reasons that I don’t understand, the engineering of this tunnel has altered the flow of water, so that many towns are losing their aquifers. Here’s an article from the Spanish press in case you’re interested in the geology of it. https://www.lanuevacronica.com/opinion/adif-agu…

    We arrived in time in Oviedo, checked into our hotel, and then headed out on a tour of the town

    First stop —David’s dorm, the San Gregorio, where the recepcionista remembrad David. Then we headed over to the beautiful Parque de Invierno, where unfortunately the mountains were covered in clouds. Then Charlie’s first cachopo.

    After lunch, we went around the old town, got Charles credential, stamped at the cathedral, and saw some of the many statues that are all over the city. Time for a rest and hoping to see some good friends soon.
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  • Back to Spain!

    24 Juni 2025, Amerika Serikat ⋅ 🌙 28 °C

    Going home was definitely the right thing to do. Even though the doctors had said there was no need for me to come home, I really just felt I had to go. I was able to spend a lot of time with the staff at the facility, and with Joe, of course, and we’ve made some changes that will greatly reduce the risk of future falls. Aside from the bruises, Joe is fine and in good spirits. He knows this will be a much shorter trip and was not upset.

    Ending my Camino early was of course sad, but not really a big deal. As all my Camino friends have said, the Camino is not going anywhere, and it’ll be there when I’m ready to head back. The much bigger deal was having to cancel my plans to meet up with David and Charlie. That was just tremendously sad. And so, I started to think… Why not head back and meet up with them? Joe is fine, his situation is much improved, and how many times do you get to travel in Spain with your son and grandson?

    So I did it, bought a ticket. With three days advance notice, there wasn’t much in the way of choices. Middle seat, 35 minutes connection in O’Hare. I figured that if I didn’t make the connection, they would have to find a way to get me there.

    But everything worked miraculously well, and by 9 AM I was in the hotel with the receptionist calling to wake up the sleepy guys. We had a quick breakfast and headed off to the Prado. I took a Spanish art history class in Madrid in 1970 when I was a junior in college, and we met once a week with our tutor in the museum. I still remember where all my favorite paintings are (they have moved some of the Goya’s). The Velazquez rooms are still spectacular, and I always have to make a stop at the display of paintings from San Baudelio de Berlanga, the frescoes that started my love of Romanesque, and which the professor used to introduce us to the Camino. (Clare and I visited the church with a quick detour off the Lana a few years ago). Pictures are prohibited in the chapel re-creation , but the guard let me take a picture of the rendition of how the church probably looked back in the day. Lots of good memories in that little chapel—from junior year abroad to Lana 2023!

    Charlie is working through jet lag, so after the Prado he took a little nap. That gave me the time to get back into the the pilgrim routine and wash my clothes! I am thankful that no one in this hotel gives me a second look when I come bouncing in in my hiking pants and ex officio shirt.

    After the nap, we had sandwiches at Rodilla (still going strong from the 1970s) and took a long walk—Sol, Gran Vía, Fuencarral, Colón, and over to our old apartment on General Diaz Porlier. We ended with a cold drink on the terrace of Palacio de Cibeles—old post office turned into the Ayuntamiento/town hall.
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  • Solvitur Ambulando

    18 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    The last couple of days have illustrated for me that this over-used phrase is well applied to the Camino - walking along through rural Spain is the perfect place to make a decision. The other truism, this one from the world of dementia caregivers, is that I live in a land of bad choices.

    As I was leaving Vitoria two days ago, early in the morning, I learned that Joe had another incident and was back in the ER. They were waiting on results, and so I decided to keep on walking. As the results came in that everything checked out normal, I started to contemplate my choices. This was second trip to the ER since I’ve been here, and though I don’t feel he’s in imminent danger, I started to think that I should go home. I had a deep sense that I was not going to be able to put this behind me and carry on happily.

    The one thing really complicating the decision was that my son and one of his sons are coming to Spain on Sunday, the idea being that we would be together and walk on the Camino for a few days. Pulling out of that at the last minute was one of the saddest things I’ve ever done. But I just knew that I couldn’t keep on here, I have to go home.

    Yesterday I walked a short stage of about 20 K, wrestling with the decision the whole way. Pros and cons, risks and rewards, costs and benefits. No matter how I thought about staying, I just couldn’t get to a place that felt comfortable. When I talked to David this morning, I made it final. I walked today into a bigger town, Miranda De Ebro. I had a few hours so I took a walk around to see the Ebro River, the Romanesque church, and the site of a huge concentration camp for Republican prisoners during the Civil War. It was later used as a prison camp for Allied soldiers captured in France, and then later after the war, for German prisoners, apparently . The barracks have all been destroyed, but there are a few bits and pieces left. I thought it was a nice juxtaposition that all the land around the old site is now used for schools, and there were lots of happy, noisy children running all around.

    I am now on a train to Madrid.

    My head is kind of swirling, I’ve got a plane ticket for Friday, and I think this is the first time I’ve ever stopped walking without having already hatched an idea for my next Camino.
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  • To Vitoria-Gasteiz

    16 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

    It was a lovely morning for walking, not too hot with a little breeze. I went straight from the parador back to the Camino, rather than trying to figure out a shortcut. I have had some pretty bad luck with shortcuts, so why tempt fate.

    Every little village had a church. Some were originally Romanesque, and there were some beautiful exterior windows or columns around the door. Others had clearly been used in military defense, because the only windows were tiny and way up high, except for some of those slats that soldiers shot arrows through. I learned on my church tour that this entire area was constantly going back and forth between Navarra and Castilla. Castilla finally won out in the early 1500s.

    I met a man working in the fields this morning. He was surprised that I couldn’t identify the plant, and first told me it was acelgas (celery). He seemed dumbfounded that I would believe that, when in reality it was a huge field of beets (remolacha). They sell the whole crop to a company that makes sugar out of it. And then he added, “I don’t really care if they make sugar out of it or if they throw it in the ocean, as long as they buy it from me.” Though he had plenty of reason to be grouchy (he was lame, and had one bad arm), he cheerfully told me that he always had to go through the field after they applied the weed killers, because there were always some that escaped the spray. None of the young people in his family would ever deign to do something like this, so it was up to the “cojo anciano .”

    The entrance into the city is as uninspiring as I remembered it. Huge apartment blocks one after the other with nothing on the ground floor. I don’t understand this method of building. Spain knows how to make neighborhoods, by having stores and cafés on the ground level with apartments above them. Playgrounds interspersed. New construction like this just create a wasteland. But once you get past it, you are in a really nice city.

    I’m in the hotel that my Camino buddy Jenny recommended, the Nirea. Great location, and in fact it’s a stone’s throw from a pintxos place that another friend recommended to me, Perretxico.

    I have had a few hours walking around the old part of town and the more modern commercial district. There are a couple of museums I would like to visit, but it’s Monday! I’ve hunted down a few of the painted facades and walls that have become quite the tourist attraction and had some agua con gás on a pretty tree-lined pedestrian street. On a whim, I entered a noodle shop and had a very good meal. Spain is really branching out!

    I have some stage planning to do tonight. It looks like I will have an unavoidable 38K stage with a fair amount of elevation, so I think I’ll take a few slow days before that. And as luck would have it, another heat wave arrives tomorrow. Low 90s some days this week, yuck! But now, some pintxos before bed.
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  • 32 km to the parador

    14 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 19 °C

    I have VN to thank for pointing out that there is a
    parador just a few kilometers off this Camino. The logical stage today would be for me to walk into the very pretty city of Vitoria-Gasteiz, but I have to be there on a business day because of several errands — Vodafone store, buy some train tickets, see about some tick prevention. So stopping here will give me a very short day into the city tomorrow, Monday.

    I started out today by retracing my steps to the first church on yesterday’s tour, and then carrying on through several small towns. I met some señoras who had just picked up their bread from the delivery truck, and we chatted a bit. The sister of one of them lives in Los Angeles and has an undocumented caregiver, who is suffering very much with all of the chaos and cruelty. They told me they pray for the US and can’t understand how we have come to this. There’s really nothing to say.

    After going through several more small towns, I came to a turn-off to the church and monastery of Estibaliz. It is a beautiful Romanesque church, with a monastery. The Benedictines had been there for about 100 years, but recently left, and this order of very young nuns (originally from Colombia) moved in. The nuns are embroiled in a dispute with the government over who owns what. This means that the museum on the site is closed. My guide from yesterday told us that the nuns who occupy this site are extremists, worse than Opus Dei, he said. They are the Pilgrims of the Eucharist, but I haven’t found a whole lot about them. They do serve beer!
    https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/spain-nuns…

    From the church, I headed to the parador, which is in an old monastery. I had a very good learning session with Mapy, after adding a few kms onto my walk. But it was a great day for walking, with total cloud cover and expansive views in every direction. When I got to the Parador, I saw a sign pointing towards another Romanesque church. The woman at check-in said it was about 2 km away, so I dropped off my pack and headed out to see it. San Pedro Quilchano. It was a very nice walk, but the church was pretty much in ruins. There were two beautiful windows, but that was it. Oh well.

    The parador is very nice, and I had a good lunch in the restaurant, quite a contrast from where I was yesterday!

    https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/agurain-s…
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  • Rest day

    14 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    The Alava (name of the province I’m in) Medieval Association gives tours on weekends to four rural churches in the area. They are all from the 12th and 13th century. Problem is, they do not provide transportation. Luckily, the first church on the list is 4 km outside of town, and I walked there with the hope that I would meet someone who would transport me the rest of the way.

    And as I had suspected, it was not a problem. Not only did they take me from church to church, but they also drove out of their way to take me back to the town where I’m staying after the tour was done.

    And the guide was great— a history teacher during the week and a medieval tour guide on the weekends. It really was a very fascinating visit.

    The first church was St. Martin de Tours, with some very well preserved Gothic frescoes. Many of the standard Bible stories are reproduced, including the crucifixion, annunciation, visitation, etc. There are also some scenes of Santa Marina putting chains on the devil, along with a depiction of judgment day.

    The most interesting church was the next one, Alaitza. I’ve never seen anything like it. 13th century paintings all over the altar area without one religious connotation. And the paintings look more like some cave drawings I’ve seen than medieval European art! The theory is that this was a privately owned church for its first couple of centuries, and for whatever reason the owners wanted to put in scenes of typical male activities and typical female activities. The males were doing things like hunting, fighting, and dying in battle, while the women were going to visit friends who had just had a baby, preparing a funeral, giving birth. Like many of the ancient frescoes that survive, these were hidden behind a big altarpiece until the 1960s. They are very well preserved.

    The next two churches were interesting more for their architectural features than their paintings. Anua had some beautiful windows with capitals, and Arbulo was actually a medieval fortress converted to church once the Moors were beaten back.

    There is a big outdoor concert going on a few blocks away, so I’m sure it’s going to be an earplugs night!
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  • Aizkorri and on to Salvatierra/Agurain

    13 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 30 °C

    Last night I got a call that Joe had fallen. Steve was right there, and within a few hours, Joe was back at Amber Glen, with some stitches and bruises, but he says he feels OK today. The staff is being extra vigilant, but I’m so glad for the ViewClix, which gives me instant access. Seeing each other every day seems to make him much more peaceful.

    22K and 800 m elevation —in my comfort zone, right? I am now a much wiser peregrina when it comes to knowing my limits. Those first 6 km took me five hours! That included a half hour stop up at the top, and many short stops to gaze at the wonderful mountains all around me, and I did go extra slow on the way down. Mountain kms are a horse of a different color!

    I was once again the beneficiary of a lot of first hand knowledge from a Basque member of the Camino web forum. The mountain he suggested for today is Aizkorri. It is much loved by the Basque people and is one of several mountains where many people climb to the top on either New Year’s Day or New Year’s Eve, with hot chocolate being served. One of the people I met on the way up today told me that champagne is not out of the question either.

    I took a taxi to a good starting point, and off I went by about seven. It was really beautiful, through a dense beech forest with lots of moss covered rocks. When I got out of the forest, there were just views all around me. Lots of rocky crags, lots of views of towns and big fields below with shepherds’ huts. I met two groups of young people on their way down. They had slept up there, just on mats and a sleeping bag. It seems to be a popular custom for young people in the area.

    Once I got to the San Adrian tunnel, where I picked up the Camino, it was after noon, and I still had about 14 km to go. Some of it was pretty much of a slog, a lot on sunny untraveled roads.

    I am in Agurain/Salvatierra (Basque/castellano). I was able to reserve a spot in the tour tomorrow that will take us to four beautiful little churches. I am hoping very much that I meet someone in the group who will give me a ride, otherwise I’m not sure how I’ll see these places.
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  • To Alsasua and Bargagain

    12 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

    I had to work backwards a little bit to figure out the next few days. On Saturday, I know that there is a tour of four small Romanesque churches that are only open once a week. I definitely want to see them, so that gives me two days to get to Salvatierra.

    The 14 km between Arbizu (picturesque village) and Alsasua (charmless big town) are flat, mostly off-road, and rural . On the way, I got a good look of what makes Navarra and the País Vasco so prosperous. Lots of factories. And not so much livestock or agriculture, except for the occasional sheep cheese maker tucked away in an off-road village.

    There was just one spot where things got messy. The dirt road ended in a field of waist-high grasses with no path visible. I went back and forth for a while, till finally I saw the path on the other side of a muddy stream. No obvious way to cross it other than plopping into it and walking across.

    By about 10, I was checking into my place for the night, since it was only 14 km away. I pulled up a few GPS tracks for local routes I had stored and opted for the one up to Bagagain, one of the peaks close to town that has a cross on top and is surrounded by a beech forest. There are of course good views all around.

    Well, the trail is pretty steep, and because of some heavy rain last night, it was very muddy. On the way up I tried to decide how many falls I would have on the way down (I guessed five, but only had two).

    I arrived back at the hotel with very muddy pants, which took a lot of scrubbing to clean. I am headed out for fruit and yoghurt, and we’ll see if I can find a few good looking pintxos to fill my stomach, so I won’t have to wait up till dinner time.

    About 25 km today with 750 m elevation. That’s a good warm-up for tomorrow— the last mountain day!
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  • Up to Beriáin

    11 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☁️ 29 °C

    I don’t know whatever made me think I could pop up to Beriáin, descend, and continue on another 10 km on the Camino. I am getting a very good education on the realities of hiking in the mountains. Looking at total elevation and total distance just doesn’t give the complete picture. Having to watch where you place each foot very carefully, navigating all the rocks, trying not to slip— all of this adds a lot of difficulty, especially for this old body.

    I am so glad to have gotten a lot of very good help from a Basque forum member, who suggested routes, pointed out my unrealistic plans, and gave me great insights into these mountains.

    Today, my only plan was to walk the 9 km trail from Unanua up to Beriáin and back down, and then continue the 4 kms back to my hotel in Arbizu. That was plenty!

    I got a cab from Arbizu to Unanua to save the first 4 kms of road walking. So by 7, I was starting the ascent. The views of the towns nestled in the valley were just beautiful. It was very slow going, and more than a handful of people passed me on their way up, and passed me on their way down before I had even made it to the top. One guy told me he walks up and down every day. Last year he missed one day, and so on New Year’s Eve he walked up and down twice!

    There were several profs with a group of teens who were in a post-secondary “formación profesional” course in sports— some wanted to be mountain guides, one a swimming coach. I got a lot of encouragement from them, since I was about the same age as their grandparents. They told me many times there was no way they would be up here. I have now been called “atrevida” “valiente,” and “maja” by these young-uns.

    When I got to the top, I was all alone at the ermita. Lots of vultures circling overhead, and the views were as good as they get.

    I picked my way down stone by stone, it took almost 3 hours. I kept thinking that it would be very embarrassing for this group of young people to come across me lying injured on the path after telling me how great I was, so I went even more deliberately than usual.

    I’ve only got a few more days left in the mountains, so I’m going to have to spend some time figuring out where else I will be able to walk. There are many options!
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  • A very hot day to reposition

    10 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ 🌙 17 °C

    Last night, Guadalupe (who is not a nun but a “consagrada”) told me a sad story with a very happy ending. Last fall, vandals set fire to the ancient doors at San Miguel de Aralar (the church that I walked up to yesterday). A boat building company in San Sebastián uses wood from this area to make replicas of old ships. When it heard about the vandalism, the company offered to make replacement doors, using the same type of wood and from the same place that the doors had originally been made from. Yesterday, the doors left San Sebastián, on a cart pulled by oxen. They will stop in villages along the way, with festivities at each stop, and on Sunday they will arrive and be installed.

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DKrJowORC85/

    My main goal today was to get myself to Arbizu so that tomorrow I can try to climb Beriaín. I have to admit that having it in sight almost all day yesterday and today has given me a bit of trepidation. It looks very imposing and inaccessible, but there is a church up on top so it has to be reachable.

    Walking the Camino route between these two towns would have been a pretty straight shot of about 10 km, so I had spent some time at home getting routes that I could add on. My first choice was to walk up in a beech and oak forest where there were lots of old “bordas” for livestock. The Ruta de las Bordas, but I had to get to the starting point. My first attempt was on a route that I tried to put together at home on wikiloc —fail. Then I tried to use mapy— fail. Finally, I asked a young woman out walking — success. But since I had lost almost 2 hours wandering around the forest looking for the trail, once I finally got there, I decided to cut it short after a couple of hours and get to my hotel in Arbizu. 22 km and 400 m are plenty for this old body in 85F/30C degree temperatures.

    Arbizu is a pretty little town in the province of Navarra, which is not in the País Vasco. But the predominant language here is definitely Basque, and the pharmacist explained that even if the government doesn’t consider this the País Vasco, the people definitely do. I talked with one man in the grocery store who had trouble managing Castellano.

    Looks like the temperature will drop a little tomorrow, and cloudy but no rain. I am staying here again tomorrow night, so I can leave all my unnecessary pack contents in the room. It really does make a difference, so I should banish my bad thoughts about all those people who have their packs sent ahead on the Camino.
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  • San Miguel de Aralar

    9 Juni 2025, Spanyol ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C

    What a day. First, breakfast made by the wonderful Pilar. She insisted on giving me a sandwich for the road, along with three really yummy homemade granola bars. As I started out, it was hazy, chilly, with the mountains on both sides. Pretty close to a perfect morning.

    I passed through several villages, 2 or 3 km apart from each other. All of them had some 18th century caseríos, many beautifully restored with their coats of arms and flower pots filled with red and pink flowers. And two very old bridges.

    But I knew it was going to be a hot day.

    The priest in the monastery had told me I could leave some of my backpack contents there during the day, to make my walk up to San Miguel easier. That was a great benefit.

    It was a rough climb, but not absurdly hard. The cafeteria at the church was closed today, which I think kept the visitors down. The church was open, however, and I was in it all by myself. There is an enamel and gold altarpiece that is really unbelievable. It is the same kind of workmanship as a little box that I remember seeing in León in the museum of San Isidoro. But that was a tiny box, and this is an enormous altarpiece, with Mary in the middle and lots of Saints and angels around. It was just spectacular. And real candles too! So I was able to sit and think about a lot of things and a lot of people.

    The story of the miracle that happened at this site is really over the top. Rather than repeated here, I have attached a picture of the tail. And a picture of the chains, which are still here.

    Rather than take the straight way back, I decided to follow some tracks I had that go to several dolmens. It’s kind of hard to conceive of what it means that these things were made 6000 or 7000 years ago. I saw four of them, each one a little different — different sizes, different shapes, different underground spaces, but each one had one of those enormous slabs on the top. How in the world did they get them up there?

    Though the dolmens were extremely fun to see, the trail itself was, shall I say, a challenge. It took me a long time to find my way, because there were very many sections of total overgrowth. Lots of sections across rocky outcrops that would have given someone with vertigo pause. But I made it, very slowly, and by 4:30 (yes that’s 9 1/2 hours after I started out!), I was sitting in front of a monastery, waiting for someone to come let me in.

    I have a very nice room in the monastery, and I am now going to figure out my plan for tomorrow. It’s going to be very hot, so the one sure thing is that I will be on the road very early.

    My tracks: https://www.wikiloc.com/hiking-trails/hiriberri…
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