Camino Via de la Plata 2022

April - June 2022
Walking from Sevilla to Santiago de Compostela Read more
  • 49footprints
  • 1countries
  • 49days
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  • 799kilometers
  • Day 31

    Santa Marta - Rionegro del Puente 27 km

    May 30, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    As usual I set off early after breakfast of a banana, Luis and Delphine left at the same time, but they were going a much further distance today and were taking the road rather than the camino. We said our goodbyes, I probably will never see them again but I will never forget them.

    It was very dark but the path was fairly flat and well signposted, As I walked through the woods I could hear shotgun blasts away to one side and getting closer, I was glad when the path veered away. At different points the camino does go through hunting ranges. Earlier this year a 24 yr old peregrina was shot and killed on the Camino Frances, I didn't want to be mistaken for game in the dark.

    I stopped at Villar de Farfon at an albergue run by two missionaries from South Africa whose mission was to share the gospel with passing peregrinos. They were very nice and provided facilities for peregrinos to make tea or coffee and have a rest. After chatting with them for a while I pressed on to Rionegro.

    The albergue was quite large but the downstairs dorm was very cramped as they had squeezed in too many sets of bunk beds. The room upstairs was much better, so I laid some of my stuff out on the beds and messaged Meg and the ladies to say I had 'reserved' beds for them. The toilets and showers were not great, there was no hot water, and the lights in the toilets didn't work, but other then that it was ok.

    The next person to arrive was the bearded Spaniard and then the French couple whom I had met and who had a Google Translate conversation with Aurelio in El Real de la Jara. They would be with us over the next week, and we got to know them a bit better, they were lovely, both of them were in their 70's but they were fit as anything.

    Meg and the others began to arrive and we went to the much recommended restaurant across the road, the food was several levels above anything we had eaten so far on the camino, the chef was very good and obviously cared about his craft. Anne and Mirjam arrived and joined us which was lovely as always, we were just missing Anita and Julia.

    Apart from an excellent restaurant, Rionegro has nothing really to recommend it, and having eaten and bought provisions at the "shop" up the street, there was nothing to do but go to bed, which we did.
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  • Day 32

    Rionegro del Puente - Asturianos 29 km

    May 31, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    I got up as late as I could, I didn't want to leave too late as I was hoping to get a coffee in Mombuey, just 10 km away, and most cafés don't open until 0800 or later. The bearded Spaniard and the French couple Jeannette and Arno and I all left within a few minutes of each other and split up as we all found our own pace. I was in the middle and I could see the light of the bearded Spaniard in the distance ahead, and Jeannette and Arno's behind me.

    It was going to be a long day today, 29 km, but fortunately it was cloudy so we were out of direct sunlight for most of the day. I got to Mombuey in no time at all, I had only stopped to photograph the sunrise, and there was a bar open so I went in for breakfast, the bearded Spaniard was there, and I 'chatted ' with him for a few minutes, (short chat, he only spoke a few words of English and I only had basic Spanish). He had also been taking photographs with a Nikon DSLR, a bulky and expensive piece of kit to carry on the camino.

    Refreshed, I set off again. I still had about 20 km to go, and whilst it was pleasant enough, after a while it was just became a bit of a slog, with quite a few inclines, I just had to keep putting one foot in front of the other and keep going because there was no other choice, there was nothing to go back to, and all the arrows pointed forward.

    By the time I got to Asturianos, I was very weary, and my legs were a bit wobbly so instead of going to the albergue on the far side of town, I made a beeline for the café to refuel, Camino Ken's number 1 rule is - never walk past a café without stopping for a coffee. I was happy to keep that rule.

    The albergue is attached to a sports centre and was not at all as it was described in the guidebook. The guide says there are only 6 beds but it looked like the whole place had been renovated and there were three rooms with a total of 22 beds. The toilet and shower units were brand new and fabulous with piping hot water. I did my washing then sat and ate the sandwich that Mirjam had made for me last night (from the heart), it was the best sandwich I have ever had.

    The restaurant was in the sports centre part and the food was ok, and not expensive, after being fed and watered we all trekked down to the only shop before it closed. after that there was really nothing to do except sort out our washing, and repack our mochilas, and sit in the sun.

    I am finding every day that I spend with Meg, Kathleen, Anne and Mirjam that a deepening bond of friendship is developing between us, and I guess that to onlookers that might seem strange. We are, after all, an odd bunch, and interestingly although Julia and Anita are not with us at the moment, they are such a part of our conversation and our thoughts that it feels like they are with us in spirit. I think this is unusual, even for the camino which has an uncanny ability to bring people together, this feels like family.
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  • Day 33

    Asturianos - Requejo de Sanabria 30 km

    June 1, 2022 in Spain ⋅ 🌧 26 °C

    I got up wishing I had been in the other room with Meg, Kathleen, Anne and Mirjam. I was in a room with 6 other people, 5 of who were serious snorers, earplugs were no help.

    The walk to Requejo was quite tedious, the weather was very changeable, sunshine and drizzle and a dampness in the air, and it has generally been cooler and damper the further north we have come. The camino path today was very varied, it went through a lot of damp, soggy, wooded farmland, and country roads and a fair bit on the tarmac as well. Part of the path just outside Asturianos was flooded and muddy but not enough to require a detour, there were a couple of steepish hills to go up as well and a quite steep one downhill on the way out of Asturianos.

    Puebla de Sanabria looked like a nice historic town but I didn't have time to be a tourist, I had hoped to get a coffee but I couldn't find a café or bar that was open despite the fact that it was after 0900. I did find a supermarket that was open so I went in and treated myself to some sugary snacks, and then carried on. I made good time for the first 20 km, but I found the last 9 km more difficult, and a bit slower. Just outside Requejo I noted that the GPS trace of the camino path seemed to be quite a bit longer than going directly on the road, so I chose the road. Although I don't like walking on the tarmac it is quicker, and I could tell from the map that the camino route involved some hill climbing. It was a good choice, for when I messaged back to Meg and the others it seemed they were finding it hard going.

    I eventually arrived in the town and looked for a café which I found easy enough and I got a coffee from a morose girl behind the counter, the coffee was a lot better than her demeanour. The guidebook described the municipal albergue as 'basic' which put us all off, so we planned go to a private albergue Casa Cerviño, so I headed there. I just arrived and stepped in the door when the heavens opened in a torrential and long lasting downpour of rain. As Musashi says, timing is everything.

    I was the first to arrive, so I messaged the others to tell them that the albergue was really good. It was spacious, very clean, had good toilets and showers, and a washing machine and tumble dryer. The bar/restaurant was right next door as well (the food was very good). I hadn't been there long when I had the most wonderful surprise, for the next person to arrive in the albergue was Anita! Having gone all the way to Santiago de Compostela for some physio she was back on the camino. She is an inspiring woman, and as tough and resilient as her homeland.

    All the others eventually arrived wet and tired, and glad for a shower and change of clothes.

    When the rain went off Mirjam, Anne and I went out to look for provisions for the next day. Requejo de Sanabria is one of the least resourced towns we have stayed in thus far, we were not able to get any provisions other than a few Magdalena cakes from the bar with the morose barmaid. However, the evening was full of chat and the warmth of friendship shared, even with the rain, these are the days that you want to last forever.
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  • Day 34

    Requejo de Sanabria - Lubián 19 km

    June 2, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 22 °C

    I had a great sleep, one of the best on the camino so far, the albergue was warm and comfortable, it was definitely one of the best I had stayed in, and the hospitalera was so nice and friendly. I always pack my bag the night before and try to be as quiet as possible in the morning but as I was stripping my bed (as instructed by the hospitalera) I was worried that I had woken up Mirjam in the bunk next to me but she assured me later that I hadn't.

    I was leaving early because there was a lot of uncertainty about the path ahead. The guidebooks all warned about diversions on this section due to the AVE high speed rail construction. The guidebook advised obeying diversion signs and I encountered several but clear directions were given at each point, and in the distance across the valley I could see the tunnels for the trainline exiting the mountain. However, as I left the sleeping beauties in the albergue, I had no idea what lay ahead for us so I wanted to go ahead of them so that I could report back about any diversions or roadblocks.

    The first part of the walk was all on the road and all uphill. The ascent on this section is 535 metres but the road smooths some of that out, trading steepness for length so the first 6 km was all uphill, but not too steep. I wore the trainers I bought in Salamanca until I got to that point and then changed into my boots. Off-road the path continued on uphill for at least another 2.2 km reaching the pass at A Canda, at 1365m it is the highest point on the Camino Sanabrés and the Via de la Plata.

    Just another 1.5 km away was the town of Padornelo, and the camino path went right past a café, so of course I stopped for a coffee. The café was well stocked with provisions of jamón and cheese and wine, so, all the essentials. Just a little bit along the road was a petrol station with a shop so I stopped there and restocked with water. As I waited to cross at a junction the driver of a huge truck blocked all the traffic so I could cross safely, I waved my thanks.

    As I was walking through the countryside I found a post with a yellow arrow on the ground, it looked like someone had torn it down. I dragged it along the path a bit then propped it up so that the arrow was pointing in the right direction. Just five minutes later I discovered that the path was partially blocked, someone, probably the landowner had put wire and rope across it. I double checked the map to make sure I was on the right path, and then climbed over the wire and kept going.

    Once again I was the first to arrive at the albergue, the cleaning lady was there and she showed me around, she was lovely and we had a good chat. Great toilets and showers, so after showering, changing and getting my washing hung out, I went in search of supplies. when I returned I found that more pilgrims had arrived, a girl from Latvia striking blond hair and lots of tattoos, and...all the snorers. After thinking about it for a few minutes I went up to the private albergue where Meg and Kathleen were staying and booked a room, then went back and got all my stuff except my washing, I could get that later.

    I met Meg and Kathleen for lunch, it was my treat for Meg because it was her birthday today, she was...well a gentleman never tells. Anne and Mirjam had picked wild flowers for her, and surrounded them with her favourite snack bar, they are such lovely thoughtful people. We had all agreed to meet later to toast Meg's birthday with a glass of wine, we even had some ice cream, and it was lovely to have Jeanette and Arno there as well.

    As we drew nearer to Santiago it became clear that we might not have much time left together as a group as we all had to be in Santiago on different days in order to travel to our respective homes or other holiday destinations. I was determined to savour each moment with each one of these lovely humans who were no longer strangers but who were becoming the dearest of friends.
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  • Day 35

    Lubián - A Gudiña 27 km

    June 3, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 14 °C

    Despite all the difficulties I had been through on the camino, today was unquestionably the worst day of walking so far. I left at 0530, the weather forecast was not good and there was, quite literally, a mountain to cross into Galicia. I had not gone far when it started to rain, the first real heavy rain I had walked in so far, and I was thankful that I had brought my Rohan waterproof jacket rather than a poncho, it performed beyond all expectations. I was not worried about my mochila getting wet as it had a perfectly good rain cover.

    The camino turned off what had been a decent path into woodland, and continued steadily uphill, it was often flooded and muddy and always slippery. It began by following a riverbed, but the water was deep and flowing fast, in fact it was already flowing over the large granite blocks laid there to assist peregrinos and keep them dry. At one point I was walking in the river, my boots were waterproof but they could only deal with so much and I ended up walking the next 20+ km with wet feet.

    All of this was being done in darkness, my path only illuminated by the circle of light from my head torch, all the while in driving rain. The longer I walked that section of the path, the more slippery and dangerous it became, and with hindsight I realised that it had not been a good idea to come on my own. The only plus was that I was able to message back details of the conditions to my friends. I was worried for the older walkers like Jeanette and Arno, and an older Spanish couple, I thought they might be safer taking the road. At one point I had to walk through some bushes that had overgrown the path, and they were so wet it was like walking through a car wash. The uphill climb was difficult and in the darkness, it felt never ending. I was tired, cold, sore and soaking wet and miserable. I felt like a Hobbit lost in Fangorn wood.

    Fortunately the higher up the mountain I got the easier and less claustrophobic it became, and I was greatly relieved to reach the summit and cross over into Galicia, of course what goes up must come down and so there was a reasonably steep descent until the path levelled out. I found myself wishing I had some of Mirjam and Anne's energy. After an hour I came across a café and stopped for a hot coffee, it had just opened and I think the lady took pity on my drenched and bedraggled state because she also brought me a huge slice of tortilla as well. Once again, I had found kindness, unlooked for, on the Way.

    From that point, with the exception of just a few km it was steadily and at times steeply uphill for several hours. Something had happened on the walk up the mountain, and I was feeling a lot of pain in my right hip and it was getting worse. Finally, I could see A Gudiña just a few km away down the valley, but every step of that last 2 km was agony.

    I arrived at the albergue just a few minutes before the hospitalera and I was more than happy to just sit on the wall outside until she was ready, to be honest I thought if I didn't sit down I would fall down. The albergue was huge but nice with terrific toilets and showers (I know I sound like I'm obsessed...but these things matter on the camino). I picked my bed and lay down for a rest after popping some pain killers.

    When the ladies arrived they were given a room together and they asked me to join them which I was very glad to do, glad too it would be Anne sleeping on top of me tonight, she doesn't move about much. The albergue had a washing machine so we put all our washing together and got that done and put my boots out to dry.

    After a chat about the long walk the next day, we decided that given the distance, the weather forecast and the fact that some of us were not in the best of shape, with sore feet, bad knees and my injured hip, (and my boots were still wet), the oldies and I would go to Laza by taxi whilst Mirjam and Anne, young and fit as they were, would walk the 35 km, but we would take some of their gear with us in the taxi. So, for me it would be a rest day that would hopefully give my hip a chance to recover. With that decided, we all went to bed.
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  • Day 36

    A Gudiña - Laza 35 km

    June 4, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    Having made the decision to go to Laza by taxi, Meg, Kathleen, Anita and I all had a lie in. Once we were all ready to go we set off in search of a café for breakfast, which we found eventually. Breakfast was good and the café owner telephoned a taxi for us, and it arrived very soon after that. The taxi driver was chatty and really funny, and we were there within 45 minutes. The albergue was inevitably closed, and so we went to a café and had second breakfast like real Hobbits.

    The albergue was modern, clean with a good kitchen. We were allocated a room together and picked our bunks and sorted our stuff out. Anne arrived about 1500 but by 1700 Mirjam had still not arrived so I set off to look for her and much to my relief I met her coming up the road. I took her mochila and walked her back to the albergue.

    There was nothing to do but the usual peregrino stuff, I was fortunate enough to spend a long time that evening in conversation with Mirjam, and I will always treasure that time with her. I am sure that people back home will ask me about my camino experience and what it was like walking every day, and what the landscape was like, and the food etc. As I have reflected on that I have come to understand that above all it is the moments with other people, where bonds of love and friendship were established and deepened that have had the deepest impact and settle longest in the heart.

    There's not much else to say about that day so let me give you a typical day in my life as a peregrino

    1. Get up, normally between 0500 and 0530, and get dressed, (some peregrinos sleep in the next day's clothes or at least next day's underwear)
    2. Breakfast of fruit or whatever I managed to buy the day before or if I'm really lucky something in a café.
    3. Walk anything from 15-32 km over varied terrain and always in the heat if not always in direct sunlight. Temperatures ranged from about 5° to 39° and sometimes it was still 25°-30° after midnight
    4. Arrive at the albergue and get booked in, pick a bunk and get clean clothes out of my bag
    5. Shower and change into the clothes for the next day's walk
    wash my dirty clothes, almost always in a sink of cold water with a bar of soap and if possible, get them hung outside in the sun
    6. Look for a shop to buy supplies for the next day, water fruit etc.
    7. Find somewhere to eat, café/bar/restaurants normally offered hot meals between 1330 and 1500 and then again at 2000 - 2100. Depending on the kitchen facilities some folk might cook their own dinner, I did a few times.
    8. Spend some quality time with Meg, Kathleen, Anita, Anne, Julia and Mirjam
    9. Read over the route for the next day and check the map, pack my mochila
    10. Journal about the day, read, listen to music then sleep.
    11. Get up the next day and do it all again.

    Of course, there's a lot that happened in-between those lines, but that's for me to know.
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  • Day 37

    Laza - Villar de Barrio 20 km

    June 5, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 29 °C

    I woke early but just lay in bed for a while listening to Kathleen's gentle snoring, weirdly I never found her snoring annoying, in fact I always thought that it was kind of relaxing and I was genuinely happy that she was getting a deep sleep. I guess a key issue in dealing with snoring is how you feel about the person, and I felt nothing but good things towards Kathleen, she's a treasure.

    I was only walking 20km today so I was in no hurry, and the albergue in Villar de Barrio didn't open until 1300. Today's walk was going to be a challenge, as there was a mountain with a very steep ascent in between Laza and Villar, and I still had some anxieties about ascents, which in this case totaled 690m. However, today I was to experience another camino miracle.

    I had walked about 3km when I saw another peregrino in the distance, and I happened to notice something falling off their mochila. I quickened my pace and got to the spot and there on the ground was a woolly hat, so I quickened my pace again until I was in shouting distance of its owner. He stopped and waited until I got to him and was overjoyed to have his hat returned, as he was quite bald. So, we walked together and got to know each other a bit. His name was Ougo he was a retired surgeon from Bologna, he was 73. I noticed a dressing on his knee and asked if he was ok, he said yes but he was very upset as his knee was no longer stable enough to allow him to continue mountaineering, his great passion. He had been mountaineering and walking the alps since he was a boy, but all he could do now was walk caminos. He was coming back in July to walk the Norte with his wife. I felt like a total wimp by comparison, moaning about every hill.

    After an hour we arrived at the base of the mountain and began our ascent of its steep slope. After about 30 minutes, Ougo, whose English was ok (better than my Italian) stopped me and said, "I have something I would like to say. In my opinion your mochila is too low." So, I had to loosen all the straps whilst he readjusted them and then told me to tighten the straps and walk. I could not believe the difference, it was as if he had taken my mochila off me, and the nagging pain in my hip completely disappeared. (He thought my mochila was actually too large for me) He wasn't finished, he told me my walking pole was too high and he adjusted that, and again I felt a difference right away. Finally he said "If I can say one more thing, your pace is all wrong. if you are going to walk up a mountain, you must walk, not too fast, not too slow but you must walk at the same pace from start to finish. If you keep varying your pace you will exhaust yourself." So he got me to copy his pace and style of walking and with all the other adjustments he made, I was at the top of the mountain in no time at all, and feeling more energised than tired.

    Why is that a camino miracle? I didn't even realise I needed help, but I did need it, and through a strange set of circumstances I met Ougo, who of all the people I could have met that day, had the knowledge and experience to see what I could not and who knew exactly what to do to fix the problem. If I had not left late, if Ougo's hat hasn't fallen off his mochila...

    The help I got from Ougo that day transformed my camino and I will always be thankful for him and I will never forget him. When we got to Alberguería at the top of the mountain we went to the famous café where pilgrims are invited to write their name on a shell, (there are over 50,000 in the café and albergue), and so we signed a shell together and I bought him a coffee, and we sat for a while listening to Dire Straits (the café owner plays them all day, he's a superfan).

    The steep decline down the other side of the mountain was actually more difficult than the ascent, but we stopped for a moment near the top and looked out over the vista before us and Ougo said "Our Lord's creation is very beautiful." I couldn't argue with that. As we got to the bottom, Ougo and I said our goodbyes, as he was going to have a longer rest before going on to the town beyond Vilar, and I never saw him again.
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  • Day 38

    Villar de Barrio - Ourense 37 km

    June 6, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    After a chat with the ladies today we decided that we would like to spend some time in Oursense, the ladies wanted to try the famous sulphur baths and I wanted to do some sightseeing, and some shopping for essential supplies. The only way that we would have the time to do that was to get there today, so it was agreed that Meg, Kathleen, Anita and I would walk part of the way then hop in a taxi to shorten the time. Mirjam and Anne were going to walk the full 37km (young, fit and fearless).

    Kathleen found and booked an Airbnb in Ourense for two nights. So we slept late and set off at 0830. The path was mostly very flat and the landscape unremarkable but we made good time to Xunqueira de Ambia. Anne had sent us a photo of Mirjam enjoying a late breakfast in a café there so we went looking for it. (Yes they had left before us!) Meg had a terrible cup of tea but the coffee was good and the barman called for a taxi to take us into Ourense.

    We had a bit of bother finding the Airbnb, it turned out that the building numbers were old and no longer in use but we got there eventually. The apartment was great, two bedrooms, a great bathroom and well fitted kitchen/living area. It had everything we needed, including a coffee machine! It was also right around the corner from the cathedral where we would need to get our credentials stamped and well located for all kinds of shopping.

    As we were walking near the apartment, much to our surprise and great delight we met Julia, and so we all went out for lunch together with Julia leading the way, and in another happy 'coincidence' Guillermo joined us as well, it felt a little like we were getting the band back together! The food was good and the conversation flowed the way it does around meal tables.

    Later that night, Mirjam arrived, she had gotten into Ourense late and we suggested that she stay in the Airbnb with us. When I set off that morning from Villar de Barrio, I was sad because I would not see her again until this time next week, so I was delighted to see her now, even for just a short time. She had just walked a hard 37 km and had 24 km to do tomorrow with a very long very steep incline, so I was happy to be able to give up my bed for her. I slept on the surprisingly comfortable couch. Although we were in the very centre of the city, all was quiet, and we slept in peace.
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  • Day 39

    Ourense 15 km

    June 7, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    After a good sleep I woke just before Mirjam got up and prepared to leave, I was sad to be saying goodbye to her today knowing that I would not see her until she returned to Santiago from Finisterre on the 12th. We have planned an evening meal with everyone in our little group on Santiago for the 13th of June, it will be great to have everyone together.

    The ladies were going to the sulphur baths and I did some sightseeing, I went out to the cathedral to get my credential stamped and whilst I was there I did the tour. It was interesting but to be honest not much different from every other cathedral I had ever visited. After my experience in Salamanca I couldn't help but see it as another cultural relic of Christendom dependant upon the secular world for survival. I went to see the cloisters of St Francis as much for the walk as anything else, but there was not much to see, you could walk around it and take a few photos but there wasn't much to it. However, they also had a museum there telling some of the history of the city, and that was quite interesting.

    Mirjam sent back word that there were very many more peregrinos on the camino, but that was expected. In order to get a Compostela you only have to walk the last 100km and Ourense is 110 km from Santiago and so many people start their camino here. She also said that she had gone the right hand route, which is very slightly less steep, and that was the route we had also decided to go in the morning. Meg had organised for two of our bags to be transported to our next albergue, and as mine was the biggest bag, I shared it with Anita. I went out to Decathlon and bought a 20L daypack for only 10€ and put all the stuff I needed for the day in it. The walk that day was so much easier for all of us that we decided to have our bags transported each day until we got to Santiago.

    I decided not to go out for dinner with the girls, I had had some pizza for lunch and wasn't really hungry, and I wanted to do some admin type stuff anyway and spend time reflecting on my camino so far and how I thought it had changed me. As Socrates is reported to have said at his trial, "the unexamined life is not worth living."

    I really enjoyed our time in Ourense. It was great to have some time to do tourist type things, and to get some much needed supplies, best of all it was great to spend quality time with Meg, Kathleen and Anita, to see Julia and Guillermo and Mirjam, and to my great joy, by a random chance, I met Anne in the street, we didn't have long to chat but it was such a delight. She had been busy with university stuff and so was booked into a place with good wifi, so it was a wonderful and unexpected meeting. Much as it is a beautiful and interesting city, for me, those moments were the best thing about Oursense.
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  • Day 40

    Ourense - Cea 24 km

    June 8, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    We were all up early because the two bags that were being transported to the albergue in Cea had to be delivered to a bar by 0730 and it was 20 minutes walk away. While we were there we had some breakfast then doubled back a little to join the right-hand route out of Ourense. The walk was very good but the first hour or so was slower going due to the unending steepness of the path, the city sits at the bottom of a valley that we had to climb out of. Thanks to Ougo I found the walking uphill ok but I was finding that my breathing was laboured and my heart rate was too high. Fortunately Anita, (medical scientist), talked me through how to breathe on the uphill and that made a huge difference - my heart rate dropped by 20 points for the rest of the hill. Eventually the path began to level out and we reached the 100 km marker.

    The Galicians really don't want you to get lost on the camino and since arriving in Galicia we had noted the abundance of unmissable granite markers that also gave the distance from Santiago. Disputes about the distance aside, these way markers gave the distance to three decimal points, I didn't know if it was someone being pedantic or if the Galicians subtle way of saying they did it better than all the other autonomous regions, probably the latter.

    Walking with Meg, Kathleen and Anita was a joy, there was plenty of mutual encouragement and support, some banter (as we say in Scotland) and a lot of laughter. It made the time pass very quickly and soon enough we were in Cea.

    We arrived at the albergue in Cea to find it open but with no one there. It was dark and dingy and would turn out to be one of the worst albergues we stayed in, it was not very clean and it was a little bit smelly, but we were given fresh disposable sheets and pillowcases. The toilets and showers were acceptable rather than good, but at night some of the lights would not go off. I don't think any of us got a great sleep.

    Anyway, Meg and I were sitting in the dark dingy reception area waiting for the hospitalero when Kathleen arrived, and suddenly it was like the sun had come out, she transformed the space just by walking into it. I realised right then that I had not spent a single moment on the camino with her that had not been a joy. She was and is a ray of sunshine, and when we went out for a walk I told her so.

    When the hospitalero arrived he was very excited to discover that I was from Scotland and he went into another office and came back with some photographs that looked about 30+ years old, he was still recognisable in them at events in Edinburgh and the Wallace Monument in Stirling, and at a highland games somewhere, meeting Prince Charles. I told him that the Wallace Monument was not far from where I lived, in fact you can just about see it from my house.

    Cea was another unremarkable town with little to recommend it, however we did have a fabulous dinner at a nearby restaurant/bar/grill. As we were eating who should turn up on his bike but Guillermo, it was great to see him again, as he cycled off, we all agreed that we would try and find a needle and some black thread for him....you had to be there.

    The next section of the camino was another one where there were problems regarding accommodation. Since the covid pandemic many albergues had closed and some of them had not yet reopened, and some were closed permanently. That was the case in the next section. The albergue in Castro Dozón was closed leaving a 35 km trek to A Laxe. Having considered all our options, we agreed that we would get a bus to Castro Dozón (14.6 km) and then walk from there to A Laxe. A quick online search revealed that there was a bus at 0630 and the lady in the shop said the bus stop was next to a bar, but we had been given conflicting times for the bus. So, in the evening I went out for a walk to find it and also how long it would take to get there, and the lovely barmaid pointed out the bus stop to me and confirmed that it would be there at 0630. It was 10 minutes walk. Over my camino I had taken a couple of taxis and buses and whilst this was not ideal, I think in each case it was forced on us by external circumstances. Some of the issues were personal matters of health and injuries but some were the fallout from covid and would require some long-term solutions by the regional camino associations. Not everyone walking the camino can walk 35 -45 Km in a day, especially when the temperatures are reaching the highest on record. Scientists have been warning us about a climate crisis for decades. It's here.

    With that organised, there was nothing to do but get to bed and try and sleep...but you already know how that went.

    I got word that Mirjam had arrived safely in A Laxe, our next stop. I could not help but think about her and Anne and Julia, like little birds having flown the nest, on their own each one following their own path. Much as we all missed them terribly, everything was as it should be, for everyone must walk their own camino, and as Sting famously sang, "if you love somebody, set them free."
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