Portugal Esposende

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  • Day 4

    Vila do Conde-Esposende

    April 6 in Portugal ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

    Woke up to sunshine. On route by 830am, walked through town onto the coastal route. Today's scenery was more boardwalks with a little bit of forest. We ended walking through a beautiful coastal town. 16 miles and 40,000 steps!Read more

  • Day 5

    Day 2 Villa de Conde to Esoconde 25.5 km

    April 5 in Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    Had a great start to the day.
    I passed a man chatting with 2 women and he offered a fresh hot bun to me. So many kind offerings here🥰

    I dropped my raincoat and a lady stopped to pick it up for me😥♥️

    I keep seeing this guy from Poland, in his seventies and nearly deaf. He was in our room tonight. He had boxes of prayers on cards in all sorts of languages....and he gave out chocolates♥️ He enjoyed some of my coffee this am. One of the lenses from his glasses went missing.....he curses a lot in Polish😂

    Walked beside the beach for a long way then switched to boardwalks. After awhile it grew a bit tiresome. I felt trapped as there was no way you could climb out and even if you did.... We were in brush.

    The rain turned into being hot and humid in the afternoon.
    Delightful Hostel!!

    So far I have met the most pilgrims from the USA. Michigan, Louisiana, Utah ( they had an 8 month old daughter, Washington State.... A lot of Germans and French. Also Lithuania and Russia.
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  • Day 4

    Day 1 Porto to Villa de Conde 30 km

    April 4 in Portugal ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    Woke up at 5. Very excited to get going.
    All set to have breakfast but found the kitchen locked until 7:30. I sat on the stairs and ate trail mix.

    Raining outside so was ready for it.

    Didn't see many pilgrims today. Very long and tedious in places.

    Cosy hostel.
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  • Day 11

    Tag 11: Sonne ist wie Urlaub von Regen

    March 11 in Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

    Strecke: Labruge - Esposende, 34 km

    Auch am Morgen ist alles noch klitschnass vom Vortag. Im Dunkeln packen wir leise zusammen. An unseren Rucksäcken hängen etliche Utensilien, die sich über den leichten Fahrtwind freuen, damit sie trocknen können.

    Direkt am Meer geht es weiter. Schon jetzt ist absehbar, dass der Tag deutlich trockener werden wird. Wir stoppen nach ein paar Kilometern für einen Kurzen (Kaffee). Die Gespräche mit Alex sind mal wieder wahnsinnig gut. Der ist echt ne Themen-Maschine… ich dachte, dass wir nach dem ersten Camino bereits alles durchgesprochen hätten, aber es sind offensichtlich noch so einige klaffende Lücken vorhanden…

    Zur Mittagszeit kehren wir in einem Restaurant ein und Achtung, jetzt wird’s verrückt: Es liegt direkt am Strand, in einer touristischen Gegend, ich trank 2 Bier und einen Espresso. Dazu gab es eine große Portion mit Steak, Reis, Pommes. Der ganze Spaß kostet 9,20€. Für die Qualität des Essens, unfassbar!

    Die neue Energie bringt uns in einer guten Geschwindigkeit weiter vorwärts, sodass wir einige Pilger umkurven, die mit der neuen Belastung noch etwas hadern. Viele haben es gestern viele Kilometer gemacht, vor allem der Regen hat einige gebeutelt.

    Gegen Abend erreichen wir Esposende.
    Super Tag, Körper topfit - was will man mehr!
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  • Day 5

    Day 4 - 30 kms to Viana do Costello

    October 23, 2024 in Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

    After a sleepless night I awoke to find several pilgrims already gone. Two things occur to me 1. I must have gotten some sleep and 2. I was inspired by how svelte these pilgrims were at leaving without a peep. They are clearly more experienced at this than I. I found today long and hot without a lot of shade. I was excited to meet Rhonda Downey from New Brunswick. She is the first Canadian I’ve met. We walked together with Anje from Germany and decided to take the unofficial coastal route, described as ‘more adventurous’. We has a mix of narrow cobblestone streets, wooded trail, carriage lanes and beach walking.. Even though I was tired, I could not resist exploring this lovely small city. I will sleep well tonight in my private room.Read more

  • Day 6

    Vila do Conde to Esposende, 15.5 miles

    September 20, 2024 in Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 63 °F

    Started in the rain, and ended with a nice sunset. Crossed a scary bridge and became socks with sandals lady. In 3 days, I have already walked 45 miles if you count all steps taken, not just those on Camino. Crazy. Not something I thought I'd ever do, but here I am... probably 125 more miles, give or take.Read more

  • Day 4

    Day 3 - Póvoa de Varzim to Esposende

    June 3, 2024 in Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 73 °F

    I still haven't figured out my sleep schedule. I'm not the only one. There is a restlessness that comes with a pilgrimage, where you feel you have to keep moving forward. Sometimes the hardest part of the day is deciding you've gone far enough.

    Last night I was exhausted. I fell asleep 15 times while trying to edit my last post. I'd wake up to find I'd pushed the space bar 30 times before jolting back into clarity. I'm sure there are still mistakes, but I'm not aiming for perfection in these epistles.

    It was another cloudless, blue sky day. The breeze teeter-tottered with humidity and I definitely prefer the cooling breath of the sky to the skin moisture already at 6:30 in the morning.

    I very nearly missed the first open cafe, this after teasing another pilgrim (who I met online from her Instagram posts and is about 5 days ahead of me) after she got lost again and had to backtrack several k's. I told her I was using the Camino Ninja app if I needed to look up my route. She told me she was using the Buen Camino app. I told her that she wasn't using it very well. (She laughed at my snarky response.)

    It was at my second cafe of the day that I met Sarah from Hungary. We had a delightful first conversation. Three Brazilian pellegrinas listened in to conversation from the next table over and interacted with me once Sarah was back on the trail. Before leaving, two young American friends from the States talked with me.

    The only two men who came into the cafe just wanted to quickly use the bathroom, down a shot of espresso, get a stamp, and get back on the trail. I learned nothing about them.

    ***

    Most pilgrims wear a shell on their backpack as a way of indicating they are on their way to Santiago de Compostela and are not a European hippie. There are lots of Camino legends regarding the scallop shell. When I ordered shells for our first Camino three years ago they came with the Cross of Saint James printed in red on the rounded side.
    At first I didn't think anything of the design, but as we walked I learned more of the significance and history of it. It isn't really a cross, it is a more of a flowery looking religious sword.

    It has been used by a couple of religious/military orders, the first being Spain’s Order of Santiago, whose main purpose was to protect the pilgrims on their way to Santiago de Compostela. There was a similar group with the same purpose in Portugal called the Military Order of Saint James of the Sword.

    (That last title might cause you to ask a question, "Why did Saint James have a sword?".)

    I'm all for the civil guard making sure the pilgrims are safe as they walk to Santiago, however, the other purpose of these orders was to drive out the Moors from the Iberian Peninsula (meaning to kill the Muslims in Portugal and Spain).

    You might read that we honor Saint James by wearing a sword because he was beheaded by one in Jerusalem, kind of like the way some Christians identify with Jesus by wearing a cross. I think there are better ways to honor and show our devotion.

    But the more significant origin of this sword is from the legend that St James showed up over 800 years after his death on a white horse with great sword in hand as an answer to prayer from the Spanish King to win a great battle against the Muslims. After the victory St. James was given a new title - Santiago Matamoros - meaning St. James the Moor Slayer.
    While the legitimacy of this battle is actually in question, and the legend of the St. James intervention not showing up in stories until a couple hundred of years later, still there is plenty of Santiago Matamoros iconography throughout the Camino, especially in the churches and cathedrals.

    I'm uncomfortable wearing a Muslim-killing sword on my Camino shell. Last year I bought a plain white one without the symbol, but it was more difficult to find.

    You might think, "Chad, you are getting too politically correct over there in Portugal and Spain. I think the sun may have gotten to your head."

    Maybe. I also don't put gun stickers on the back of my car.

    Symbolism matters to me.
    Identity matters to me.
    Images matter to me.

    The mix of religion and violence and church's involvements in wars matters to me.

    Selling Bibles or indulgences for political power or the amassing of silver and gold matters to me.

    "Am I buggin' you? I don't mean to bug ya. Okay, Edge, play the blues."

    I'm not on a crusade (see what I just did there?) to get people to stop wearing or using the St. James Cross/Sword, but if they notice that I'm not, I'll explain why.

    ***

    What about today's walk?

    There were a couple times today where there were options in the path (even though they aren't marked well). I found myself heading away from the coast and toward a town that I wasn't expecting. Sure enough I was heading down the coastal (town) route and not the litoral (ocean) route. I found a dirt road and headed west. I walked through vegetable farms and waved at onion farmers out in their fields. They all waved back. I knew if I was off course they would have pointed which direction to go. It was marvelous and a highlight of the walk.

    There were other unique arrows today including one that filled up the whole road. I certainly didn't miss that one!

    I arrived in town almost three hours before I could check in at my albergue. They let me drop off my bag and then I headed out to find lunch. I've decided that a calzone is just a pizza that has been folded in half. That is all the wisdom I have for today.

    Ultreia et Suseia!
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  • Day 23

    Viana do Castello

    May 9, 2024 in Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

    Gestern Abend war es noch richtig nett am Strand mit Julia/Dt.und Adam/Kanada mit Sunset, Wein und Chips. Heute morgen ging es um 7 Uhr wieder los. Erst durch Dörfer und dann durch Wälder, rauf und runter, über eine 462m lange Brücke über den Rio Lima, diese führt in die wunderschöne Stadt Viana do Castello. Hoch am Monte Cruz thront das Heiligtum der Santa Luzia, das weithin sichtbar ist und zu dem 330 Stufen hinauf- und wieder hinunterführen.
    Auch die Stadt ist sehr schön und überall ist etwas los. Unser Hostel, das gleich nach der Brücke liegt, das Convento da Carlo ist wirklich super. Dort traf ich auch wieder auf unseren Trupp. Zu fünft ging es dann am Abend in die Stadt zum Essen, das auch noch von Lifemusik begleitet wurde.
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  • Day 5

    Fão

    April 16, 2024 in Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    Another full size day at 22km, near perfect weather and flat.
    A wholesome brekkie at our hotel then on the path at 8.00am. Planned a break for coffee around 7km but nothing open until after 8km, then coffee but no snack. Carried on past multiple market gardens and greenhouses to Apulia, was pretty warm and cobblestone roads were tough on feet. A basic late lunch and on to Fao via rustic farm lanes. Revised plan for a few days time, we’re going well. Our Fao boarding house has a pool, looks enticing.

    Stayed: The Spot Hostel Ofir
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  • Day 11

    Day 3 - Póvoa de Varzim to Esposende

    April 14, 2024 in Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 70 °F

    Day 3 on the Camino and the skies continue to be blue and the temperature warm. The same is forecasted for at least the next 10 days. This area has had so much rain previously that we were very nervous for our planned time here but we have been very lucky weather wise, so far.

    Today being Sunday, there were loads of families out walking and enjoying the beaches. We left later than we normally like because I (Peg) couldn’t pass up the free breakfast, that came with our room last night, but it wasn’t served until 8am. We arrived at our Albergue about 3:00 with many stops along the way to refuel our bodies and rest our weary bones. Tomorrow we have further distance to cover so will definitely be leaving earlier.

    As they say in Portugal, Bom Caminha!
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