Spain Guadarrama

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  • Day 18

    Fromista to Carrion de los Condes

    May 18, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 19 °C

    Ok…one thing about the Camino, and I think I mentioned it before is the “food” challenge. So not only do the Spanish eat at very odd hours not at all timed with my 60 year old biological clock, but I am figuring out that the culinary efforts to feed the pilgrims amounts to either “conference” style feeding of the pilgrims, or generally very poor take out. For example, yesterday, I asked for a sandwich at a kiosk in a town and it was simply a French loaf with a couple of slices of ham ( and the terrible kind), and 2 mini slices of cheese. At the pilgrim supper, I had a salad which consisted of iceberg lettuce, 2 slices of tomato and a splash of tuna and pre-pkg oil and balsamic dressing, the second plate was a a plate of pasta with tomato sauce. This morning breakfast was either the egg and potato omelet or bread with meat and cheese…this is very typical, but more than 2 weeks in, I have not been complaining much, except today. I might also be a bit more sensitive because I have fought terrible wind for two days now…

    My guide book says that there is an excellent restaurant in the town about 5 km before my final destination. It is even a Michelin star restaurant! I know that lunch will not be served before 130, so I wait…I wait very patiently for an hour…I toured the church…also lovely…and waited.

    I was the first one in the restaurant, and greeted by a maitre de, and the tables are set with wine glasses etc. etc…and I think…oh no… they do not serve pilgrims like the guide book said, but none the less, I persist and the friendly maitre de seats me. We have a brief discussion about the type of wine I would like and between my “no Spanish” and his “no English” we settle on rose. A word the same in both languages.

    Over the lunch, I am brought the pilgrim’s lunch. A wonderful soup, Castilian, a fish in tomato sauce and finally French toast and cream…I have never had a Michelin star restaurant experience for 18 euros (including wine), and likely never will again because you have to be dressed like you are a pilgrim and look all the more wretched for the experience.

    Another thing I am learning about the Camino is that speaking Spanish is definitely an asset. You can get by like I do with no Spanish, but I think it would be much easier to engage with the experience more fully if you had access to the language. Everything is harder in Spain without speaking the language, from eating, to doing laundry, to finding places for buy new gear. Part of my experience today is a response to not being able to speak Spanish and deciding to be brave and try to do what the guide book suggests, despite the fact that it is harder to communicate. Despite my lack of language skills to step outside of the typical pilgrim experience.

    While I was at lunch, locals started to come in. For some, the maitre de brought out olives and bottles of wine, for others he brought out I think a lamb chop…but it was really large, and for others they got a menu! All the while, the locals all said hello when they passed my table and I even had a conversation with a local using a translate app…I attached a picture. In this restaurant they use their napkin as shown. I wondered what that strap was for??? Apparently it is put around your neck. I can think of a few shirts that might have been saved with this technique rather than just putting it on your lap!

    And the best part of lunch, after a jug of wine, was when I asked for a taxi to the hotel, the hotel driver came to collect me. I passed all these pilgrims walking in the wind, along the side of the motorway, and not for a second did I feel guilty. I enjoyed my authentic Castilian lunch in a wonderful restaurant that historically was a hospital for pilgrim’s.

    I have arrived at a monastery turned high end hotel. I attached a view from my modest room in this old monastery. The town of Carrion de los Condos is historically important. It is the 1/2 way point to Santiago, and the town at one time housed 10,000 people who lived, worked and served pilgrims or were passing pilgrims. The monestery was politically important but also economically important and was established and nurtured as a secondary Santiago because pilgrims were 1/2 way through their journey which means that I am also now 1/2 way through. I have walked ( mostly) 400+ km at this point. Beginning tomorrow will mark the point where Santiago becomes increasingly less a dream and more a reality.
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  • Day 145

    La Barranca

    December 19, 2024 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

    Das Naturschutzgebiet La Barranca besuchten wir u.a. auf Empfehlung einer Freundin. Das Wetter spielte nicht ganz so mit und daher unternahmen wir nur eine kleine Wanderung zu einem Aussichtspunkt.

    Bereits in Frankreich ging unsere Wasserpumpe für den Wasserhahn kaputt. Wir hatten ziemlich schnell eine Ersatzpumpe gefunden, die allerdings nur tropfenweise Wasser aus dem Hahn lässt. Mit Hilfe von Daniela konnten wir netterweise die passende Tauchpumpe zu ihrem Onkel in der Nähe von La Barranca bestellen (danke an Daniela & Mariano). Leider hielt der bestellte Expressversand nicht, was er versprach. Das Paket war noch nicht einmal in Spanien angekommen. Wir versuchten daher am Nachmittag unser Glück in einigen Camping-Shops in Madrid. Leider fanden wir auch hier keine passende Pumpe. Und so müssen wir weiter mit dem wenigen Wasserdruck leben.
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  • Day 144

    Kloster de San Lorenzo de El Escorial

    December 18, 2024 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

    Die königliche Stätte San Lorenzo de El Escorial ist das größte Renaissancebauwerk der Welt und wurde 1984 zum Weltkulturerbe erklärt. Wir nahmen uns den Nachmittag Zeit die riesige Anlage mit den vielen Gemälden zu besichtigen.Read more

  • Day 3

    Day 3 Manzamares El Real to Credilla 21

    April 6, 2024 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

    Camino de Madrid

    Day 3 Manzanares El Real to Cercedilla 21kms

    A restful night in the hostel. At 8am, I set off this morning. It was cool but dry and perfect weather for walking.
    The path followed along a road next to Guadarrama National Park with dramatic views of the mountains.
    Tentg, the Korean Pilgrim, was always just ahead of me. I finally caught up with him in a small pueblo called Mataelpino where we stopped for first breakfast of churros and cafe con leche.
    After we began our gradual 400m ascent to the next town called Navacerrada another 7kms. There, we stopped for second breakfast. This time, it was coffee, pastries and orange juice to prepare us for the steep 300m ascent to the mountain pass and down into Cercedilla. The town has a real tourist vibe. I quickly found my lodgings for tonight and have settled down for lunch.
    Today was an excellent day for walking especially with some company. No blisters to report on.
    Tomorrow will be a tough day to just beyond Segovia 34kms over 1800m pass. I will have to carry food and water as there are no services. It will be a picnic lunch in the mountains.
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  • Day 2

    Manzanares el Real

    December 1, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 7 °C

    Sterre wilde graag een fiat 500 huren, mislukt na 1.5u proberen, dus maar met OV. Lieve buschauffeur liet mij gratis reizen naar Manzanares omdat mijn kaart niet werkte, dus ik hoefde ook een ticket te kopen. Eenmaal hier om 14:30 hebben we mooie uitzichten gezien, geitjes en veel roofvogels gespot, en een hond tegengekomen waarvan wij dachten dat deze al dagen daar rondliep. De buschauffeur op de terugweg was niet zo lief. Een kaartje kopen kon alleen met contant geld, dus we moesten de dus uit want ik had alleen 2 euro bij. Na wat geld pinnen moesten we op de volgende bus wachten en toen gingen we terug naar MadridRead more

  • Day 26

    Walk in Guadarrama National Park

    October 9, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

    This morning we checked out of the hotel, boarded our bus and bid farewell to Madrid. We had about a 90 minute drive to Manzanares el Real, where we stopped for supplies for a picnic lunch. We were then dropped off at the starting point of our walk into the Guadarrama National Park. This park is very popular with people from Madrid as it has numerous walking and hiking trails and also rock faces to climb (if that’s your thing).

    We had a lovely sunny day for our first walk. Gabriele asked for someone to be the back walker, which is someone who makes sure no-one is left behind. I volunteered for this and Ian said he would assist. So off we went, first encountering a couple of cute donkeys and then discovering that the bridge we should take to cross the river was washed out and being rebuilt. Gabriele had to make a slight adjustment to our course and then we were off.

    This area is best known for the unusual granite rock formations of La Pedriza. There are large pine forests all around which gives quite the contrast to the large granite formations. We started our walk at 900 metres above sea level and would climb up to about 1,200 metres. As with any group there are those that want to rush ahead, those that walk at a steady pace and those that either dawdle or might struggle with the steep inclines (and there were a few steep inclines during the walk).

    The area is also a breeding colony for Griffon Vultures and we did spot a number during our walk. It was fine when we walked in the shade, but there were a number of times we were walking up steep inclines and had the midday sun right on us. There were a couple of people in the group who struggled a bit, especially during the up hill sections, so Ian and I stayed with them and provided support and encouragement.

    We were on our way down when we found a lovely shady spot by a waterfall to stop for lunch. There was also a large flat piece of granite that served as the perfect table to lay out our spread. We had Jamon Iberico, three types of cheese, chorizo, fresh baguettes, cherry tomatoes, lettuce, grapes, plums, mandarins, bananas and a range of cookies. It was a real feast and we slightly over catered!

    After our delicious fresh picnic we continued our descent to the pick up point. It was a lovely walk that gave the group the chance to get to know everyone a little better. In total we walked just over 8 kilometres.
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  • Day 23

    The Valley of the Fallen

    October 6, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    We left El Escorial and drove about 10km northeast, to the Valley of Cuelgamuros, formerly known as Valley of the Fallen. It is a monument in the Sierra de Guadarrama mountains near Madrid. The valley contains a Catholic basilica and a monumental memorial .

    Dictator Francisco Franco ordered construction of the site after the civil war. It was built from 1940 to 1958 and opened in 1959. Franco said that the monument was intended as a “national act of atonement” and reconciliation.

    The site served as Franco’s burial place from his death in November 1975 (although it was not originally intended that he be buried there) until his exhumation on 24 October 2019 following a long and controversial legal process. This was due to moves to remove all public veneration of his dictatorship.

    The monument, considered a landmark of 20th-century Spanish architecture, was designed by Pedro Muguruza and Diego Méndez on a scale to equal, according to Franco, “the grandeur of the monuments of old, which defy time and memory”.

    Together with the Universidad Laboral de Gijón, it is the most prominent example of the original Spanish Neo-Herrerian style, which was intended to form part of a revival of Juan de Herrera’s architecture, exemplified by the nearby royal residence El Escorial.

    The monument precinct covers over 13.6 square kilometres of Mediterranean woodlands and granite boulders on the Sierra de Guadarrama hills, more than 900 metres above sea level and includes a basilica, a Benedictine abbey, a guest house, the Valley, and the Juanelos - four cylindrical monoliths dating from the 16th century.

    The most prominent feature of the monument is the towering 150 metre-high Christian cross, the tallest such cross in the world, erected over a granite outcrop 150 metres over the Basilica esplanade and visible from 30 kilometres away.

    Beneath the Valley floor lie the remains of 40,000 people, whose names are accounted for in the monument’s register. The valley contains remains of both Nationalists an Republicans. Republicans were interred here mostly without the consent or even the knowledge of their families; some estimates claim that there 33,800 victims of Francoism interred - and their families have legal problems in recovering the remains of their family member.

    Franco was exhumed and removed from the church in 2019 in an effort to lower the public veneration of the place. He is now buried in the municipal cemetery that serves the Madrid neighbourhoods of Mingorrubio and El Pardo.

    We toured the Basilica which is very big and quite austere, but no photos were allowed.
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  • Day 23

    El Escorial

    October 6, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Today we took a half day - 5 hour - tour to El Escorial. The Monastery of El Escorial is the monument which is said to best represent the ideological aspirations of the Spanish Golden Age. During this era, the Spanish Crown, which had established itself as the main defender of the Catholic Counter-Reformation while other countries had embraced the Protestant Reform movement, became the leading world power on account of its dynastic alliances and territorial power in Europe.

    Philip II became King of Spain and of the Indies in 1556. Having decided to build the Monastery, he began his search for the ideal site in 1558 and finally located it in 1562. Work began on the project by Juan Bautista de Toledo. By 1571 the Monastery area was almost complete and work commenced on the King’s apartments in 1572 and on the Basilica in 1574. The Basilica was consecrated in 1595, though the last stone was laid in 1584, and the task of decoration dragged on for several more years.

    El Escorial is the result of a collaboration between two men - Juan Bautista de Toledo and Juan de Herrera. Juan Bautista de Toledo, who had worked under Michaelangelo in the Vatican, was entrusted with the general site plan and most of the design drawings. There were also a number of master builders and overseers who had important roles in its design and construction. The final result of El Escorial is regarded as a highly personal manifestation of Philip’s character.

    The Royal Monastery of San Lorenzo El Escorial consists of a huge rectangle, or grid, that houses the building’s various functions:
    1. The holy area comprising the Church and its atrium
    2. The Monastery, laid out around one large and four small courtyards
    3. The King’s Apartments
    4. The outbuildings of the King’s Palace
    5. The School, and
    6. The Library

    We were able to visit the Library, the Church, the King’s Apartments, The Courtyard, Gallery of the Lower Cloister, the Main Staircase, the Chapter Rooms and The Pantheon (Dead Royals). We also snuck a look at the King’s Gardens through a few windows.

    There is a large collection of artwork spread out through the various rooms, too many to mention.
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  • Day 13

    Valle de Colgamuros y Escorial

    July 16, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

    We went to visit two different yet unique places on Karina's birthday: el Valle de Cuelgamuros and the El Escorial Palace.

    Our first stop was the Valle. It houses an incredible basilica carved just inside a mountain. It is an imposing place, and one of the things that called our attention was the sculptures inside the basilica, including the figures of two imposing angels guarding the entrance, and those of monks overseeing the people attending the service. As luck would have it, there was a mass at the time we came in, and for that reason, we couldn't take a picture of the place.

    The basilica is crowned by a massive 150-meter high cross with a depiction of the 4 evangelists at its bottom. The cross is visible from the esplanade.

    From there, we drove 20 minutes to reach El Escorial, an obligated scale for those who are tourists in the area of Madrid. El Escorial is a Palace-Convent that is famous for holding the remnants of most kings of Spain and their families. The Convent-Palace shows the close connection that existed between Church and Monarchy at the peak of the Spanish Empire. The most impressive room of the complex is the Library, which was designated as a room to study books but also to perform studies on astronomy and mathematics, amongst others. The second part of the complex is the Covent, which also includes the tomb rooms for Spanish royalty.

    Nerea met with us at El Escorial and made the tour as we caught up and talked. Afterward, Nerea suggested for us to stop at a nice restaurant just 3 kilometers away, where we enjoyed some tinto de verano, octopus, and salad. We were ready to head into our final destination of the day at the heart of Madrid.
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  • Day 4

    Valle de los Caìdos

    November 28, 2019 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 7 °C

    Dopo l'Escorial andiamo alla Valle de los Caìdos che dista 12 chilometri. È un sito fatto costruire dal generale Franco nel 1945 in memoria dei caduti nella guerra di indipendenza del 1936/39. Qui sono sepolti più di 1.500 militari caduti in guerra.
    Arrivando si vede un'enorme croce sopra una collina rocciosa. Da una parte della collina c'è un grande monastero, dall'altra una chiesa tutta scavata nella roccia. Si entra per ben 300 metri sotto la collina e la chiesa è veramente imponente con una cupola tutta decorata in mosaico dorato con circa 5 milioni di tasselli. Dall'esterno si vede solo una grande spianata con una bella vista sulla valle e foresta sottostante, il porticato e l'entrata alla chiesa.
    Le casse con i caduti sono ai lati della chiesa, anch'essi tutti sotto la roccia.
    È un'opera veramente imponente ed incredibile sia dal punto di vista tecnico che religioso e simbolico.
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