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- Senin, 10 Oktober 2022 14.29
- ☁️ 18 °C
- Ketinggian: 829 mi
SpanyolVillares de Órbigo42°28’9” N 5°54’37” W
Villar de Mazarife to Villares de Órbigo

A short day today, just 17km.
We had a good early breakfast at the albergue and were out the door about 8am. By the time we left the town there was enough light to see.
We walked about 7km beside a dead straight stretch of road. There was almost no traffic so it was not so bad. Then after a snack it was 3km more on a dirt road between corn fields to Villavante. We had coffee and croissants at the Santa Lúcia albergue there.
5km further on we found Hospital de Órbigo, with a long medieval bridge leading into the town. Lunch there in a restaurant after a fruitless search for an ATM (cajero), and replenishing a few necessities from the supermarket.
Not concerned about the ATM as we go through Astorga tomorrow. It is a bigger town and sure to have one.
And finally 2km out the dirt track brought us to Villares de Órbigo. It’s a very quiet rural town. We were greeted by Martha who runs the El Encanto albergue. Great place and very pleasant hostess.
More great cool cloudy walking weather, if a bit humid toward the end. It looks like it will rain here tonight, but weather for 6 days ahead looks pretty fine and dry.
We had the pilgrims’ dinner at Arnal’s Restaurant and Bar up the street. Huge bowl of soup, large slab of steak with salad, bottle of vino tinto, 26€ for 2. Should help avert iron deficiency for the road ahead.Baca selengkapnya
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- Selasa, 11 Oktober 2022 02.37
- ☁️ 12 °C
- Ketinggian: 892 mi
SpanyolMurias de Rechivaldo42°27’39” N 6°6’26” W
Villares Órbigo to Murias de Rechivaldo

A day to celebrate with a couple of radlers. We have now completed 500+ km of the Camino Francés and 600+ km if we include rest days and walking around destination towns.
Our host Marta provided us with all the breakfast we needed and we were walking into the dark morning by 7:45am. Sunrise was 8:30 and we walked mostly along unpaved rural tracks towards the city of Astorga.
Initially quite undulating terrain, it eventually flattened out a few km before Astorga.
Mostly cloudy and cool so good walking weather.
We chatted with a couple of pilgrims from Quebec over coffee and chocolate croissants at the morning break in San Justo de la Vega. Easy flat path for the 4km into Astorga where we had some lunch and did some needed chores. We both needed to get cash and John managed to extend his Movistar SIM until the end of the trip.
Astorga is the site of one of Antoni Gaudí’s beautiful buildings, the Bishops Palace. Looks very much like the castle in the starting credits of many Disney creations. See Kevin’s photo.
We completed the day with the final 5km to Murias de Rechivaldo and our room at Casa Flor, a quirky albergue with a relaxing back garden where we have enjoyed a few drinks in the afternoon sun.Baca selengkapnya

Hi John. I was wondering if you took spare walking shoes? Or, had a plan if one got damaged? [Roger]

John EslerG’day mate. My only footware are Vasque Mantra2 walking shoes and thongs. The shoes had 400km on the clock when I started so we’re well warn in. They are very robust and I wouldn’t expect them to fail. Because of the amount of pavement we have walked on the soles will be warn out by Santiago so I will donate them to Spain. Doing it again I would choose something a bit lighter like Hoka trail runners. The thongs are Archies which have an arch support; very comfortable after 25km in the shoes.

Have been following your trek for most of the way Kevin and John and very impressed with your perseverance and dedication to complete the walk despite all the aches, pains and mishaps that go with it. The photos are great and significantly increase my appreciation of the countryside and what you see and experience on the way. I'm very envious of what you are both doing and hope the remainder of the trip goes well. [Dinny Goonan]
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- Rabu, 12 Oktober 2022 03.21
- ⛅ 10 °C
- Ketinggian: 1.433 mi
SpanyolFoncebadón42°29’28” N 6°20’35” W
Murias de Rechivaldo to Foncebadón

A 22km day with a sting at the end, in the form of a steep climb. We ended the day 570 meters higher than where we started.
We left Ingo’s Hostería Casa Flor as the dawn broke after a good breakfast. There were clear skies with cloud over the hills we were walking towards.
It was about 5km on a wide dirt path through slightly undulating scrubby country to a coffee stop at Santa Catalina de Somoza. There we met the couple from Cape Cod, Massachusetts. They last saw us in Calcadilla de la Cueza, when John had difficulties and took a taxi to Ledigos. They were glad to see us still in walking condition. By now it was very cloudy but the weather forecast promised no rain.
From there it was a gradually steepening climb to Rabanal where we each refueled with a bowl of spaghetti bolognese. As we arrived there the skies cleared again and conditions from them on were clear and cool.
Many pilgrims were staying in Rabanal. It’s a very pretty town stretched out along a fairly steeply inclined Camino.
Our destination was 6km further on. It was a tough climb, getting steeper as we went and the path was rock strewn and hard to walk on in places. The landscape was sort of alpine scrub, none of it farmed.
We raised quite a sweat and had to stop and catch our breath a few times..
We were glad to check into Albergue El Trasgu de Foncebadón, get showered and have a cleansing radler out the back with a great view down towards Astorga.
It seems a trasgu is Celtic Spain’s version of Ireland’s leprechaun.
While sunning ourselves out the back we also tried a bottle of sidra natural. They provided 2 glasses and a device for adding bubbles to the cider as it exits the bottle. Interesting it was.
Our room has a window in the ceiling. Convenient for drying our delicate-yet-tough Darn Tough merino hiking socks.
The restaurant here looks good so we will dine in-house.
Glad we stayed here instead of back at Rabanal. We may get good sunrise views tomorrow from the top of this range not far above us now.Baca selengkapnya

PelancongLooks like some rough terrain today gents. Good going! (He says from the relative comforts of San Sebastian’s Old Town).
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- Kamis, 13 Oktober 2022 03.11
- ☁️ 12 °C
- Ketinggian: 577 mi
SpanyolMolinaseca42°32’19” N 6°31’20” W
Foncebadón to Molinaseca

A day of contrasts. We had the usual breakfast of fresh OJ, toast and cafe con leche at our very nice Albergue El Trasgu early enough to get a pre-dawn start at 8:00am. By the way, El Trasgu is a mythological creature present in the tradition of several cultures of what is now northern Spain, especially in Galicia.
We started out in the pre-dawn light to walk the relatively easy 2km sloping gravel paths up to Cruz de Ferro (Iron Cross) where pilgrims traditionally leave a stone carried from home to symbolize you leaving all your burdens behind.
The Cross is at 1500 metres in altitude and to reach our destination of Molinaseca 20km away we needed to drop to 580 metres. We walked on an extremely rough and rocky steep path to El Acebo where we had lunch and gave our feet and knees a good rest. El Acebo is a beautiful medieval timber and stone village refreshed by the Camino traffic.
We decided that more of the rocky path was not going to do anything positive for our health and would complete the final 10km to Molinaseca down the paved road. Walking on bitumen is not fun and it was steep and exhausting but safer.Baca selengkapnya
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- Jumat, 14 Oktober 2022 03.48
- ☁️ 13 °C
- Ketinggian: 500 mi
SpanyolCacabelos42°35’59” N 6°43’21” W
Molinaseca to Cacabelos

A 23km day in very fine weather and the way was quite flat, so a welcome change from yesterday’s more vertical ordeal.
Nothing was available for breakfast in Molinaseca as we left our room at 7:30 so we just marched straight for Ponferrada, 7km away, with dawn breaking along the way. The route avoided some extensive eastern suburbs by skirting the south edge of the town, often with houses on our right and open fields on our left. Along the way we noticed a pleasant scent coming from the vegetation we were passing: slightly peppery and a bit sweet. We’ve noticed it before in the morning walks. A fellow pilgrim thinks it may be wild fennel.
On arrival at the first bar in Ponferrada we stopped for a coffee and muffin. Also there was Saskia, a Dutch pilgrim we’d met at Ingo’s albergue a couple of days back. After coffee we followed the Camino right through town, admiring the castle as we passed by. On the far side of town we had a second installment of breakfast at a very peaceful bar near the church of Our Lady of Compostilla (not a typo). From there it was about 6km on streets and roads through various small settlements till we opted for a sandwich and cold drink at Camponaraya.
We finally got back on a dirt path as we exited that town and the final 6km was rather pleasant through some well treed undulating vineyards, some of the vines quite old.
The day had become quite warm so we sat down for a pre-checkin radler in the shade outside our hotel, the hotel Saint James Way. After getting settled and cleaned up we returned for another drink and discovered that Saskia was also staying here, as was a Danish couple who had also been at Ingo’s albergue, Penny and Frank.
We all got chatting and ended up dining together in the hotel restaurant. Penny and Frank are traveling with a very intelligent well trained little female dog called “Camino”, of the Papillon breed. She apparently walks all the way with them, and with the normal canine toing and froing, probably does twice the distance that her owners walk. Dogs of that breed are known for their long distance capabilities, Frank told us.
It turns out that Penny, when about 19, was a backpacker in Australia and had picked asparagus in Cowra, NSW to make some money while there. Likely we will meet them all again as we are all aiming to reach Santiago about the same time.Baca selengkapnya

Hey John, do you only have one pair of shoes? I'd be worried about a blow out and having to walk bare footed like a real pilgrim! [Roger]
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- Sabtu, 15 Oktober 2022 03.52
- 🌙 11 °C
- Ketinggian: 553 mi
SpanyolTrabadelo42°38’53” N 6°52’38” W
Cacabelos to Trabadelo

An 18km day in cool cloudy conditions. A great walk today.
We didn’t leave till just after 8am, correctly predicting that there might be a bar open by then. So we had a good breakfast before hitting the road.
The walk was in 2 halves.
First half through beautiful undulating vineyard country. Just a lovely few hours to Villafranca del Bierzo.
Along the way we found the plant that is so pleasantly aromatic. Seems to be wild fennel that grows like a weed here.
Villafranca del Bierzo is a beautiful town, at the confluence of the Burbia and Valcarce rivers, surrounded by very steep mountains.
We had coffee there and bought sandwiches to go, for a later lunch along the track.
The second half was all along a little used road that followed closely the Valcarce river upstream toward the north-west all the way to Trabadelo. All the way we could hear the burbling sound of the rapidly flowing stream, never more than 15 meters away. We stopped to eat our sandwich in a very quiet village called Pereje.
After reaching Trabadelo and getting settled we were very pleasantly surprised to bump into Lisa from Portland whom we had met on the first day back in the Pyrenees and a for few days after that. We’d assumed she was days ahead but it turns out she became quite ill with a lung infection way back in Estella. Some days in hospital and a few slow days of recovery meant she had just now caught up with us.
We all had a good yarn and will likely dine together in O Cebreiro tomorrow, assuming we survive the climb of about 900m.
Good dinner and early night tonight. We’re in the Pensión El Puente Peregrino which is very good.
The Danish “Team Camino” are also here with their valiant little doggo.Baca selengkapnya
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- Minggu, 16 Oktober 2022 08.24
- ☁️ 10 °C
- Ketinggian: 1.296 mi
SpanyolLa Cernada42°42’27” N 7°2’41” W
Trabadelo to O Cebreiro

Elly, our host at El Puente Peregrino, is an excellent and creative cook and she fed us and our Danish friends Penny and Frank a beautiful meal last night. Red lentil curry, Shakshouka, and chocolate brownies all accompanied by vino tinto of course. Elly also left us a basket of goodies for a predawn breakfast.
Today was another big contrast.
We spent the first four hours walking up the Valcarce river valley. We walked along the verge of a quiet road which has mostly been replaced by a motorway we could see in the distance. The river in a steep sided valley was rarely more than 20m from our path and it’s sound was a relaxing backdrop.
We passed through a village every couple of kms and stopped for lunch at Las Herrerías, 12km up the slowly climbing valley.
In various places small herds of dairy cows grazed in the riverside meadows, their cowbells tinkling peacefully..
After Las Herrerías the final 7kms to O Cebreiro was dramatically different and physically demanding. We rose 800m in altitude sometimes climbing along narrow rock strewn paths with 13% slope.
Towards the end of that climb we crossed the provincial border into Galicia, our sixth and last province on this camino.Baca selengkapnya

PelancongI'm gonna miss these daily updates when you've reached your destination, but I take it the rest will be welcomed

Kevin Esler8 walking days left, Oli. Yes looking forward to taking it easy for a bit after that.
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- Senin, 17 Oktober 2022 07.09
- 🌧 12 °C
- Ketinggian: 667 mi
SpanyolTríacastela42°45’21” N 7°14’29” W
O Cebreiro to Triacastela

A tough mostly downhill 22km day, our first full day in Galicia.
We had a good breakfast in the bar at Hotel Cebreiro and were on the road soon after 8am. Dawn is at 8:45 now so we used a lamp for an hour or so.
Weather was cool and misty and once there was light to see everything was lush and green.
The halfway mark was at Fonfría. The walk to there was some down and up on a very good path of hard packed dirt. We ate some lunch at what seems to be one of the new Galician government run albergues. Very modern and spacious.
From there it was quite a steep drop into Triacastela. About 600m vertical over 11km distance. The path was good, no loose gravel or shifting rocks, but still it was painful by the end.
The weather was what we’d heard is typical of this province. Misty, low cloud, breezy with occasional rain. We both needed the ponchos for an hour towards the end when the rain got more serious.
As we were approaching Triacastela we were astonished to meet the fast walking lady from Indiana we’d dubbed “Hot Wheels” when we walked into Pamplona with her and her 3 friends, way back early in our trek. There was great hilarity all round.
Then we stumbled into the Pensión Casa David and got cleaned up after a harder than expected day.
Now for a cleansing radler and a laundromat session.Baca selengkapnya
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- Selasa, 18 Oktober 2022 02.32
- ⛅ 15 °C
- Ketinggian: 432 mi
SpanyolSarria42°46’34” N 7°24’35” W
Triacastela to Sarria

Shortish walk today just 17.9km. There was a bit of vertical nonsense though. Mostly through cow country again. These are all dairy herds I think.
(While I think of it we had a top notch 3 course menu del dia last night up the street at the Complexo Xacabeo. 12€ each. A very well run establishment.)
Leaving in the dark as usual after breakfast at our pensión, Casa David, we climbed steadily for a couple of hours up past San Xil. At the peak we were up 400 meters.
The rest of the walk was a steady descent of 628 meters to Sarria.
We refueled with some snacks from the vending machine in the village of Montán.
We stopped for lunch at Pintín where we had the local version of a meat pie: not bad.
About 3km on a dirt track beside the road to enter Sarria.
The weather was cool, dry and sunny with occasional periods of very strong winds.
We quickly found our digs in the Pensión Rua Peregrino.
This is a fairly big town but definitely rural. We heard cows mooing a kilometer or so from our pension. You can also smell cow stuff from the middle of town when the wind is right.
We will run a few errands when the shops open later.
We are now about 113km from Santiago. We expect to cover it in 5.5 more days. Many people just walk from here to Santiago. We are expecting heavier traffic due to those joining the route here.Baca selengkapnya

Very proud of you two boys. I enjoy you daily reports. Looking forward to hearing about it in person. Lots of love, Mum. [Margaret]
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- Rabu, 19 Oktober 2022 09.24
- 🌧 14 °C
- Ketinggian: 402 mi
SpanyolPortomarín42°48’36” N 7°36’51” W
Sarria to Portomarín

A 25km day with lots of rain.
We left our pensión at 7:45, surprised to find it was not raining. The forecast was 100% certain about lots of rain. We had no sooner sat down in the first bar we found for breakfast when the heavens opened. It was torrential and sideways at times in the strong wind. Alas it was much the same when we’d downed our juice, toast and coffee so we donned the ponchos and headed out into it. It continued to rain, and very heavily at times, all morning. Some of the tracks leading out of Sarria were turned into creek beds. They improved outside the city limits a bit. In these circumstances, resigned to having sodden feet all day, we put our heads down and cranked out 12km without a break.
Pilgrim traffic was noticeably heavier due to those beginning their trek at Sarria. So much so that there was a line out the door at the coffee place we passed as the rain cleared. We walked on a few hundred meters and stopped in a shed containing vending machines, and tucked into a KitKat and coffee. From then on there was little rain and we were able to appreciate the beautiful countryside: more lush green cow country, with a tiny village every few kilometers. About an hour later we stopped at a very nice bar at Brea and had something resembling lunch.
Along the track we met some of the usual suspects, Lisa from Portland, and Paula (a.k.a Hot Wheels) and her 3 fellow Hoosier pals (Hoosier = person native to Indiana). We took pictures of each other at the milepost indicating we had exactly 100km to travel to reach Santiago.
One other stop for a drink at a nice bar in Mercadoiro before covering the final 6km or so to Portomarín. There was quite a steep descent just before reaching a very high bridge over the Miño river leading into town.
We checked into our Pousada de Portomarín. It’s a grand old place, a former Parador, built in the 1960s. Relieved to find our wet feet had no blisters, we took care of some washing and boot drying and headed downstairs for the usual couple of cleansing radlers.
This place has a restaurant where we will dine and breakfast, thus avoiding any unnecessary walking.
We were happy with the ponchos’ performance today. They felt a bit clammy in the heavy rain but everything under them remained quite dry.Baca selengkapnya

PelancongLove the innovative shoe drying techniques. Congratulations on reaching the 100 km milestone. The next few days should be very rewarding as you edge closer to your final destination. Hope the sun shines and there's not too many hills 😊
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- Kamis, 20 Oktober 2022 20.09
- ☁️ 14 °C
- Ketinggian: 587 mi
SpanyolPalas de Rey42°52’26” N 7°52’11” W
Portomarín to Palas de Rei

27km and soggy again.
The rain in Spain falls mainly in Galicia. And the rain in Galicia falls mainly on Kevin and John.
An excellent breakfast at our Portomarín hotel and an increasingly late sunrise meant we didn’t get walking until 8:15 and it was still dark. We also knew from the great Spanish weather app that we would be in for rain from midday.
We walked through the full length of Portomarín then across the river accompanied by the most pilgrims we had seen leaving predawn. Most will have started their Camino yesterday in Sarria which at 113km is the closest starting point at which pilgrims can obtain the Compostela.
We climbed steadily from an overnight 400m to around 600m when it started raining and continued steadily for three hours as we climbed to 720m. Seeking some respite and warmth we called into Casa Mariluz in Agaete for the restorative effects of Galician soup.
On the track again we briefly experienced the heaviest rain of the day before the sun reappeared and thawed us out as we completed the last 8km into Palas de Rei.
Like yesterday we had 3.5 hours of quite heavy rain while walking. But the soup break fortified us for further trudging, and the sunny conditions late in the day lifted our spirits and made a small start on drying out sodden footwear.
We checked into Pensión San Marcos and it is just great: modern clean and comfortable. They cater well for pilgrims with an urgent need to wash and dry stuff. Oodles of clothesline space in the sun, and heating radiators in the room that are turned on !!
The pensión is massive, discreetly scattered over several buildings just a block or two from the middle of town.
Based on Google reviews we had dinner at Pulperia A Nosa Terra. The kitchen opened at 7pm and the place is just a tiny bar so we cleverly squatted at a table at 6:20 and had a cleansing radler before requesting a menu. Dinner was very good. Kevin satisfied his craving for pulpo (octopus) and John had pork tenderloin prepared nicely, washed down with a good temperanillo, crepes, espresso. The place seemed to be very well run by just 3-4 people. Terrific Galician food.Baca selengkapnya

Keep up the good work you two - the end is in sight and I have a bet on you in a 'Camino multi' to get there. I must say a highlight for me has been your brilliant photos - is one of you taking more than the other? I think that if I were either of you I would be pretty pissed by all the people who join the Camino with 100km to go and get to claim the achievement as well. Unfair I say! You should get the priority in accommodation, food and coffee as far as I am concerned. Let them wait in the rain! I also wonder what each of you think about as you hike along. I would expect that the days of walking would somehow clear your mind of a lot of shit. What then enters your mind, apart from the thought of when are we going to get there? [Dinny Goonan]

Kevin EslerThanks Dinny. Glad you are enjoying it. Photo responsibilities are probably 50/50. We’re both keen amateurs. The equipment is necessarily lightweight and pocketable: an iPhone 13 and a Sony RX100v7.

John EslerThanks Dinny. After 30 something days it is fairly easy to clear the head of the usual interruptions. It is good thinking time.
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- Jumat, 21 Oktober 2022 06.12
- ☁️ 12 °C
- Ketinggian: 391 mi
SpanyolBoente42°54’58” N 8°4’39” W
Palas de Rei to Boente

21km in good weather with just a short shower of rain.
The weather forecast had been dire so we were expecting another drenching. Grateful it didn’t happen.
We had a good breakfast at a bar in Palas de Rei and put our heads down and cranked out 10km or so while the good weather was with us.
Stopped for café cortado and cake at O Leboreiro. Then pressed on expecting rain at any time.
By 14km we were in need of a proper refueling and had arrived in Melide so we stopped for a lunch of pizza.
Melide looks like a pretty busy center but we didn’t linger. A km or two beyond the town the rain started falling so ponchos were deployed.
But it rained lightly and only for about 30 minutes. Not enough to wet our feet.
Eventually the ponchos were stowed and we walked on to our destination of Boente. It’s a pretty small town. The pensión is very good. We will dine here too as other options are scarce,
There were lots of eucalyptus trees in the forests we walked through today. Some were quite old and large stringy barks.Baca selengkapnya
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- Sabtu, 22 Oktober 2022 03.03
- ☁️ 13 °C
- Ketinggian: 345 mi
SpanyolA Salceda42°55’19” N 8°16’32” W
Boente to Salceda

21km of mostly beautiful rural paths and an hour of rain.
We planned for an early start to enable us to avoid possible rain patches with strategic coffee breaks. Down to the bar for 7:00am breakfast and found the place in darkness. We returned to our room to pack up and be on our way and found breakfast in full swing at 7:30 as we went down to leave.
So refuelled we walked in darkness with a headlamp for 40 minutes until first light. For 8km the Camino followed a country path below overhanging trees up and down across several small river valleys until our coffee and cake stop in Arzúa.
Arzúa also gave us access to an ATM to replenish cash and a farmacia for blister dressings and Vitamin I (ibuprofen). It would have been nice to check out the weekly street market but rain was predicted and we moved on.
Leaving Arzúa through unpaved country lanes we encountered more of the eucalyptus groves we had seen yesterday. There are 400k hectares of Aussie eucalyptus forests in Galicia. Saw some fine old Stringy Barks.
We stopped for a lunch of empanadas at Casa Do Hórreo in Ferreira just 3.5km short of our destination for the day. It started to rain and continued quite heavily for an hour so we stayed under cover for dessert and coffee. With no letup in the rain we donned our ponchos and walked on in the now easing rain and continued onto our accommodation.
Now after dinner we are drying wet gear for tomorrow’s predicted downpour.Baca selengkapnya
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- Minggu, 23 Oktober 2022 08.21
- 🌧 12 °C
- Ketinggian: 318 mi
SpanyolSantiago de Compostela Airport42°53’59” N 8°26’13” W
Salceda to Lavacolla

2nd last day, 19.3km, worst weather yet. Sloshing wet feet for 6 hours. 460m ascended, 680m descended.
It was rainy and windy at breakfast time so we delayed departing till 8:30 when visibility was sufficient without a headlamp.
Then it was head down and walk through some appalling weather: rain with very few breaks, and wind gusting very strongly at times. In some of the eucalyptus forests the wind roaring through the trees was thunderous.
Speaking of eucalyptus, we saw some very large, both in diameter and height, older growth stringybark trees, especially in the latter half of the walk and near the airport.
We’d had a good breakfast so decided we’d cover 10km before stopping to eat. In the end it was at Amenal at the 13km mark that we stopped for coffee and a somehow disappointing bocadillo de jamon. Had been hoping for a burger or spaghetti bolognese but the cook was off duty.
From there it was a 2km muddy creek of a track up to the Santiago airport runway, rising about 100m vertical.
The Camino took us round the end of the runway and wandered along for a while till we reached our hotel, the Garcas, in Lavacolla, about 11km from Santiago cathedral. Tomorrow’s walk is also expected to be a rainy one, but it will be shorter.
Now to find some way to get our boots somewhat dry. A shakedown in the bathtub followed by inverting them on top of the heating convector on the wall looks promising.Baca selengkapnya

Pelancongsorry you were walking in this, I'm on a bus to Porto! hope your last leg is drier!

John EslerPerhaps we are paying our dues for the many days of perfect conditions. Enjoy Porto.
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- Senin, 24 Oktober 2022 13.13
- ☁️ 15 °C
- Ketinggian: 253 mi
SpanyolPalacio de Fonseca42°52’47” N 8°32’42” W
Lavacolla to Santiago de Compostela

Final day: wet but short, 11.5km. Destination reached.
We left our hotel about 7:30 with ponchos stowed but within seconds of stepping outside the rain started. Ponchos were donned and off we went into the rain.
It was a good path, no mud, mostly sealed roads or tracks. Also mostly lit by streetlights except for a small stretch when a head lamp was needed.
After about 2km we found an excellent bar open and had a good breakfast (juice, toast, coffee). We also obtained there the one remaining sello or stamp in our credencial document proving where we had walked each day.
We set off into town, passing through a village or two before a longish walk across Santiago proper to the cathedral.
It rained on and off for the entire walk, at times quite heavily. So we arrived about 10:45 with wet shoes and feet.
We got slightly lost in the old part of town as it is a maze there and the Camino markers seemed to disappear. But soon enough we emerged beside the Cathedral.
We immediately bumped into Tony our Kiwi fellow pilgrim from Tennant Creek.
We then took care of getting our official compostela or certificate of completion, written in Latin, including the Latin forms of our first names. It was a very quick process and we still had just enough time to check our packs for later collection and attend the noon pilgrim Mass in the Cathedral. It was standing room only. At the end they did swing the famous botafumeiro, censing the place up well. We were lucky to catch it as it doesn’t happen every day.
After Mass we ran across our Hoosier friends just as they arrived. We will meet them later for dinner. Then a bite of lunch before checking into the Libredon hotel just a short walk around the corner from the cathedral.
A few statistics:
• 42 days
• 904km walked comprising
• 772km Camino Frances plus 132km after arriving each day and rest days
• 1,163,950 footsteps
• 13,079 metres altitude ascent and similar descent
• 885 pilgrims arrived in Santiago the day we arrived
• 2 of more than 400,000 to complete a Camino in 2022Baca selengkapnya

Pelancongcongratulations on completing the walk, it's been very nice following your adventures every day for the past few weeks !
PelancongBoring (giggle) NOTHING but great photos … beautiful light … beautiful compositions …