• Day 5

    Zubiri to Pamplona Spain

    August 4, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 68 °F

    Zubiri to Pamplona 08/04/2023
    At this point, every muscle of my body was hurting, even without thinking about it. After 4 hours of sleep, we were back on the trail at 7:30am for another 6 hours walk to Pamplona. My feet and knees were swelling considerably, and Nick has some mega blisters. I have a couple of them but manageable for the most part, at least nothing has become infected. We ventured out hoping we will get something to eat in the next village like we have done before but we realized later that it was a mistake.

    As we were hitting the path, we passed this tall mystical person (I am 6'5". this person was probably 6'10"), he seems to be a Priest, he had a green rain cover with a cross and an emblem/patch attached to the raincoat, square glasses, had not shaved in a few days like me. He was slow moving but steady and consistent.

    Time moves fast or slow in El Camino but you have to keep walking and thinking and solving all the world problems, a few “Hail Mary's” for inspiration are required. El Camino will hit you hard regardless your physical condition. These was our third 16 miles day.

    After a very long climb through some tall grasses with little to no marking's, we got to the top of the hill. I looked backwards and saw the mystical man looking up the hill toward us and moving forward. The grasses were as tall as I am and is had to determine which way to go since so many people has opened their own path through it. I waved at him to call his attention, and he raised the cane. We saw this mystic person 3 or 4 times again along the way. Somehow, he kept catching up with us. He was a tank moving through with nothing that would stop him.

    We walked 6 kilometers and found someone trying to communicate with a local elderly man about a place to eat, I clearly understood what the man was saying and translated in English and my bad Italian to the Croatian couple. He was saying all these villages from here to Pamplona along El Camino were small of about 100 residents and there was no food. At that point we looked at each at my son and said let’s keep pushing forward. It was raining and cold but was better than having the sun on our backs. I had 1.5 liters of water and Nick had two. In our minds that was enough to make it to Pamplona.

    Later we met a few others like Doctors Cesar, an anesthesiologist from El Paso Texas, an Israeli couple, the two French girls, the 3 old ladies from Spain, 4 superheroes into one young man that was killing it, 5 horses, six cows.. lol, and many other peregrines walking along the path. I may be composing a new Christmas song. Get it? El Camino brings people from all over the world but definitely they walk a lot more in their daily lives than we do in the USA.

    We agreed that all the kilometer’s marking along the path were incorrect. 😎😎 Just a way to said you will get there. There is no easy pass to Pamplona, it is all downhill “NOT” but walking 16 miles a day is brutal regardless. We reached Pamplona by 1:30 pm local time.
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