• Lexie Magill

Camino de Santiago

49-dniowa przygoda według Lexie Czytaj więcej
  • Reasons

    1 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    After all my noise about how good privates are over municipals, I find myself in the latter in Los Arcos for €8 (a new cheapest) and pictured are the reasons I'm very ok with that.

  • Looking at the pictures

    1 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ 🌬 13 °C

    Toddled off for a beer, 'read' the paper to stay awake. Realised an adorable thing they do here, but interestingly only for certain sports, is put the age of whoever they're talking about in the caption.

    Also, why do hospitality managers always find a sense of creativity ONLY when it comes to bathroom signs? A particularly wild example here.
    Czytaj więcej

  • You poke your head into these things

    1 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ 🌬 14 °C

    ...and it explodes. The maths of it all always gets me. I spent close to an hour here with a bilingual American woman, being shown and told about every inch of the place by two tiny Spanish grandmother volunteers. They said on two days of the year the skylight perfectly aligns to illuminate a certain statue. It took 400 years to build. They didn't have excel or anything. It's phenomenal. The gold and silver is all a bit colonially problematic, but you have to give them the maths. Czytaj więcej

  • Worth its weight?

    2 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 3 °C

    Currently packing up to leave Los Arcos, with 28km between me and Logrono. I finished the third in the Thursday Murder Club series yesterday, after plucking it gleefully from the albergue shelf in SJPP. Now I find myself weighing up (literally) if this will be worth lugging. I have wanted to read it for a while and it feels like another gift from the Camino, but ooft. She thicc. Czytaj więcej

  • Los Arcos to Logrono - part one

    2 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 4 °C

    I had time to kill before dawn as I forgot to leave my head torch out and couldn't be bothered diving back in for it. Furthermore, and in a first, the albergue had sugar (!) so I made a cup of tea and read the first 10 pages of Wifedom to decide whether to bring it. I loved it instantly, and have since dipped into it at breakfast and in my post walk slump.

    Feeling particularly efficient, I sauntered out of the joint about 7.15am, a few metres behind a confident looking guy who I followed towards the road, where he promptly turned around and announced he was lost. We backtracked about 50m and got back on track, and he then insisted on walking together for the next seven kilometres.

    I've managed to avoid this so far so wasn't sure of the etiquette when he stopped to get out his tripod and DSLR every two seconds. I think his name was Jovan? Hungarian, big into birds, told me that thing yesterday wasn't an eagle, it was something else I can't remember the name of. Hump! Strike that sign then I guess.

    Approaching the first town of the day he'd jussssst started to express admiration for Trump and appreciation that Hungary rejected a bunch of refugees lately, so I resolved to do whatever he didn't at the bar. He stopped, so I kept going. He passed me when I was having breakfast in the next town a few kilometres further on. Seeya!

    I'd been harbouring a suspicion all morning that in my streamlined morning routine I'd managed to shed not only time but also the pair of underwear I was drying on the end of the bunk. I confirmed this at breakfast, but strangely couldn't bring myself to be upset about it. Yes, I've only got three (now two) and yes, they are a particular kind I won't be able to exactly replace here, and yes, I pride myself in taking care of things, but much more importantly, they're just scruds. Who cares.

    Oh I caught up with that Tescos plastic bag guy and asked if he's couriering his bag - he is. He's got FIVE pairs of boots in it, and he rotates each day. I still think a plastic bag is an insane day pack choice but you do you.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Los Arcos to Logrono - part two

    2 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 7 °C

    It's the longest day yet, distance wise, and if you don't want to do the whole 27.8km stage, your one option is to stay in Viana, at the 18.4km mark instead. As the following stage is 29km, there's no making up that ~10km tomorrow, it basically means you turn two days into three by walking the first half of one, the second half of one and first half of the other, then the second half of the other. Messy.

    I've been a sanctimonious prick when it comes to doling out the platitudes to others - listen to your body, take it easy, etc. So when my left quad started giving me gipp on the approach to Viana you'd think I'd have stopped. No, apparently a pilgrim in motion will stay in motion unless acted upon by a bigger force than that.

    Cursing that decision almost immediately, I soon rounded a corner and saw Jovan and another pilgrim - he clearly likes company when he walks - and internally groaned as he ditched her taking a photo to come walk with me again. My feet hurt, my legs hurt, my pack felt heavy, and it was all industrial concrete noise.

    Once in the albergue, mercifully, very close to the edge of town, I repeated my party trick of selecting the worst possible shower. Best I can compare it to is if you left a juice box at room temperature for a while then stabbed it with a fork and held it over your head. Half dressed and fuming, I turned on the one next to it out of interest and thought about stabbing some more as the water came out strong and hot.

    Now, my highly technical towel only really has about three-quarters of a dry in it at the best of times. Perhaps it's made for a much smaller person? I'm not sure where you'd find one. So in choosing to start the shower process again, I was going to have to ask a lot from it. When the time came, the towel looked at me incredulously and suggested I speak to the union. When they didn't show up, the towel threw itself in and slapped about me, wet and cold.

    Today's lesson, which the towel has since provided in writing as a formal complaint: test the shower before committing.

    I'm now sitting in the kitchen waiting for my hair to dry as I strongly suspect Spain sides with Italy in considering going outside with wet hair the most unhealthy thing you can do, up to and including swallowing fireworks. We'll see if I can stand up after, and go from there.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Gutter kebab

    2 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

    It's not always smooth and it's not always glamorous. I do try to be self aware though. And so I do see how stupid it was to be frustrated I could 'only' find incredible tapas, and not a meal. Notwithstanding, they do add up, they don't involve much veg, and I was quite hungry, quite tired, and reasonably hormonal. I gave up in the end and had a very reasonably priced kebab in a gutter. We'll try again tomorrow. Czytaj więcej

  • Overslept and underprepared

    3 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☀️ 8 °C

    As well as evening lockouts, the albergues are just as enthusiastic about morning push outs, usually by 8am.

    After a long day yesterday I clearly slept well, and because that hasn't been the case, I haven't been using an alarm clock. I'm *sure* my phone said 5.30am but then I blinked and it was 8am and I was still in my sleeping bag.

    They were kind to me because I made a performance of being frantic and apologetic, and because they were worried someone had forgotten the medicine in the fridge and were pleased it was mine. Pulled out sheepish at 8.20am, an hour late to the longest day yet. Great start. Get an alarm you lout.
    Czytaj więcej

  • A big day for small friends

    3 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

    Blessed! Camino cat count now at nine.

  • Logrono to Najera

    3 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Leaving the albergue I was determined not to carry the funk for the next 29km. I did that insane yet effective thing where you reverse engineer a smile. You grin until the muscles send a message to the brain that there must be something to be happy about? I think that's how it works. It did, anyway.

    On the way out of Logrono I saw a black cat, and eagerly knelt down next to it, to love it. When I tried to stand up, my legs didn't have enough warning, and I fell down and nearly headbutted a hole in the poor thing. That had me laughing. Probably also helped that it was sunny, nobody bothered me, and I was generous with the stops.

    We are definitely in wine country, and I was grateful for the dry given this thick red dirt apparently makes for ruinous mud. I've downloaded the Buen Camino app, basically google maps but with one yellow line and the albergues on it, and it's making navigation easier in spots that would have given me trouble before.

    I took a two kilometre, largely WC-motivated, detour via a little town at the 18km mark, and on leaving was mobbed by a bunch of small girls - I'm really awful with estimating the age of children from when they can sit unaided to when they enter high school, but I'll guess they were eight. They held a tacklebox full of rubber-band accessories like it was the holy grail, and reverentially took me through their wares.

    The sad thing is that you sort of harden yourself to scams over the years and I initially tried to disengage before realising no, these were just kids that probably spent recess crafting and were now on the scrounge for pocket money.

    I knelt again, sincerely hoping I'd be able to get up afterwards, and together we had a serious think about what I could buy with 40 cents. This ended up being decided by committee, and I think my new ring goes very nicely with the others. It's not about the ring of course, it's about holding space for girly nonsense, which I happen to thing is one of the most sacred things in the world.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Najera

    3 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    Oh I could stay in Najera a while. The municipal albergue is my favourite yet, managing to be both the cheapest (€6) and most communal so far.

    Albergue atmosphere naturally depends on the random alchemy of its guests but in no small way, the two Italians running this place are doing wonderful work. I'll tell you more tomorrow.

    I've walked 67km in two days. I'm weary and I'm proud.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Blues and golds

    4 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C

    I massively over corrected the sleep in and found myself lying awake at 3.45am so I figured the sooner I finish that book the better, and got up. This was through no fault of Dave in the adjacent bunk, I'd add, he was unnecessarily apologetic about it when he realised I was gone.

    I'd have chuffed off pre-7 if I didn't want to say goodbye to Pam and Nat, two Australian women in their 60s (?) travelling separately who made space for me last night. Pam has a stress fracture in her foot, her second on her third go at this, and is heading home. She has a kind smooth face and a wicked sense of humour, and lost her husband, the love of her life, too early.

    Natalie has short hair, dyed blue on top, and from what I can tell is a bit of a rebellious nomad, spending long stretches of the year camping by motorbike. She's more outwardly staunch than Pam, scattering strong opinions on the table like cards and inviting us to read them and weep.

    I like them. I like this hostel. I leave it at 7.15am and walk into the blue, which turns gold as I crest the ridge.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Najera to Santo Domingo de la Calzada

    4 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C

    A glorious day, the hemmed in paths of the Navarrese forests forgotten as we bounced through wide rolling fields.

    What a gift to be here in spring, where the sun walks with you but doesn't punish, and the surroundings are green and swollen, not scalded and crisp. After two 28km+ days the 22 flew, and I thumped down the hill to Santo Domingo by noon, choosing not to push on a further 6km to the next town.

    A section on both my big toes is numb, I assume we're building a callous but if not I suppose I can deal with that.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Domestic bliss

    4 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    From last leaving Logrono to first checking in to Santo Domingo, what a difference two days makes. This isn't as impressive as it sounds, more likely everyone else just pushed on and I was the first not to. Regardless, it gave me the run of the place to settle in.

    This always looks broadly similar, so here it is for you to imagine we're doing it together.

    1. Take a seat opposite the hospitalero in charge, offer them your passport and your credential and watch as they scan one and stamp the other. Take the slip with your bed number on it, listen to the house guide (where everything is, what time the door closes, what time to be out tomorrow) and receive your crinkly plastic present.

    2. Take your shoes off and put them in the side room, changing into your sandals - these should be at the very top of your bag.

    3. Poke your head around checking out the place as you find your room and then your bed, don't put your backpack on it!

    4. If you're responsible, immediately make the bed using the disposable pillow case and fitted sheet you've been provided, and unsheathe your sleeping bag. I've just started being responsible, so I can say this.

    4. Unpack your bag onto the bed, releasing your

    - charger and book (install these near the head of your bed)

    - medicine canister (put this in the fridge and the cool brick inside in the freezer, if there is one)

    - rest clothes, clean underwear and socks, soap, and towel

    5. Shower and change into rest clothes. Nobody showers in the morning, as far as we're all concerned the day resets after you walk.

    6. Take your walking clothes and towel to the laundry room, wash them and hang to dry.

    The day is now yours, admin is over, and the town sort of goes to sleep between 2 and 5pm anyway. I sat in the garden with my book, which I really am loving, had a nap (the last few days caught up with me), went to the supermarket and cooked dinner, then went for a long walk around the town.

    Before bed, put absolutely everything loose into your bag so that in the morning you can get up, grab your sleeping bag and your pack, and leave the room swiftly and silently. Pack up in a common area while you sip your coffee. Not everyone has this step down yet but give them time.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Santo Domingo de la Calzada to Tosantos

    5 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    I'd heard lots about the Catalan independence struggle, but nothing of Castilla y Leon, the "largest autonomous region in Spain with an area of 95,000 km² (11 times the region of Madrid) but a population of only 2.5 million (less than half that of Madrid)." Today took us into this region, where it sounds like we'll be for some time.

    Most of the day was spent adjacent to a highway undergoing significant roadworks, so not the prettiest stretch but still enjoyable, and the warmest so far - I think it got up to 27 degrees, with a beautiful breeze coming into Beldorado.

    The trouble with walking east to west is the sun starts behind you and sticks on your left the whole walking day. I'm going to look like I've been grasped firmly by my right hip and dip-dyed in fake tan by the end of this. I forgot how easy it is to tan here, and that UV can even be 0.

    I met and walked for about 5km with Matt, some sort of investment person from Sydney, to the extent that I comprehend the notion of 'raising capital' and $100m deals. Apparently we started from SJPP on the same day, but haven't seen each other as he spent one night in an albergue and was so disrupted by a snorer he's been in hotels since.

    We found ourselves in agreement on three things in particular.

    1. The Americans are incredibly annoying and lack any self awareness whatsoever.

    2. The landscapes of the last few days in the Rioja have been incredible, and appreciated slightly more than Navarro because of their difference to home.

    3. We dunno what to do about the Metesa - the sparsely populated, flat, arid, (sotto voce) allegedly boring, ~200km stretch between Burgos and Leon. We might have worked out an approach, more on it later, and he gave me his number and told me to let him know.

    Today's stage technically ends 22.4km from Santo Domingo, in Beldorado. I decided to push on a further 4.8km to Tosanto (pop. 60) so I could do the same overshoot the following day, leaving less to walk on the day I get to Burgos and therefore more time to explore it.

    It's my first time staying off stage, and my first time in a 'donativo' an experience which will get its own post.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Lord grant me the patience...

    5 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    Tosantos - a one room comedy.

    ---

    Cast of characters

    Jose - caretaker of this "austere yet full of emotion" donation based, religious hostel for 27 years. If anyone's seen What We Do in the Shadows, I'm fairly sure the idea of energy vampires came from him. He's apparently 80 which is truly shocking as he looks about 65 - our yawns are clearly keeping him young.

    Rusty - had a rest day in Logrono so we've synched back up. His knee is dodgy. He's worried about his house in the Sydney floods. He hasn't picked up any more Spanish in the last 10 days. I'm coming to understand he's a lovely man and an absolutely terrible listener.

    A Dutch woman - naturally speaks pretty perfect English and has a resting 'disgust' face that puts me constantly on the edge of a laugh.

    A Brazillian woman - despite speaking Portugese has drawn the extremely short straw of translating the constant, repetitive, monotonous stream of consciousness dribbling out of Jose.

    A Spanish man - suspected of actually having an extended nap, punctuated by some cycling. Every time I've seen him (most recently on the bunk under me in Pamplona) he's been asleep, and he sticks to form here, waking up at 8pm for dinner. I don't think he can read.

    Jesus (hay-zeus to everyone except Rusty, who commits to gee-zus despite every opportunity not to) - Jose's more charismatic offsider with one completely bloodshot eye, who will later ruin things by making suggestive comments about the Brazillian.

    ----

    Scene One - Pre Dinner - 8.16pm

    Our hero slumps on the stairs of a two hundred year old house, layered with everything she has, half mad, and trying desperately to find this experience charming.

    ----

    I've sat at the kitchen table with three fellow pilgrims and participated in the meticulous chopping of overboiled vegetables. These were then mixed with boiled eggs, olives, and tuna, drowned in three - count them, three - giant jars of mayonnaise, decanted, and adorned with even more mayo.

    I've watched the same man responsible for this coordinated massacre, Jose, then spend 20 minutes crafting an ornate arrow topping out of roasted capsicum, delicately applying each sliver to the mayo bath to create the effect like it's brain surgery.

    I've widened my eyes and bit my tongue as Rusty failed to navigate the translation app, consistently, for nearly an hour, pressing anything but the microphone button and asking something that isn't listening 'will this dish be baked?' then getting frustrated with it. Of course it won't be baked Rusty, it's glorified potato salad.

    I've stared at the empty and off oven, wondering if this 'russian salad' is going to be it or if it's a mostly mayo based evening. In between that I've stolen glances at the clock as it moves towards, and then past eight, remembering fondly the sausages I'd long made a start on digesting this time yesterday.

    After dinner we have group prayer, and then group washing up, and then perhaps if I ask nicely the group can suffocate me with my sleeping bag. If not, in the morning there's group breakfast. I've made a point of not wishing away any time on this trip in excitement over the next thing but JESUS CHRIST.

    ----

    Scene Two - After Dinner - 10.45pm

    Lying on a vinyl mat, trying to process the evening, our hero recounts the experience.

    ----

    Well it was Ensalada Ruso, bulked out with a soup made with garlic, tomato, and stale bread. At this stage I was so hungry and cold it was brilliant. Knowing the night wasn't finished with dinner I was keen to get on with the proceedings but Jose went on and on and on. I basically learned Spanish. As long as someone's talking about the history of the Camino with a lisp, I'm fluent.

    He's got rose tinted glasses on for pilgrims doing this before he was even born, convinced that modern ones aren't spiritual enough. He urged us, multiple times and not very concisely, to be minimalist and abstain from contact with civilisation (by which I assume he means technology and our regular lives), noting the reason things are so basic around here is to keep the 'tourist' pilgrims away and attract only the IDIOTS like me.

    Too often, Jose would be rabbiting on, the Brazillian would be listening so she could translate, and Rusty, bored, would just blurt out a random question like WHO'S SAINT GERONIMO when it absolutely wasn't his turn to talk.

    When we'd finally managed to extract ourselves from the table we climbed up to an odd little room accessed through a window, for group prayer. I wasn't too sure what this was going to look like, and was open to it as long as it was quick. Would you believe that it wasn't?

    We mucked around with the candles then we mucked around finding everyone a version of the pamphlet in their language. We then all had to read a prayer in our language and then, after some more mucking around, we were all given a small folder labelled with our language.

    Not everyone makes it to Santiago, right? People have to cut it short, their bodies fail them, all kinds of reasons. Jose told us that if we wanted to, we could write our reason for walking and leave it with them. For the next 20 days, pilgrims would do to our stories what we were about to do with these folders - read them, and pray for their authors when we get to the end. 20 days because that's when we'll have got there.

    So that's nice, but then we were instructed, again, to read one out. I assume the person writing it knew how this all worked but it still felt horrifically invasive to be sharing such a searingly personal matter aloud. I dialled up the accent and spoke quickly. Rusty had gotten out of this bit by going to the bar for wifi to check on his house so I'm confident the person's secret stayed safe with me.

    The whole 'group' experience kind of fell over at the (predictable) point only the women did the washing up, but I was dead on my feet by then and just happy for the day to be over.

    ---

    END
    Czytaj więcej

  • Tosantos to Atapuerca

    6 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ 🌬 20 °C

    Breakfast was provided, although not earlier than 7am as "rest is very important" so we all had a sleep in for the sake of some free bread, jam and coffee. Rusty, either oblivious or unburdened by the LITERALLY HOURS of advice last night about being disconnected from the modern world on your pilgrimage, propped his phone up against the milk and live streamed the Carlton game at volume. As Josie has since suggested, I wouldn't be surprised if that finished Jose off and he gets out of the albergue game now.

    I got what turned out to be quite a dull day of walking underway at 8.30am. it was almost all on a straight forestry type road, the contrast was turned down with grey skies, and a persistent wind from the south gave me a deep comb-over. With nothing exciting at all to look at, it was good thinking terrain, and despite a (possibly mayonnaise poisoning) headache, I got a solid amount of that done.

    Again, the typical end point for today is St Juan de Ortega but I overshot it to finish in Atapuerca, which means getting to Burgos tomorrow (in the rain) will take 20 rather than 26km. Atapuerca is a big deal if you're into archaeology, with the earliest human remains in Europe found in now UNESCO World Heritage listed prehistoric caves here. At last count, it apparently evidences 1.4 million years of activity. So one night of listening to Jose then.
    Czytaj więcej

  • The BEST albergue yet

    6 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

    I didn't super know what this place would be like but I knew I was the only option in town with both wifi and a kitchen so for €15, sold. From now I have exactly €1.45 left until I can get to an ATM in Burgos tomorrow so I'll probably be eating those emergency sardines I've lugged since Roncesvalles.

    It. Is. The. Tits.

    My bed has a CURTAIN behind which is a light and USB ports and a shelf and a blanket, making it the cosiest, sturdiest, most private, and best equipped bunk I've had by far. The rest of the place is adorable and detailed and charismatic. There are just 16 beds, only 10 of them taken, and seven of us just went out to dinner together (paid on card) and had a wonderful time. I'm ecstatic.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Kit abundance

    7 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    This morning a stupid mean dog ran across the road at me, growling and snapping and pushed me in the leg with its nose. I got very scared and a strange auuhhhhhh noise came out of me.

    In compensation perhaps, I have broken an awful cat dry spell by spotting lots. One detour was very poorly marked and I missed it, finding myself in a spot I knew wasn't it and needing to back track. I was joined at this time by a gorgeous little kitten and we had a nice sit down together to make it all worthwhile.

    Thank you kitz. Dumb dog, GO AWAY.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Atapuerca to Burgos

    7 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

    When you are trying to live a simple pilgrimage, mens aftershave nearly knocks you over. Honestly, what is it made of! None of the women ever smell of anything, we are consciously neutral I think - odour resistant fabrics and unscented toiletry bags. This, by the way, is a great shame to me, as creating a perfume association with a long trip is an established habit of mine and I'm sad not to be doing this now. I suppose if I want an olfactory memory, I can huff a bit of bread. But it's not the same.

    It's a wonderful privilege to have a life I am looking forward to returning to after this trip, as much as I am enjoying myself. When I think about it, the things I'm most keen on at the moment are all sensory - exfoliating my entire body, wearing a soft jumper not a swishy puffer jacket, drinking tap water, sitting on a couch not a bunk bed, and having a hug.

    I really needed the latter today when, about 75 minutes out of Burgos, the rain came. At the time I thought I was 45 minutes away, as an exuberant man in the linear park passing me said encouragingly in Spanish that it was three kilometres to the cathedral. On debriefing at the albergue, it's become apparent this absolute troll told everyone he passed it was three kilometres to the cathedral, regardless of where he passed them. Truly Machiavellian, you have to applaud it.

    I knew it would rain, so had my jacket and pack cover on already, but I wasn't prepared for the kneecap job it did to morale. I think at the start of the trip, I didn't know any better and it was all new and fresh and the rain didn't bother me too much. After a few warm dry days, my skin has softened - it was bloody awful. Shivering, soaked, I trudged about five kilometres through the city outskirts, appreciating nothing, to the albergue.

    I stared at it, it stared at me, I narrowed my eyes, it wasn't backing down. The little sign said 'cash only' and of course, trudging, I had forgotten to go to an ATM and remained in the black by a mere €1.45. Tears threatened to join the growing puddle underneath me at the desk, so I muddled through asking if I could at least leave my bag while I returned once more to the breach, and turned and went back out, returning half an hour later when I'd finally tracked one down and dragged myself back up the hill.

    After a few minutes of fumbling with white stiff fingers, I managed to get my shoelaces untied and my zipper down, and went and stood in the mercifully hot shower until I thawed. Emerging to join Dave and two women I've known too long to ask their names in the kitchen, I was in much higher spirits, downed two coffees then went out for a walk, a wine, and a pintxo.

    I've not got a sweet tooth at the best of times but due to my authentically skint experience, that pintxo was my first bit of food for the day and subsequently, in a raging thirst for calories, evidently, I've inhaled a pack of gummy bears, three Oreos, a straciatella icecream, and a Kinder Bueno. If you could hook cane sugar up to an IV I'd probably go for it.

    It was only like a 23km day but it felt so much harder. I'm crashing now. I'm going to stay an extra night in Burgos because I've seen bugger all of it and it's meant to rain tomorrow which I just can't face walking in.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Might live here?

    8 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ 🌙 8 °C

    I'm on the top bunk and my back hurts, so what now? There's no railing, I could just ... I've long wondered if a good clatter from a height might actually sort me out. This is a picture I took of it last night in more mobile times to send to me mum. My forever home.

    Edited later to add a photo of the absolutely unreasonable ladder, which has nearly killed me five times.
    Czytaj więcej

  • Upskirting God

    8 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ 🌬 11 °C

    There's an outrageously nice church in every single tiny town here, and the argument for having seen one having seen all does, to an extent, stack up, but the Burgos cathedral is a whopper. I got a pilgrim discount (slay) and spent two hours wandering around, looking up, and getting spun out about how perfect stuff from AGES ago still is. Czytaj więcej

  • Immaculate immaturity

    8 kwietnia 2024, Hiszpania ⋅ 🌬 12 °C

    Like you DO appreciate the art and the history but you CAN also find some of it funny. It's allowed.