• Lexie Magill

Camino de Santiago

En 49-dags äventyr från Lexie Läs mer
  • Ponf. to Villafranca del Bierzo - pt two

    20 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    All in all another offensively beautiful day which consisted mostly of me walking up a hill, looking out from the top, and saying f u c k off. Anything under 25km feels short now (BRAG) and after the intense elevation changes of yesterday (and to come tomorrow), it was a joy. It starts quite cold, mornings are usually between 1 and 8 degrees and then, unlike home, it jumps about 2pm, with the hottest part of the day usually around 6pm. So you can see why siesta (and everything closing) happens between 2 and 5.

    For pilgrims, it means the morning kilometres are far easier than the afternoon ones, and lunch has to be considered - if you're not arriving before 2 you had better eat or go to the supermarket on the way or it'll be a hungry wait. So you make some decisions based on your route, energy, the weather, and how competitive getting a bed in the first-come-first-served albergue scene is in the town you're heading for. I've had a go at just about all approaches so far but today I got in about 1.30pm, a full three hours earlier than yesterday, which felt lightning.
    Läs mer

  • Mother of stages

    20 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    ...is how the guide describes the nearly 30km tomorrow, and I've already had Dave message me on Instagram and say it's the hardest day he's had.

    I've iced my feet in the freezing river, I've carb loaded, and I've farewelled my heavy jar of jam. Really not sure I can do more. She'll be right.Läs mer

  • Villafranca del Bierzo to O'Cebriero

    21 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    I am just now, with one week to go, building a fucking Camino family. I am simultaneously thrilled and devastated.

    In the kitchen last night I ended up having dinner, and a tea, and a really genuinely good conversation, with Lucy, an Englishwoman living in Malaga. This morning, I finally asked where the incredibly gentle man that looks like a punk anarchist bouncer is from - he folds his clothes and makes his bed so slowly and carefully. Turns out I've slept next to Christian from Naples three times and we have both been speaking broken if earnest Spanish to each other this entire time. I know his neighbourhood. He is a delight.

    Eight kilometres in, salut to the tiny French woman Maggie I've orbited in the last few days. 10 kilometres in, Fabrice emerges from the opposite direction to the trail, swearing and swinging his poles around in frustration at having taken a completely useless detour. Maggie sent him the wrong way, did I hear the dog? Did I hear him screaming swear words at the dog? He's two days into quitting smoking, you can tell.

    I was a bit nervous about the elevation later so I broke a month long tradition and walked with him all day, with brief interludes. He said I calmed him. He was surprisingly protective - buying me coffees, pulling me away from traffic, walking on my outside on the roads, peeling me apples, making me fill my water and put on sunscreen. After a month of aggressive self sufficiency, this was unusual but nice - a lesson in accepting help maybe.

    In the last four kilometres Lucy and Maggie joined us, along with some completely knackered Japanese men, and we summited together. What a bloody view. It was so worth it. I don't know about hardest day. There were certainly tough bits, and in different weather sure maybe it would have been less enjoyable, but honestly I loved it. Maybe I am harder too. 💪
    Läs mer

  • O'Cebriero

    21 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 18 °C

    Lucy, Maggie and I are sharing two adjoining bunks, and when we went to have showers, got to know each other very well indeed given there were no doors - school/pool spec. Surprisingly to Lucy and I, Maggie was the prude about this - she's since indignantly asked every pilgrim in town staying elsewhere if they have doors on their showers.

    I kneaded my laundry in the freezing water next to Fabrice, hung it out with pegs loaned by Lucy, and then went to get a wine, joined by them one by one and then stragglers until our table in the alley had three others attached to it and about 15 pilgrims around it.

    Bells pealing, Fabrice let me rummage around in his bag to borrow a jacket for the cold church and we all hustled up to mass, Lucy setting me off with the giggles a few times as our priest (a Patrick Dempsey lookalike) herded us through a half hour ceremony.

    It finished with a special pilgrim portion, where we all stood in a circle and he handed out pebbles with yellow arrows painted on. There was a prayer I can't remember, because someone from each language had to read it to the group. Lucy and I were the only native English speakers and she wasn't having a bar of it so I had to. Nervous, I spoke clearly and retained nothing except the last line: be happy - make others happy.

    After we went to dinner, and after they left I joined my Camino cousins, the Brazillians and Italians, at their table and had a grand old bilingual time. They're a big lot - I like them very much but they are too many to make a family out of so cousins it is.

    Lucy and I are currently shaking with laughter in our bottom bunks listening to Maggie huff and puff in French at the snorers. I am so scared for this to end. If I walk with them tomorrow it might be harder later. But is that reason not to?

    Why now. Why *now* am I finding these people, letting them find me? Another lesson, I'm sure. In Pamplona I think I needed to let the others pass and walk alone, I wonder if now, on the other end of the journey, it is the opposite. A test - can you leave this, can you appreciate something inherently temporary? Can you love and lose?
    Läs mer

  • O'Cebriero to Triacastela - part one

    22 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 5 °C

    Ups and downs today, of both hill and mood. Will come back and expand on this later but for now here are the incredible views - almost all of this was up, incidentally.

  • O'Cebriero to Triacastela - part two

    22 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C

    Again, I'll write this properly later but what you MUST know now is that Rusty got bed bugs so bad he had to go to hospital. Hilarious.

  • Triacastela to Sarria - part one

    23 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 5 °C

    Well I had a giant nap yesterday and slept in until 7am today and whaddaya know I had a much nicer day. As much as it's only walking and I'm sleeping much better, I do think it's all starting to stack up now, and I'm potentially more tired than I realise. Without the back pain it'd probably be more manageable.

    We are coming to the end of the short sleeve weather so I hope cooler (moving into wetter) days don't completely unravel me. A silver lining of that however, might be that it makes it easier to manage the ending. If the difference between the Camino and Portugal includes being warm and dry, I'll be more excited about it.

    As well as a nap, yesterday I sorted a bed for today in Sarria in advance - the first time I think I've done that potentially - so considering that and the fact that it's not getting hot today, I can dawdle happily.

    Dawdle happily I did. Top of 17, clear, 25km, bewdy. Perfect long sleeve weather. Barely saw anyone on the way, which suited me fine as I've ricocheted back to fierce independence - you can't hurt me, I'm avoiding you first!

    The Camino always provides, and today I copped three excitingly edible blessings.

    1. I ran into Fabrice and two others about five kilometres in, Fabrice was practically manic cutting up bread and sausage, stuffing it into our hands along with cheese and olives and walnuts. The non-smoking thing is great in theory but I think in practice it's just been replaced by weed and as a result he's eating a lot. I took my picnic to go and told them I'd see them in Samos.

    2. I got to Samos first and was lining up to order a coffee when Fabrice pushed in front of me at the bar. This honestly really gave me the irrits given we'd already had an odd day with each other yesterday, but then he turned around and handed me the coffee he had bought which was very nice. I still think I've got the irrits though.

    3. A pilgrim rest stop at someone's house, always appreciated, always adorable. I had a mandarin and a milk and fruit smoothie juice box thing.

    I also worked out I have *just* enough boxes left in my Credential to fit the minimum required remaining stamps (10) between Sarria and Santiago. This is exceptionally pleasing as I haven't been consciously moderating this but running over only a little bit to start a new one would have really annoyed me - I'd prefer them to all fit on one or to have gone crazy on them and filled two. Muy buen.
    Läs mer

  • Another drab monastery

    23 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 9 °C

    You could stick to the road and get to Sarria in under 20km, or you could take a rural 7km detour via a monastery, which I think was also the hillier option.

    I suspect all the long-termers (in my generous view, anyone that started before Burgos) took the detour because we're all dragging our feet on finishing, and the newbies that just started in O'Cebriero did a mixture depending on their bravery and fitness this early in their respective games.

    It was of course lovely. It was of course closed. Churches being open seems a lot like a Navarro and Rioja thing, I gotta say. It's inhabited by Benedectine monks and nuns, and good on them. There's a fucking petrol station on the side of it, I'd note. Is nothing sacred?
    Läs mer

  • Triacastela to Sarria - part two

    23 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 14 °C

    We're back in tractor country and as good as it looks it smells absolutely terrible so probably roll your windows up as you look at these photos.

    At one point it smelled so bad I actually got curious. Can poo rot? What happens if a cow eats, say, Blood and Bone fertiliser then does a BnB poo and that poo somehow dies - is that what's going on here? RANK.

    Lots of villages with tough cats, two houses and a church today. We are seeing more new pilgrims and excitingly for us old pilgrims, some of these are tiny children! We get all gooey, crouching down, wishing these little ones buen camino, waving goodbye. I hope they know they are living my dream, getting PUSHED ALONG AND INDULGED AND ADORED. Ingrates.
    Läs mer

  • Sarria

    23 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ 🌙 10 °C

    I seem to keep picking albergues up/down steep slopes, add that to the learnings for next time because finding a 'back soon' sign on the door after you think you've just done a last push for the day is a bit hnnnggg. Anyway I went and had a wine and came back and all was well. I checked in with another girl who, it turns out is Spanish, 22, starting walking tomorrow and absolutely shitting herself.

    I held her hands and told her she could do it and jumped around a bit to assure her I was fine and she would be too, told her about the app and then tried to give her some cheese. If I see her tomorrow I'll walk with her a bit.

    We're both a bit perplexed about where the hell all these supposed hordes in Sarria are - as a pair we are currently half of the population of our albergue so it looks like that myth has been busted as I expected. I knew making a fuss about it in April was fear mongering.

    In other news I've gone absolutely lactose mad in the last few days I'm not sure what's happening, potentially a calcium addicted tapeworm?
    Läs mer

  • Sarria to Portomarin - part one

    24 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 2 °C

    Martina is going to be absolutely fine, and could actually host a training session I'd push to be mandatory for half the people I've been with for a month. Her alarm was silent, she took everything into the kitchen to pack up with no fuss, and she has a small backpack. A+ my darling.

    She's nestled sliiiiiightly under my wing, she checked I was going to have breakfast at the hostel before she committed to it ("ok I will too", with a nervous smile), and I could see she was a bit hesitant about setting off so I pushed her out of the nest with a firm Buen Camino (BC) and assurances we'd see each other later. This only *might* be true but it's what she needed to hear at the time.

    Harbouring a slight sense of foreboding about this turning into a theme park, some sort of conveyor belt Camino, I headed out of Sarria. There are so many people compared to what I'm used to. None of these new fucks are saying BC which really irks me but in the spirit of it all I'm being VERY laid back about them breaking the rules I've invented.

    Other ways in which I am right and they are wrong include (all of them but specifically) walking on the LEFT side on the road and the RIGHT on the trail, letting people pass, stopping at the second or later bar in a town not always the first, taking your pack off before going in, looking for a sign inside that says aesos not baño (it's never baño) talking at normal human volumes, and greeting the locals.

    I've been thinking about what parts of this experience I can carry forward into day to day life, where I might not have a spare five to eight hours a day to go walking. A big source of enjoyment here - and one I knew I'd appreciate before I even started - is the simplicity, the reduced number of decisions I need to make each day. For example in the morning I put on my one outfit, use my bare minimum toiletries, pack up my small bag, walk outside and look for an arrow.

    I reckon if I start picking my outfits the night before and set up a better drop zone, I can achieve this efficiency at home, and maybe get a few kilometres walk in before work, go the long way? My body clock would currently give me tons of time, let's see if it resets once I'm out of bunk beds before we get ahead of ourselves though.
    Läs mer

  • A grubby Snow White

    24 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

    WONDERFUL amount of wildlife today, I'm counting the baby in that because they are strange and unusual creatures as far as I'm concerned.

  • Sarria to Portomarin - part two

    24 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    I can't believe I started thirty days ago! Until I go downhill or meet a new starter, and then I can - I feel ANCIENT. Nothing bonds a group like intruders, and we long-distance pilgrims have, in the nicest way possible, closed ranks. Not like Bachelor contestants, we aren't giving anyone dirty looks, but we DO exhale with relief whenever we see someone we recognise. To see them is to see yourself reflected and have a witness to your, very different, experience. They know that you know.

    I was feeling grateful enough for this witness that when Rusty and Mando called out "peregrina!" behind me I actually walked with them for a few kilometres. We peeled away from each other when they stopped for a coffee and I didn't, and later I saw them again - Rusty leaning back in a chair, proclaiming to nobody in particular "never let FEAR decide your fate!" as he mashed handfuls of chips into his mouth.

    Credit to the man, he's had blisters, a bung knee, food poisoning, and an allergic reaction to bed bugs requiring an injection in his ass and he's still smiling. His inability to participate constructively in a back and forth conversation is now wildly funny to me, and I just indulge him like you might a slightly racist grandmother or a sleepy child. He wants more cash but he won't say it - people keep telling me he's looking for me but whenever he finds me he doesn't ask. I'll check in gently if I see him tomorrow as I do too and if I'm copping a $40 ATM fee it may as well benefit two of us.

    Coming to the end of the stage you cross the Belesar reservoir that was created in 1963, flooding the medieval town of Portomarin which was rebuilt on the hill it currently resides - this included the churches, stone by stone. It's pretty impressive really, as much as they surely could have thought about us pilgrims and put it on a barge instead of up a steep set of stairs. It's the most water I've seen in one place since the sea in Biarritz!

    Dave had sent word that when he was here yesterday all the beds were booked so on getting to my preferred albergue (naturally, DOWN the hill again) I asked tentatively if they had any beds left, hopeful that because it was about 1.40pm I wasn't too late. Of course we have beds - you're safe at this time of year unless you're in a group, he said, then showed me into the completely empty dorm and told me to pick any of the 32 free beds. I honestly don't know what Dave's on about. We agreed that the far corner was the good one, away from the door, window, and bathroom (the three horsemen of the sleep apocalypse).

    I dropped my bag and headed back out, asking him where the supermarket was and if it closed at 2pm because it was now 1.52pm. He gave me directions and confirmed it did, jokingly telling me to run. When I set off sprinting up the hill I heard him burst out laughing behind me. I'd spent half the walk thinking about an egg and tomato sauce sandwich ok. I made it, although they were turning the lights out on me while I searched high and low for the bloody eggs, ALWAYS the wildcards in every supermarket shelving plan.

    After lunch I sat around soaking up what's probably the last sunny afternoon of the Camino, before miraculously turning into an employee of the albergue - or at least that's what all these goddamn newbies seemed to think.

    The guy running this place doesn't understand English, let alone speak it (which is a big difference by the way, I can pretty well get by listening now but speaking is much harder) and this stupid woman in a stupid hat didn't even try to speak Spanish or even simplify her English. It GRINDS MY GEARS I tell you. She asks him in English if she can stay here tonight because she was going to keep going but she's too tired, he tells her in Spanish he doesn't understand English, they both look at me, I get them both through the check in process then go back to my sun.

    Grabbing something from my bag, I see that this woman is dangerous. She, of 31 remaining free range beds, has set up shop directly next to me. I consider barking at her. I go to have a shower and do laundry instead - foreshadowing here, a task I can do because I have eyes. When I come out four new people have joined, and she's set the tone apparently because we're all filling from the back - a practice I encourage on the bus but NOT IN DORMS. One man, inexplicably, has taken a top bunk. World's gone mad.

    I'm sitting in the kitchen when my shift really kicks in - two people ask where the laundry is and where they can dry clothes, I point to the facilities and the sign saying where the clothesline is. The woman I will tell my therapist about though, was trying to play pilgrim. It was her first day, her friends were at a restaurant but she wanted to have a cup of soup! How authentic, such slum. She bustled in and made the following queries without hesitation:

    - Where are the cups?
    - How can she boil water?
    - What on earth do I mean she has to boil it in a pan, isn't there a kettle?
    - How does the stove top work?
    - Can I help her turn it on?
    - Can I watch her water and pour it into her cup with the soup sachet when it's done as she's having a shower?

    After long enough that the soup was probably cold again (of course I did it, have you met me) she came out, peered into the glass of salt next to the stove, asked me if it was salt, made a face, added some to her soup and then took it into the dorm, breaking more rules. I considered barking at her too. She didn't put the POT AWAY EITHER.

    Being new isn't the excuse, none of us were pulling this in SJPP. It's just a different type of pilgrim innit. A dickhead one.
    Läs mer

  • Portomarin to Palas de Rei - part one

    25 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C

    Can you believe I had almost exactly the same boiling water interaction at 6.45am as I did at 10pm? I didn't have to pour the water this time but otherwise, uncanny. I grit my teeth and smiled and said welcome to the Camino!

    It is amazing that these same people appear to be able to accommodate immense amounts of discomfort when it comes to their amateur walking set ups - I've seen corduroy and denim, I've seen sandals hanging off bags swinging to hit the back of thighs with each step, I've heard a thousand clinks and rustles that would have stopped me in my tracks. They fascinate and appal me, these people. You can't boil water in a pan but you can deal with that?

    Anyway the ordeal distracted me so much I forgot my boiled eggs I was so excited about. When I realised, I stopped walking and said, urgently and forlornly, MY EGGS and then kept going. I've since laughed about that a few times and it's one of many running in jokes with myself. I assume the hospitaleros raid the fridges at the end of each morning after we all go and claim what they want. I was refrigerating them in the carton which is, on reflection, a booby trap, and they might get a surprise when they go to crack them.

    The temptation to stay off stage is huge at the moment, as is the appeal of 'complementary' routes - detours that diverge from and later rejoin the historic way. I suspect most of the five-day pilgrims will find these a bit daunting/want to stick to tradition and avoid them, so naturally I've taken almost all of them.

    One involved a very brief tramp, with alarmingly free will, around the site of excavated pre-Roman ruins, which I've since learned is ”one of the most important archaeological sites in the Iberian peninsula". I'm glad I didn't knock anything over.
    Läs mer

  • Portomarin to Palas de Rei - part two

    25 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

    If I stay in Palas de Rei today, then tomorrow I'm unlikely to finish my 28km before heavy rain is predicted from 2pm. The rain started gently at 12 today but by the time I'd finished my very excellent rest soup the sun had come back out, so I was planning to extend today's walk and do an extra 3km dry today than wet tomorrow.

    The second I stepped into PdR it started pissing it down and after a few hundred metres I realised I was sheltering exactly under the albergue id stay at if I stayed here....so I admitted defeat and checked in. By the time I got the sheets on the bed it cleared up again and now I'm stuck here WITH NO WIFI. I don't really mind. When the Camino has plans for you, don't struggle. I have a bottom bunk and a power point, the shower had a door. I am positively rich in blessings. I'll just try to haul myself up a bit earlier tomorrow.

    The theme park fear has eventuated by the way, as you can probably sense. It's a bit like turning up for an exam you've studied for and realising the test hall is full of people drinking coffee and reading magazines. You're happy for them, but this is actually quite important to you and it's hard to concentrate.

    I can't really complain about this because there will always be someone with a more justified perspective in which I am the perpetrator. Ugh she only started in SJPP/is walking the stages/isn't religious/hasn't gone to mass every night. But on a very subjective personal level, it's as if someone has taken the romance of it all, clubbed it fiercely about the head, and propped it, bleeding, in the corner of the room. It's still there, but it's harder to look at.

    Something I like about myself is my near pathological ability to find a silver lining, and in this case I think I've stuck to form. I think the Camino is taking a gradual descent in both physical and metaphysical planes which will ease my transition out of it. And what a gift that is! If I was stepping out of the thick of it, I would mourn it so fiercely. This, a sad whimper rather than a bang, will be easier to move on from.

    Accordingly, I've been looking up a hotel for after Santiago de Compostela (SdC) where I'll launch Project Recuperate. I want a nice private room with a private bathroom for two nights. This will give me the first non-bunk bed, non-check out experience of the entire trip, where I have been in constant motion. When I tell you I can't wait to be a queen bed with real sheets past 7am...

    Oh ps I saw Martina! She's knackered, she's got blisters, but she gave me a massive hug and I can see the change in her eyes already - the cling wrap is off and she's got her hands dirty. Good for her.
    Läs mer

  • Palas de Rei to Calle - part one

    26 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 6 °C

    Two suspicions confirmed today:

    1. I can do hard things.
    2. My shoes are no longer waterproof.

    An Australian guy has been an outrageous dick to me so I'm going to bed. Maybe I'll cry! I'm feeling fragile but I know I'm just tired and these terrible last days are breaking my heart.

    Santiago is 31km away. Operation I'm-a-pilgrim-get-me-out-of-here is in full swing.

    Tell you more tomorrow.
    Läs mer

  • Palas de Rei to Calle - part two

    26 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

    Ok I'm up to telling the tale now.

    There was a guy limping around the kitchen last night, and as I was packing up in there this morning, I did such a good job of saying hello when he hobbled in that he thought I was Spanish! That evaporated instantly don't worry.

    I was very prepared to loathe him on principle as a new starter but I shan't because he's Spanish (Madrid), extremely Catholic, has done the Primitivo and Norte before, and is handsome in a tennis way. Like this guy ABSOLUTELY plays tennis, or should be in tennis catalogues at least. If you don't know what I mean by that I simply can't help you I'm afraid.

    It's Friday, and the template stages split the remaining 77km between us and Santiago de Compostela (SdC) into three days (28km, 20km, 19km) to arrive on Sunday. Between that fact and the exaggerated wincing I was watching him do, I was somewhat confused when he assumed I was getting to SdC tomorrow. He was, and it's easy terrain from here he said - you can do it easily.

    Something I haven't mentioned here yet is that when we are chatting about the day and how far we're going, we almost never use the town name, we talk about distance. So the stage town is Arzua (28km) but there are other options at 31km, 33km, etc. In pilgrim, if someone asked where you were going today, you might say I'm going to try for 33 but if it rains I'll go to 28. I pondered this over my - if not rounded, perhaps manic scribble? - breakfast of a chocolate protein shake, pork empanada, and REALLY good really cheap yogurt I'm furious to only be discovering now.

    I pondered this further as I walked, and ran into him after a few kilometres because althought he was in his pjs when I left, evidently he's extremely fast. We walked together for about five kilometres, he asked me questions like there might be a test at the end. He's been to Australia once for a Catholic youth convention, I bet that was an absolute riot. After insisting I stop in Melida to eat octopus at a specific restaurant, he abruptly said well, ok Leslie, I'm going to go and pray for you now, and sped off. 10/10 exit.

    I tend to do anything good looking people say - it's a character flaw - so at 10am I dutifully schlepped into the pulperia to see Michel finishing up, "wow, jus, a-wow" and got an even stranger second breakfast. To be fair to him it was absolutely amazing. I'm always iffy on inland seafood, but Galicia does stretch to the coast, and apparently their traditional cooking methods are a source of great pride (even if the source of the octopus itself is Morocco).

    So far it had managed to stay clear but I knew it was going to turn and sure enough, about 40 minutes from Arzua hail started pelting down, followed by rain that quickly got so aggressive it was funny. Saturated, I sloshed into town, stood under a balcony where Sophie and co were sitting dryly having got there earlier, and dripped. If you think about it, it's the GETTING wet that sucks, staying wet is sort of tolerable, and I knew it was going to rain earlier in the day tomorrow so I figured I'd keep paddling (which would cease to be a figure of speech if this kept up to be honest).
    Läs mer

  • Mother Gretchen

    26 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

    "I mean, if you even knew how mean she really is. You know I’m not allowed to wear hoop earrings, right? She told me two years ago that hoop earrings were “her thing” and I wasn’t allowed to wear them anymore. And then my parents got me a pair of really expensive white gold hoops for Hanukkah and I had to act like I didn’t like them. It was so sad. And you know she still cheats on Aaron. Every Thursday she hooks up with Shane Oman in the alcove behind the auditorium. And I never told anybody that cause I’m such a good friend!"Läs mer

  • Dont piss here

    26 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    I finally remembered to do my homework on these water bottles outside houses and guess what? They are an attempt to dissuade animals and insects from hanging around/peeing on the doors! The theory is that the light refracting off the water scares them off. Which honestly is about as scientific as my meat layer stuff but sure.Läs mer

  • Palas de Rei to Calle - part three

    26 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    Another piece of advice Michel had given me (repeatedly) was that none of the towns after Arzua had a supermarket so I pit stopped and my stomach directed some decision making - brown carbs and sugar seems to have been the brief. Sour lollies secured in the breast pocket, I continued, only for the rain to miraculously yield after about three kilometres. Thank you St James! I made it to the albergue in the 38km town (Calle) at exactly 5pm and sat in the one good chair. I deserved it.

    After a shower and laundry, I came out to feast on both my food and wifi - I was tired, my bones were wet, I was hungry, I wanted to talk to my people. This Australian prick wasn't having it. "Erm, you'll sit with us if you don't mind" (...the young lady was silent). He continued to make a thing of it over the next 15 minutes, obstinately engaging me in conversation across the room, intermittently directing me to join the group at his table, and generally making me feel small and powerless.

    On a normal day I'd have rolled my eyes at this but it came at the end of a long, hard, cold, wet one where I'd already been bothered by my octopus waiter (don't call me baby, don't talk about my eyes or my smile, just get the fucking bill) and a bunch of men leaving Melida (honk honk) and spent a small stretch quite concerned about a guy behind me. On the latter, men - if you are completely alone in a forest with a woman please DON'T WALK TWO METRES BEHIND HER FOR KILOMETRES SILENTLY.

    In what I consider a demonstration of great progress in my people-pleasing deprogramming, and just general restraint, I neither acquiesced or headbutted the guy trying to boss me around. I just went red, and sat, verge of tears, shaking with indignation. GO AWAY.
    Läs mer

  • Calle to Santiago de Compostela - pt one

    27 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 7 °C

    After a night of sulking about that dickhead and trying to make logistic decisions I was too tired for, I had a stern back and forth with myself about bucking up (there was a compelling counter argument which involved pointing out we could HEAR the rain on the roof already) then swung into it. I was just going to walk and see what happened. That sentence would have never ever been said by pre-Camino me.

    The rips in my shoes are letting the water in, and I can't afford any more distance in wet feet so I set about Art Attacking the insides with duct tape. I slapped some on the outside too but I knew it wouldn't hold given they're dirty. Sure enough it popped off after about a kilometre but the stuff inside did the job nicely.

    It rained gently pretty much the entire time. Apart from the crowds (school trips have joined now, amaaaazing) and the commercialisation and the undercurrent of local resentment, this stretch is just not that pretty or interesting either. Sections today skirted huge highways and an airport, there were eucalyptus everywhere, it was odd and disengaging other than the wayfinding pole measurements ticking down.

    Despite this, spirits were quite high, probably due to sugar - I've started shotgunning flans while I walk.

    But seriously, if you have limited time/patience/ability and are looking to give the Camino under a week, spend it literally anywhere else than Sarria to Santiago. It is without a doubt the worst section.
    Läs mer

  • Calle to Santiago de Compostela - pt two

    27 april 2024, Spanien ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

    A St James miracle, with about eight kilometres to go it stopped raining and the sun came out.

    Michel again popped up out of nowhere, we apparently had our economic exam on today so the conversation was all about how superannuation worked in Australia (Spain apparently sees us as an example when it comes to relieving the generational tax burden of an ageing population) etc.

    His perspectives on Spain as an entity and in relation to the EU and international community were quite interesting. He's almost as big into history as JC and brings a Spanish lens to the Camino I've been keen on understanding. We spoke about the impact of it - on infrastructure, on the economy, on communities, with particular focus on this last 100km - and whether it's helping or hurting. A good chat to have I feel, and one I'll probably continue on with myself after it's done.
    Läs mer