Portugal
Maia

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    • Hari 20

      Etappe 18

      27 Mei 2023, Portugal

      Hoi zämä!
      In dem schönen Hotel, wo wir gestern nächtigten, liess es sich vorzüglich schlafen! Sehr gerne hätte es auch noch etwas länger sein dürfen! Um 06:30 aufstehen ist nicht wirklich mein Ding!  Nun....wir hatten ja ein Tagesziel, das es zu erreichen galt! Also, raus aus den Federn und rein in die Schuhe! Der Weg wartet! Zuerst mussten wir aber, weil das Hotel nicht direkt am Jakobsweg stand, auf den richtigen Pfad gelangen, was sich in dieser grossen Stadt als etwas schwierig erwies! Zum Glück gibt es heute "Maps me" , so war die Wegfindung auch für uns nicht unmöglich! Die heutige Etappe war echt langweilig! Wir liefen, ohne Witz, stundenlang nur an stark befahrenen Strassen entlang! Auch unsere französisch/ italienischen Mitpilger, die wir in der heutigen Herberge zufällig wieder trafen, waren der Meinung, dass diese Streckenführung eine Katastrophe war. Unterdessen freue ich mich darauf, schon bald in Spanien unterwegs sein zu können. Die Menschen hier sind wirklich nett und hilfsbereit, die Landschaft ansich ist sehr schön, aber die Infrastruktur von Strassen, Wege, Trottoirs usw. ist mehr als nur schlimm. Hier sieht man Sachen.... die man (in Europa) nicht für möglich hielt!
      In der heutigen Herberge sind wir wieder auf die witzigen Mitpilger der letzten zwei Etappen gestossen. Ganz spontan luden sie uns zum Abendessen ein. Obwohl wir  schon eine Kleinigkeit gegessen hatten, nahmen wir die Einladung an. Wir bereuten es nicht!! Denn das Essen war gut, es war gemütlich und wir haben viel gelacht!  In solchen Momenten tut es mir aufrichtig leid, dass ich mich nie ernsthaft bemüht habe, fremde Sprachen zu lernen. Schaun wir mal.....es soll ja nie zu spät sein?????
      Ciao et au revoir....
      Baca selengkapnya

    • Hari 3

      Marosinhos to Labruge: Lollygagging

      2 Mei 2023, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

      Everybody passed me today. Four Camino cyclists, a dozen folks wearing backpacks (“Bom Caminho!”), a bunch of locals out for a beach day, and a woman carrying two bags of groceries, A nut brown, big-bellied, shirtless guy in bright blue shorts passed me…twice.

      I am an unapologetic lollygagger. I stopped to read all the informational signs posted. There were probably a couple dozen along the 7.5 miles of boardwalk that made up the first leg of my Camino. (FYI: The Germans sank a boat off the coast here after the war, just to assure the Allie’s didn’t confiscate it. The flowers of the dunes here enjoy protected” status. The still-active fishing settlement on the beach is older than your great grandma.)

      This is nothing new. Anyone who has hiked with me will tell you I like to stop and dissect the roses. Today, I pause to watch some shorebirds, plovers, putter about. They are unworried about my proximity, unlike our shy California version. I witness two couples in their silly flirting and wag my finger at the “mao homem” who scares his girlfriend. I take a brief detour to find an ancient fishing cottage surrounded by the collected plastic remnants of a modern coastal cleanup. Cool!

      Some pilgrims judge a slow walker on the Camino. For them, suffering is part of the process, and speed is essential to the route. Others argue, “It’s your Camino, and it will unfold the way it supposes to unfold. The Camino provides,”

      After a first day of coastal meandering, I can see some challenges ahead. No amount of lollygagging can erase the physical strain of the 100-plus kilometers ahead. But I walked 7.5 miles today, and I could have done a bit more. I’m tired, but no blisters, and no aches. All good news.

      Certainly dark moments lie in wait, ready to chew up and spit out my current nirvana . My feet will likely start to hurt. Rain is forecast for later this week, and I’m not sure how I will navigate that. At some points I’ll get wet, and sore and tired and hungry and grumpy.

      But I’ll be ok. I am going nowhere fast, and it is glorious.
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    • Hari 74

      Zeit für Qualitytime 👨‍👩‍👧✈️🇪🇸🌊

      18 Oktober 2023, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

      Es ist soweit: Das Kapitel Solo-Travelling ist beendet. Zumindest vorerst. Jetzt heißt es nämlich erstmal quality time genießen. Und es ist verrückt, während Frida in Porto auf unsere nächsten gemeinsamen Abenteuer wartet, fühlt es sich an nach Hause zu fliegen und das, obwohl ich meine Eltern auf Mallorca und nicht in Deutschland besuchen gehe. Beweist doch wieder einmal, dass Zuhause nicht nur ein Ort sondern auch Personen sind. 🧡Baca selengkapnya

    • Hari 19

      Das Surf-Mekka

      14 Mei 2023, Portugal ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

      Nachdem wir unsere Akkus am Campingplatz aufgeladen hatten, ging es für uns gegen Mittag frisch, froh und munter weiter.

      Einzig die Batterie des Campers hat trotz Landstromanschluss nicht geladen und somit einen vollständigen defekt 🪫

      Auf unserer Tour nach Porto hielten wir zunächst am Praia do Baleal und bestaunten dort die vielen Surfer 🏄‍♂️ und wie sie mehr oder weniger auf den Wellen ritten 🌊

      Im Anschluss fuhren wir nach Nazare, das Surf-Mekka wo Wellen bis zu 25 Meter hoch werden können.

      Der Strand und die Promenade war extrem voll, leider gab es keine Surfer und keine Wellen da diese lediglich vom November bis Februar so extrem hoch sind.

      Im Anschluss fuhren wir bis Porto und aßen zu Abend bei McDonalds und probierten uns hier durch die Portugiesischen Burger 🍔

      Die letzte Nacht verbrachten wir mit einer Runde Karten.

      Morgen geht es für Vicky in den Flieger nach Deutschland ✈️
      Baca selengkapnya

    • Hari 24

      Homeward Bound, leaving on a high note

      23 Juni 2023, Portugal ⋅ 🌙 17 °C

      3 am airports never vary.... People sleeping in contorted strange positions, sorting and repacking bits, tired looking returnees , much more alert departing vacationers. I'm waiting for our gate to be announced for our 5 am flight, and pondering my budgetary choices 😅. Actually we saved a lot on this flight, it was worth it.

      Our last day in Portugal was an absolute delight, I think we saw the best of the best. We got the first morning rabelo boat tour, about 8 of us on a peacefully gliding Duoro River trip. Rabelos are the boats used in the past to transport casks of port down to Porto, now they are used for tourism. These pretty, small wooden boats are a much more authentic experience than a crowded cruise boat day trip. Although the real river cruise boat we saw looked very tempting!

      Then the plan is to head for Sabrosa, the town 16km away that I've just read it's the birthplace of Ferdinand Magellan. As I explain it to Brad, if Magellan could attempt to circumnavigate the globe in the 1520s, then surely we could drive that short distance to visit! The only difficulty is that there is a price to be paid for breathtaking views, and that price is often a white knuckle drive. Incredibly gorgeous scenery does distract a bit from hair raising switchback elevation gains though, and we're soon enough in Sabrosa.

      A last picnic lunch in a park under trees, and a short walk through the old town leads us to Magellans birth home. We pay our quick respects there. I can't imagine the vision and drive of a person born in 1480, to believe the impossible could be done, and set out to do it. It's really sad he didn't quite make it, dying en route.

      We visit the nearby Sabrosa wine cooperative, where we have an excellent personal tour with a young local. For 4 euro each, this includes tastings. And it's a wonderful layout, the cooperative has kept much of the old equipment to display. An old copper still, which is no longer permitted to be used, manual filling and corking machines, we can see the effort required in the old days compared to the gleaming efficiency of the new. A bit less poetic, of course.

      And far less dangerous, as we are shown enormous vats where the grapes have their initial press. Once the liquid is siphoned out for the next step, even to this day, someone physically must crawl through a tiny door and scrape the mast out!

      A fascinating visit, not at all what we expected. So, down a routine highway, into a routine hotel, and here we are entering that vast complex system of transport. To be thrown out the other end many hours from now, jet lagged, achy, desperate for fresh air....and happy to be back on home ground!
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    • Hari 23

      In port in Porto in Portugal

      8 April 2023, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

      8/4 Our short visit to Porto, Portugal’s second-largest city. We docked at Leixoes, a few km from the city itself but it was all built-up anyway, driving through on the bus. We just took the included excursion which was okay though difficult for all excursions because of it being an Easter holiday so lots of visitors as well as major roadworks going on building an underground train network I think so all credit to the bus driver because the streets are narrow, several turned into one-way, and for some reason there was a lot of double-parking in the streets so I think the driver had to hold his breath and hope for the best in some places. The guide was Porto born and bred, very good.

      We took the scenic route into the city along the waterfront, lovely beaches and blue sea. Stopped in a central square so we could have a 20 minute walk around which was good because I wanted some cough mixture and there was a pharmacy right there. We were beside a small green park with a small bar, grass and very old olive trees, apparently the site of the city’s medieval olive grove that has been preserved – with a twist! Underneath is a new, small shopping mall, partly open to the sky where they’ve made a cut in the olive grove. Quite strange, but it was pretty all the same. We walked past the entryway to a public building with a huge stone ball suspended from the roof, pleased it didn’t fall on Pete.

      This mall led to another square and to the famous Lello and Irmao bookshop which was where JK Rowling started writing the Harry Potter books. There was a queuing race outside and dozens lined up to go inside, numbers very strictly policed, I wasn’t tempted, but the photo cribbed from the history talk shows how lovely it looks. The guide talked about whether the books used elements of the bookshop in descriptions, and also said that the students from the nearby university could often be seen wearing capes around the square – did that translate to Hogwarts perhaps?

      We carried on driving but it was hard to see much out the bus windows. And it was a bit hard to hear at times because of certain yappy people on the bus who had loud conversations over top of the commentary. So annoying. The guide gave us the city’s history, pointed out important buildings, and apologised again for the roading situation, but you just take it as it is. We could see a few of the tiled buildings, he pointed out that a lot of the tiling has been added in later years (20th century) when people realised they helped keep out the damp. The cathedral is apparently very ‘imposing’ and beautiful but we didn’t go near it, and the railway station is completely covered inside by tile stories. Didn’t notice many police around other than two officers on horseback in one street. Around the city there are traditional ‘English’ Gentlemen’s clubs still in use. I was interested that the guide kept referring to classes, both in the past and present day; a lot of references to upper, middle, lower classes which struck me as a bit odd. And it made me pleased to think that in NZ we don’t really have that huge divide, maybe to a small extent but this was really obvious.

      We saw some of the old city walls, some up high but many along the Douro riverfront with deep and high arches leading into back streets or big courtyards, apparently some would have been entrances to warehouses and named accordingly e.g. ‘coal street’ etc. Across the river you can see the big port (alcohol, not shipping) company warehouses and other buildings, mostly English names.

      There are six big bridges over the river, we could only see one side of the famous bridge built by Gustave Eiffel before he headed to Paris to see about a tower. The metal bridge in the photo, you can see a round tower at the top of the cliff, this was used by the Duke of Wellington as a base – I couldn’t quite work out if it used to be a monastery and was converted to barracks for the Duke, or was built as barracks and is now a monastery. Never mind. About half the group went their own way but the rest of us stuck with the guide walking along the riverbank then back through some small narrow streets to the meeting point, much more interesting to hear about the area’s history and more about Porto than to wander aimlessly in tourist territory surrounded by fridge magnets and handbags and cafes, learning nothing much.

      Back ‘home’ we were greeted by a parade of ship’s crew holding red umbrellas, chorus of ‘welcome back, welcome back’ and loud music, odd but fun all the same. Rushed to the theatre in time to hear most of the talk on the age of discovery and global exploration from early times through to Columbus, Vasco da Gama and so on. We went to a later one supposedly about ‘Fact or Fiction: Falmouth and Literary Cornwall’ which sounded quite wide-ranging (think smugglers and ‘Rebecca’) but it turned out to be just Poldark which was okay but not as expected. I had a much-needed sleep after that.

      We had booked (for free) at Manfredi’s Italian restaurant for dinner, one of the two ‘posh’ restaurants, and we had a delicious meal and wine, great waiter Enzo looked after us, from Peru. The people next door asked about how long he’d been on the ship, conditions etc: this was his second trip, Viking had better accommodation, food, conditions and great pay – he was making as much as, for instance, a doctor, would make in Peru. Has a wife and 7-month-old child back home, very proud to show us their photo.

      Then it was time for the 9.15pm show, songs and stories from Assistant Cruise Director Francesca, who had a magnificent operatic voice but also crossover so very entertaining with a variety of songs and she was well worth listening to.

      Back in our room we found the Easter Bunny had visited – or was still there: a chocolate bunny in a basket and some eggs.
      Baca selengkapnya

    • Hari 4

      Etappe Matosinhos -Vila do Conde

      2 Juni 2022, Portugal ⋅ 🌧 17 °C

      Ein unvergesslicher Tag am Atlantik! Für heute hatten wir uns viel vorgenommen: Schließlich liefen wir 24 km mit über 35.000 Schritten der wunderschönen wilden Atlantikküste entlang. Schöne bequeme Holzstege säumen die Küste und ermöglichen ein bequemes Wandern.
      Das schöne Anblick des Atlantiks liess uns die Müdigkeit vergessen. Erst auf den letzten Kilometern spürten wir eine Schwere in den Beinen. Unterwegs ließen wir uns zur Erfrischung und Stàrkung immer mal wieder in einer schönen Strandbar nieder, Auch haben wir Bekanntschaft gemacht mit einer Amerikanerin, wo sich herausstellte, dass wir in der gleichen Pension übernachten. So sind wir eine Zeitlang zusammen gelaufen und haben auch das Abendessen gemeinsam eingenommen. Der Host der heutigen Unterkunft, ein Gastgeber mit Leib und Seele, hat mit uns die weitere Unterkunft gesucht, offenbar ist das übers Weekend nicht ganz so easy. Seine Art hat uns grosszügig darüber hinweg sehen lassen, dass das Bett viiiel zu hart war.
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    • Hari 18

      Day 36 Santiago to Porto Portugal

      26 Oktober 2023, Portugal ⋅ 🌧 17 °C

      It was not raining when I walked to the bus depot 😁

      I had my morning cafe con leche and am now waiting for the bus to Porto.

      Very comfortable bus ride. Met a mother /daughter from Bavaria. They had just completed the Porto Camino.

      Got off at the bus depot and saw that my hostel was 2 . 5 km away. I started walking....and saw the train/ Metro station. I found an information booth and was able to ride the subway close to my hostel.

      I wanted to check-in but I didn't realize that Porto is an hour behind Espana so had to wait.

      I decided to eat and ordered a delicious fish dish called Pataniscis with tomato rice.

      I went back to the hostel " So Cool Hostel" only to find it was the wrong one😳 The one I was booked at was called " Cool Hostel". But it was easy to hop on the metro for another couple of stops.

      When I got off I was inundated with all of these people. It was a street that was a mall ( no cars) and it was very crowded.
      There was a street vendor selling castanats which are roasted chesnuts. They roast them on briquets. They tasted like potatoes to me🤔

      I found my hostel got settled then did laundry. The owner was doing laundry and filling Ikea bags....where is there an Ikea here?

      Went to bed early as I was very tired.
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    • Hari 4

      Arrival in Porto

      25 April 2023, Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

      Taxi was on time and picked us up at 7 to take us to the airport. Check in smooth. Half hour delay after boarding due to fog too dense to take off, but smooth flight of about 2 hrs to Porto.

      The Metro from the airport took us to the centre of town (get off at Trinidad station) and we walked up and down, down and up cobbled lanes to get to our apartment as we had arranged a 1-2pm arrival, but nobody was there. Found a gelateria and had sit down while we continued to try to reach the owner. He advised he forgot to the send the codes to get in....was never planning to be on site as we had understood. Finally got codes and got in about 3:30. Accommodation adequate, good bed, clean. Other tourists going in and out the buildings, definitely an area of redevelopment with buildings empty and derelict looking next to others that are being lived in and renovated. Everywhere it is like this, an old, old city, very narrow streets, tuk tuks taking tourists about, some renovated buildings, most not although outside appearances can be deceiving.

      Porto is very photogenic.
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    • Hari 69

      Der Flug von Porto nach Madrid

      26 November 2022, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

      Der Flug von Porto nach Madrid war angenehm und für mich auch sehr emotional 😢🥹. Als wir in Flugzeug gesessen sind ist mir so richtig bewusst geworden, dass die Reise endgültig zu Ende geht...Wir haben so viel schönes und unvergessliches erlebt, dafür ein großes DANKE.

      Die Menschen hier in Portugal haben mich sehr beeindruckt vor allem ihre Offenheit, Herzlichkeit und Freundlichkeit 🥰🫶.

      Und der da oben( ich meinte der Papa also Gott) hat uns sogar Heute zum Abschied einen wunderschönen Tag vergönnt mit einem wunderschönen Sonnenuntergang, welche wir aus der Vogelperspektive anschauen dürften 🥰❤️☀️🫶🙏
      Ich bin für das alles sehr Dankbar.
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