España
Belorado

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Viajeros en este lugar
    • Día 15–16

      D14- Belogrado to Villafranca de Oca 11.

      27 de mayo, España ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

      Short walk today and we had a little sleep in this morning as we had accommodation booked at Villafranca. It was raining a little when we left and looked very misty around the hills. We walked the gravel path with the crops of wheat and rapeseed either side of us. After 4.7km we hit the town of Tosantos expecting to have our morning coffee and breakfast. However, when we got there nothing was open so off we go for another 2km and found a nice place at Villambistia where we had huge baguettes with ham and cheese and long awaited coffee. It was still drizzling when we got back on the road so we put our ponchos back on and headed for Villafranca. We stayed at the Albergue de San Anton Abad which is part of the Hotel San Anton Abad. It used to be a pilgrims hospital and was built in the 14th century by Queen Juana Manuel who was the wife of Henry II to service the poor and people passing through. It was renovated and now a three star hotel is in its place.Leer más

    • Sandwiched Between the Moon and Sun

      10 de septiembre de 2022, España ⋅ 🌙 52 °F

      Good morning! Woke up to a cool (almost cold) morning. As we left the town and there were no longer street lights, I turned on my headlamp. I didn’t walk far to realize I wouldn’t need the light this morning because the full moon was standing strong in front of us. Not to be outdone, the sun was rising behind us. Such an amazing sight, pictures cannot capture it, but I tried!Leer más

    • Día 20–21

      Top bunk curfew time

      25 de mayo, España ⋅ ⛅ 73 °F

      When you stay in an Albergi, aka Pilgrim hostel, curfew is at 10, which means they lock you out if your not back, and if you are back you have to go to bed, lights out in your bunk. I didn't know which is worse, being locked out of in the bunk lol. Trina and I are in the top bunk, lucky us😅having a giggle fit while the nice Korean couple below us are snoring.

      Ok shhh. lights out, night night.

      Oh, and your kicked out by 8 am.

      I think a bus ride is in our future during party of our 30 k to Atpuerco manaña.
      Leer más

    • Día 13

      Belorado to Atapuerca

      3 de junio, España ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

      Very long way to go today so we left at 5.45 - in the dark. Actually pitch dark as it was a cloudy morning. Nevertheless the first birds (black redstarts) were singing as we were leaving Belorado.
      First coffee was delayed as most places don’t open til about 7 so we had walked nearly 10k before we found somewhere open. But it was a wonderful place so I’m pleased that we came to it first. In a tiny place called Espinosa - an alberge and bar run with love by a couple who produced great coffee and amazing food. One to remember.
      Second coffee was in Villafranca - not quite as good but good enough. Then to a tiny supermarket where I stocked up with a tiny toothpaste as I’m running out and a banana.
      After Villafranca it was steeply up but so beautiful - oak trees giving way to pine trees with a wonderful smell I’d like to bottle and take home with me.
      Then a very long largely flat section with beautiful trees, flowers and butterflies before we gradually dropped down to San Juan de Ortega where I sat at a cafe for a while and then explored a beautiful Romanesque church.
      On through the forest to Ages with Nick, Paul, Linda and Bernie. Stopped for a painstakingly carefully made cheese and tomato sandwich at the little bar where we ate dinner last year when staying at Agés. Couldn’t get into that hostal this year so walked on for the last 2.2k to Atapuerca through extraordinary fields of flowers. Today staying in a four bed room in Albergue INpulso Atapuerca with Tamami from Japan and Li from Korea - both seem lovely.
      After a wander around town dinner options looked limited so we made our own tomato sauce with pasta with fresh tomatoes and peppers and shared with a Dutch girl going through a big change of career - interesting discussions about wine and politics!
      Going to sleep to the singing of a spotless starling who has a fantastic range of sounds.
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    • Día 19

      Espinosa del Camino

      6 de septiembre de 2023, España ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

      Kolejny ale zupełnie inny dzień. Przybyliśmy do bardzo malutkiego miasteczka, w którym mieszka około 45 osób. Nasi gospodarze pochodzący z Niemiec prowadzą malutka albergue na 5 osób. Na razie jesteśmy jedynymi gośćmi. Wokół cisza i spokój po prostu nic się nie dzieje. No może nie zupełnie nic, czeka nas jeszcze domowy obiad o godzinie siódmej, nawet pisząc używam pełnych wyrazów aby wyglądało na ważne i długie wydarzenie.
      Musieliśmy zmienić plan. W związku z moim obrzydliwym pęcherzem na dużym palcu w prawej stopie, który okazał się bardzo głęboki i duży, wręcz podminowujacy miejsce po paznokciu, i lewym kolanie, które nadal nie chce współpracować we właściwy sposób, ja potrzebuję paru dni odpoczynku i nie używania moich nóg.
      Jutro się rozdzielamy, Kasia idzie jutro do Ages I następnego dnia do Burgos. Tam się połączymy i zostaniemy jeszcze dwa dni. Mamy nadzieję że to wystarczy.
      Takie jest Camino niepowtarzalne, zawsze dające inne wyzwania. Każdy dzień jest inny i nie wiadomo co przyniesie, trzeba być tylko otwartym na to aby wybrać dobrze. Aby się podnieść trzeba upaść.
      Nie ukrywam że nie bardzo dobrze sobie radzę z tą zmianą ale nie ma innego wyjścia.
      Dzisiaj w załączeniu tylko widoczki z Espinosa i okolicy ❤️
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    • Día 12

      11 days of walking , now in Atapuerca!

      21 de abril de 2023, España ⋅ ☁️ 73 °F

      Atapuerca is a really cool small town ! While only about 50 people live here year round, it has HUGE anthropological significance as it’s an “exceptional reserve” of the earliest humanoids in Europe. I walked quickly to beat the heat (arrived around 1:30) and was really glad I did because the museum in this town closes at 3 ! :( Amazing to think that I had no idea I would stumble upon such an important site this morning !!Leer más

    • Día 8

      Sunrise, Day 8

      24 de julio de 2022, España ⋅ ☀️ 35 °C

      Today will be a slightly more strenuous day, compared to yesterday’s walk in the park. 27km, which is OK, but 38°C and no stops for most of it.

      Right now it’s cool and fun to walk. We’ll see how it plays out once the sun is out in force.Leer más

    • Día 22

      Belorado to San Juan de Ortago

      25 de septiembre de 2023, España ⋅ ☀️ 10 °C

      Today was an early start for our 24 km walk . We left at 630 am in the dark and it was quite chilly. ( Brian loves it cold). We walked as day was breaking passing again fields of spent sunflowers but the sun was rising behind us and we were all feeling fresher then yesterday morning! After about 5 km we came across a cafe for a much needed coffee and the waitress had also been to the Spanish no charm school. However it was good to eat some breakfast..beautiful baguettes with pastrami and tomatoes and then Brian couldn't resist the sugar donuts!
      We carried on in the cool morning air but it was starting to warm up and luckily today there was lots of shade until near the end. We passed through a couple of pretty villages, one which had a beautiful old well that was meant to take all your tiredness away! We were tempted but it was pretty chilly.
      We stopped at Villa Franca for lunch ( pastries filled with chocolate or custard) So although we must be burning some calories with all the walking we are certainly consuming some!
      After leaving Villa Franca we started the ascent of Montes de Oca which is a climb of 200 metres over 3 km and it was hot! Maybe those pastries weren't a great idea. At the top of Montes de Oca there is a monument dedicated to the victims of a massacre during the civil war. The inscription reads " Their death wasn't in vain, their execution was"
      On we walked through forests of oak and pine and was great to be in the shade. The forest is meant to have wild boar, deer, badgers and wolves but luckily it was too hot for them to be out and about. We had a couple of stops in the shade and a lady had a stall with loud Spanish music playing.
      It's always the last 3 or 4 km that are the killers and by then the sun is hot and the shade had gone.
      Finally we got to San Juan which is a tiny wee village but our accommodation is great with even a clothes line! And guess who is in town, Barrett the fog horn. Lee is thrilled.
      We are all in good spirits, still no injury or blisters although the best part of the day is taking your shoes off.
      Love all your messages and it's starting to seem a long time since we left NZ. .
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    • Día 17

      Day 14 Tosantos to Atapuerca

      4 de octubre de 2023, España ⋅ ☁️ 55 °F

      Only 548 more kilometers to go... 😆 the first church we saw today was built right into the rocks above Tosantos. We climbed up a very steep ridge to a long forested path. Which kept us cool throughout the day. There was a unique refreshment stop surrounded by the artistic creations of the vender. We had lunch in San Juan de Ortega. We met up with our ethereal friend Silvie from France. We ended the day in Atapuerca in a very rustic Albergue called Hostel La Plazuepa Verde. Near the town is an archeological site where the oldest human remains in Europe were discovered going back 1.5 million years.Leer más

    • Día 14

      Lord grant me the patience...

      5 de abril, España ⋅ ☁️ 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
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    Belorado

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