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    • Dag 23

      Homeward bound

      1. mai, Spania ⋅ ☁️ 41 °F

      We spent our final day in Santiago de Compostela wandering the city and enjoying the sites, including watching new pilgrims arrive and experience the May Day observations. We flew to Madrid in the late evening as we prepared for our last hours in Spain before returning to the Pacific Northwest.

      I have the following reflections : I am truly blessed to have had the opportunity to travel with Lydia. We had so much connection, laughs, triumphs, and little bit of pain. It was amazing that we walked the distance we did in the time we had and I would not have wanted to do it with anyone else.

      We made some great trail friends Regina, Mark, Brita, Julia, Diego, Teresa, and many, many others. Some of our encounters were brief and impactful, while others were connections with true divine intervention.

      The Camino is a journey that one follows for a life time......
      Les mer

    • Dag 21

      22 km and 700 m to Pobra de Brollón

      1. mai, Spania ⋅ ☁️ 4 °C

      I woke up this morning and saw that once again weather.com predicted clouds and no rain till late afternoon, while the Spanish, weather website aemet.es showed rain all day. I chose to put my faith in weather.com, even though it had let me down yesterday. Both websites showed the same cold temperature, though – 38 F/3C. Another day to put my smartwool socks on my hands. But I would much rather have those warm lambswool gloves that are sitting at home in my Camino box!

      This was a planned short-ish day, because I wanted to have a good chunk of time in Monforte De Lemos tomorrow. I have stayed there two or three times, but always arrived on the late side after a pretty hard walk. It’s a small city with some interesting things to see.

      I had forgotten how beautiful this stage is. Lots of green, lots of flowers, lots of big vistas from up high. No cultural or historical sites, but plenty of natural beauty. And the rain held off until I was about four minutes from my destination.

      There is now an albergue in town, but I learned that the pensión where I had stayed years ago had reopened (its owners closed it when they retired, but their kids have reopened it). Very nice.

      Clare and I have had a good and very filling lunch in La Taberna Vieja, and we are going to stay here till the thunder and rain stop.
      Les mer

    • Dag 10

      von A Guarda nach Mougás

      30. april, Spania ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

      Sind heute früh bei Regen losgelaufen, direkt am Atlantik lang. Dann kam Schüttregen von oben vorn, links vom Meer und gefühlt auch von unten Trotz Regenjacke und Regenhose bis auf die Schlüppi komplett durch. Als es dann zum Bauchnabel durchsickerte, kam zur rechten Zeit eine Kaffeebar. Alle die reinkamen, sahen gleich durchge-
      weicht aus. Einmal alles gewechselt und einen Cappuccino getrunken. Wir haben gute Laune, weil: es soll heut nicht mehr regnen. :-)
      Les mer

    • Dag 20

      To Quiroga in the rain (28 km and 700 m)

      30. april, Spania ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      It wasn’t a totally rainy day, but there were several long-ish periods, so my shoes and feet were soaked most of the day. This is a very nice stage even when it’s raining, way up high with four other paths paralleling below — the river, the train tracks, the national highway, and the local highway. And there I was on top of all of it! The Sil River is dark green, blending in with the greenery all around. With the grey sky, the color palette was fairly reduced—except for billions of bright yellow flower bushes (gorse or broom, I’ve been told they’re called).

      The Camino goes through several little villages— all have at least a few inhabitants, a few renovated homes, and the great majority falling apart. I can’t imagine that there is anything that will bring these places back to life, but maybe the Camino will do it!

      One of my two favorite Sil River horseshoe curves is on this stage, and luckily it wasn’t raining when I got to that spot! I sat and had a few handfuls of trail mix and soaked it in — then the rain started and I really soaked it in.

      I am in a nice place in Quiroga— hair dryer and heat! Now my shoes will dry for sure.

      Looks like rain for the next few days.
      Les mer

    • Dag 8

      Caminha (Portugal) to Oia (Spain)

      28. april, Spania ⋅ ☀️ 57 °F

      This morning we took a small 6-passenger water taxi across the Rio Minho into Spain. We chatted on the trail with people we had met earlier as well as new fellow pilgrims. Again, there was a variety of paths, and the day wasn’t too long — about 12 miles, taking about 6.5 hours with breaks. There were almost no services along the route, so we ended up eating snacks instead of a real lunch. (Note to selves: make sure to carry more food in our packs!) Arriving in the tiny seaside village of Oia quite hungry, we were dismayed to find the only two restaurants had just closed — but our hotel was at least serving drinks, which we supplemented with a bag of chips. We found a self-service washer and dryer, and washed a large load of our dirty clothes. Finally 8 pm rolled around, and we were the first two in the restaurant!Les mer

    • Dag 20

      Santiago de Compostela

      30. april, Spania ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      An 8km final day, mainly up hill! We started late to avoid the drizzle and were partially successful. Our ponchos did get an outing. While short, the walk was quite hard. Final few kms through the suburbs of Santiago as we sought a glimpse of the Cathedral, then we arrived via the alley ways of the central city. Lots of fellow pilgrims arriving. Photos then off to get our official parchment of completion, a proud possession. Found our rather cosy room nearby, then a quick visit to the Cathedral to embrace the Apostle James and light some candles. A late lunch and celebratory libation. We’ll attend the Pilgrim Mass at 7.30pm.Les mer

    • Dag 36

      Tears, paperwork, and backtracking

      27. april, Spania ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      Before I knew it, we were in the city outskirts then the historic centre outskirts and then we were there. End of the line. I've had 33 days to get ready for this and I wasn't.

      I stood there in the graduating crowd and felt around in the dark for an emotion. I couldn't get hold of one, they were too slippery. Myths and murmurs of long processing times at the pilgrim office made me scurry down there after a few minutes.

      How it goes from here is this:

      You go online and pre-fill your name, route, start date and location, and whether or not you did this for religious reasons. I did this last night, but lots were doing it on the street. This form spit out a QR code. You show this code to the security guard (I'm not making any of this up) who lets you into the foyer.

      You scan the QR code and it gives you a ticket. You wait (not even a minute… those liars) until the screen shows your ticket and a desk number. You go to that desk. You hand over your credential and scan the QR code again. They inspect your credential, stamp it, and, if it is to their satisfaction, issue your Compostela, look at you, and say congratulations.

      You shake their hand. You walk through the gift shop (still not kidding) and buy a little cardboard tube to keep it safe. She rolls it, seals it, takes your money. You walk out the door, find the closest bench, and collapse. You burst into tears and let out the cry you have been carrying for 945km.

      You go back up to the Cathedral, find and fall into the arms of pilgrims you know. You laugh. You hold people as they have their turn to cry. You exchange Instagrams, cheek kisses, international number codes.

      You walk 4km back out of town to find a bed. You have a beer. You tell some people what you've done. You sleep.
      Les mer

    • Dag 35

      Palas de Rei to Calle - part three

      26. april, Spania ⋅ ☁️ 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 it to miraculously yield after about three kilometres. Thank you St James! I made it to the albergue in the 38 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 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 on 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.
      Les mer

    • Dag 19

      A longer route to A Rua

      29. april, Spania ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

      The day from O Barco had to be either 13 km or 40 km. I was not interested in the 40 option. I had learned on the forum that there was a way to visit an old abandoned estate (Pazo) on the other side of the river, which would also add a little bit of distance. I did some more searching and found that there were several trails on that side of the river that would take me up high, to some waterfalls, and then to a couple of little towns on my way back down to the river. I pieced together some Wikiloc tracks and got a good alternative – 24 km and about 600 m elevation gain.

      It was a combination of two local trails, both very well-maintained and marked. I saw several people out walking, all single women from the nearby villages, and also met a man tending his little patch of grape vines. The waterfalls were quite nice, and the walk along the ridge at the top gave such a different view than what we normally see walking down by the river. I came into town over an ancient pedestrian bridge, and saw that there was a Roman millario right next to it! I am very happy to have done this route, and I arrived in A Rua just in time to have a menú del día with Clare.

      Despite the weather forecast, it was a glorious day, but rain is back in the forecast tomorrow. It looks like the morning will be dry, so I will start out good and early!
      Les mer

    • Dag 17–20

      die letzte Unterkunft

      29. april, Spania ⋅ ☁️ 16 °C

      Die letzten 3 Nächte verbringe ich in dieser schönen Wohnung. Morgen schaue ich mir Santiago an und gehe natürlich zur Kathedrale um mir meinen Sündenerlass schriftlich geben zu lassen. Heute noch einkaufen und chillen.Les mer

    Det kan også være du kjenner dette stedet med følgende navn:

    Galicia, Galicien, منطقة غاليسيا, جاليسيا, Qalisiya, Галісія, Галисия, গালিথিয়া, Galiza, Galicija, Galícia, Galizia, Galicie, Galisia, Γαλικία, Galegio, گالیسیا, Galice, Galysje, Comunidade Autónoma de Galicia, Yn Ghaleesh, גליסיה, गलिशिया, Galisiya, Գալիսիա, Gallecia, Galisía, ガリシア, გალისია, Галисиэ, 갈리시아 지방, Galîsya, Galisi, Gallaecia, Galissia, Galisija, Галиција, गालिसिया, Galicië, Galicia i Spania, Галиси, Galicja, گالیکیا, A Galiza, Galisya, Галиция, Galizzia, கலீசியா, แคว้นกาลิเซีย, Galiçya, 加利西亚

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