Spain
Plaza de Platerías

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    • Day 37

      O Pedrouzo to Santiago de Compostela

      May 8 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 77 °F

      34 days of walking. 500 miles through 274 cities, towns, and hamlets. Roughly 1,023,000 steps in 170 hours of walking. I’ve made it to Santiago de Compostela and completed the Camino Francés!

      I started walking early this morning at 7:00 am and got to Santiago in time to get my Compostela (certificate of completion as well as a secondary certificate of distance completed). I then went to the Cathedral and attended the noon pilgrims mass. Pilgrims (in announcements in multiple languages) were reminded before communion that if they were not Catholic, they were not welcome at the Lord’s table; that caused a lot of people just stand up and leave at that point. I stayed for five more minutes and then followed the other outcasts out through a church side door. Sigh.

      I then had a hamburger and a glass of wine before walking to the Anglican Pilgrim Centre. I was hoping to stop in and take some photos for their website which I help support, but no one answered the door. So, I checked into my hotel and rested a bit before venturing out again.

      Tonight is the eve of Ascension Day, so tomorrow is a bank holiday. Concerts were going on in huge outdoor stage venues on opposing sides of the cathedral. I watched the music events and then tucked in very late (midnight!) as I have a bus tour early tomorrow to Finisterre and Muxia.

      I’m feeling loved and supported and grateful to have the time away from my ministry work to do the Camino Frances. And I’m looking forward to seeing my husband, Bryan, in a couple days and enjoying some time together cruising the Mediterranean.

      Thanks for being with me on this journey as a reader and support!
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    • Day 40

      12:00 Pilgrims Mass

      June 26, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 55 °F

      We are early but the line was already long getting into Cathedral so we went in and just found a seat..
      The main altarpiece is stunning... and Botafumeiro is hung... so I am definitely hoping 🙏
      Meanwhile just taking pictures of anything near to our seats...

      Santiago
      The Big organ
      Going into St.James' Crypt
      Memorial plaque to Pope John Paul II

      So... Botafumeiro DID fly... 😁🙏❤....but try as I may I couldn't upload it to Google Drive ( too large of a file to attach here so I thought I put it there and then provide the link) so most likely I will have to wait till I get home to try to finish that piece off.
      Meanwhile here is the rest of the pictures

      P.S. As promised - here is the link to the video with Botafumeiro. Because we were sitting facing the Center of the Altar I can only video that part and unfortunately we cannot see Botafumeiro going the whole length of its path.
      None the less, it was AWESOME and magical!

      https://drive.google.com/file/d/13QS-otjKhy1EGC…
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    • Day 37

      Pilgrim mass(es)

      April 28 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 12 °C

      I've been fairly picky and contrarian about which of the religious parts of this whole thing I participate in, and I've tried not to let the word "should" weasel its way in there.

      Midday pilgrim mass in the SdC cathedral made the cut. I bloody LOVE the shaking hands bit. The rest was all honesty boring and long and uncomfortable. Nowhere near as inclusive and gentle as O'Cebriero but to be fair SdC are the big dogs and can do what they like. Maybe it was and I just couldn't understand the mumbling ancient priest.

      Place was packed. I was perched on a tiny ledge of a stone pillar base and spent most of the hour wishing we could make a decision on standing or sitting because either is fine but my back has strong feelings about the transition. You very strictly could not take photos during mass and there were roaming security guards to make sure of this.

      Lining up for the tomb of St James did not make the cut. I zipped out of there, taking the stairs past the queue waiting to join the one inside two at a time, to show off.
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    • Day 12

      Ponte Ulla nach Santiago (21km)

      April 25 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

      Heute brachen wir wie immer sehr früh am Morgen auf. Es ging auf die letzte Etappe, und das Erreichen des Zieles: Santiago de Compostela. Für Friedrich das erste Mal und für mich das zweite Mal, dass ich die Türme der Kathedrale sehe und sich die Emotionen des Caminos in einer einzigartigen Mixtur zusammenfinden. Die ersten 11 km waren wie immer mit Gesprächen gefüllt und wir genossen die wundervolle Natur. Je näher wir jedoch Santiago kamen, desto größer wurde die Aufregung. Und dann 2 km vor dem großen Platz kam es zur Sichtung der Türme und wir trafen unsere irische Bekanntschaft wieder. Die Freude war groß. Wie es einer unserer spanischen Freunde in seinem Toast gestern Abend sagte, gibt es sie: "la Familia de Camino". Wir sind dieser geworden.
      Schließlich kamen wir an der Kathedrale und in Santiago an. 🥰 Wieder einen Camino gegangen und gelebt. Nach 11 Tagen und 260 km vieler Emotionen, Begegnungen, wunderbarer Menschen, wundervoller Natur und Ereignissen ist ein Camino wieder zu Ende. Aber das Ende des einen Camino ist schon der Beginn eines neuen Camino, und der Kopf beginnt zu arbeiten. Außerdem wurde eine Freundschaft auf die Probe gestellt und gestärkt. Danke für die wundervollen Zeit. 🥰 Und jetzt werden wir auf uns, unsere Freunde und den nächsten Camino trinken.
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    • Day 37

      Completo!

      October 25, 2023 in Spain ⋅ 🌧 17 °C

      On the Camino, when an albergue is full and has no more available beds it puts up a sign that reads “completo.” My trip, my experience here on the Camino is now very nearly completo.
      Yesterday, along with Morgan, David, Ollie and a new young friend, Ihne, from Norway, I walked into Santiago. We walked through rain with clear patches as well. We walked at times alone, then pulling together, allowing plenty of space for all the needed conversations to happen amongst various pairs of us. I watched David and Ollie walk and talk together; it was so good to see. Morgan and I took time to revel in what we had done together as well.
      As we wound through the outer portions of Santiago toward the old town and the Cathedral the rain slowed and mostly stopped. We had glimpses of sun, even, as we took our final steps through a covered stone passage and down broad steps filled with the music of bagpipes. I LOVE bagpipes!

      We all funneled out into the great square in front of the towering grey stone Cathedral, laughing, gasping, many of us crying. We spotted others we knew and there were many, many hugs. Joseph was there, who we had not seen in days! He is a photographer and he generously took so many photos. Thank you, Joseph! This all went on for some time. We were so happy, so amazed, so…stunned to actually have arrived. Then group by group we peeled off, mostly heading to the office where we registered officially as having completed the pilgrimage, where each of us showed our hard-earned credentials and received our Compostela.

      That was yesterday, and I just was not ready to try to describe our arrival. I knew I needed to wait for today, and I’m glad I did. Yesterday in the square, I was as stunned, happy, and celebratory as anyone, but in typical fashion I was also dry eyed. Which was fine! Today though, after I toured through the cathedral, saw the crypt of St. James, did all the things, I discovered a small, very quiet side chapel designated for silence and prayer. I sat in that chapel, along with a small handful of others, gazing at a beautiful ciborium holding the Host, and it was there, unexpectedly, that my tears arrived in a flood, along with a profound awareness of being completely known. It was a great gift. What else can I even say?

      At the limit of my words, I will reach for those of a great Basque lover of the Camino, Antxon González Gabarain:

      “…you can give me torrential rain all the way down the Alto de Perdon, or a hurricane wind in my face all the way to Lubier. Give me 46 degrees in the shade in Merida, or a meter of frozen snow on Lepoeder Pass. Give me a line of bicyclists skidding ‘round the curves that climb Markina, and give me seven days straight without seeing a single waymark. Give me… give me the five most infuriating hospitaleros who ever existed, during five consecutive days, and give me miles of asphalt underfoot. And signs that say “Completo” and “Closed,” and as many blisters as you want. Give me hunger and thirst. Don’t forget to give me a cold shower – you know how much I love those! Give me albergues full of Frenchmen and bedbugs, and give me a poorly-placed waymark at the worst possible moment…  “But more than anything, give me a Camino, and give me thirty days.”
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    • Day 47

      Exploring Santiago

      November 3, 2022 in Spain ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

      We had about a day and a half in Santiago to get to know the city. We stayed in a hotel right outside the old city. After doing a bunch of chores like, getting new shoes, shipping hiking stuff home, and laundry, we did a lot of walking around this very old city. We visited the cathedral. Saw the tomb of St. James. Attended a mass for Pilgrims (Jim did the first reading & responsorial psalm). Shopped for a few nonhiking things to wear for the next leg of the trip. The summer flowers were still looking pretty around Catheral Square, kind of a contrast, as we saw city workers busily putting up Christmas lights & decorations.Read more

    • Day 27

      Rest day in Santiago

      October 4, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☀️ 20 °C

      The city is filled to the brim. So many pilgrims— you see the ones arriving, the ones who have arrived and are spending some time here, and the ones all packed up and on their way to train , bus, or plane. Occupancy rates are the highest they’ve been all year.

      This morning, I had to pack up my stuff and move from one hotel to another. It wasn’t a big deal, but it is amazing that I was unable to get two nights in a row in the same place, unless I wanted to spend €333 for a room in the Parador.

      I went through the holy door, which is only open during holy years and provides a plenary indulgence. A holy year is a year in which Saint James day falls on a Sunday, though the pope extended last year’s I also attended the Pilgrim Mass. and saw the botafumeiro swing. Though I got to the cathedral an hour before the mass, there were no seats left; I found a very comfortable perch at the base of an old stone column. It was a high mass, officiated by one Archbishop, two or three bishops, and about seven other priests. It felt a little weird that the celebration was in honor of international policing day. Some high-ranking officials from the national police made a few statements. And then one of the priests talked to us about how necessary police are and how we should be prepared to give up liberty to ensure tranquility. It was a bit jarring to someone used to the idea of separation of church and state. But then I have often been surprised by how many solemn Spanish religious celebrations include participation by the military, so I guess this is no different. After the mass I lit a bunch of candles and sat in the now almost empty cathedral. I remembered the day about 15 years ago when Dana and I walked into Santiago from the Camino del Norte and ran into my parents in the cathedral. We had known we were close but in those pre-iPhone days we were not in close contact. How I miss them.

      I got a ticket to visit the Portico de la Gloria, the original doorway to the cathedral before they added the current baroque facade. Thankfully, they left the Romanesque in tact. After about a decade of restoration (and 11 million euros), it’s once again open to the public. No pictures are allowed, so you’ll have to Google it if you want to see. I (and many who know a lot more than I do) think it’s one of the most beautiful examples of Romanesque in Spain. My favorites are the 24 elders in a circle around Christ, each one playing a different medieval instrument. And the smiling Prophet Daniel.

      The stars at home have aligned to allow me to enjoy the icing on the cake —walking to Muxia and then Finisterre. I haven’t been out to the ocean in years, and I am so grateful that I got the greenlight. I’ll be doing longer than usual days so as not to abuse their graciousness. This means four more days of walking and then a few days to get home.
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    • Day 34

      The full experience

      August 25, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

      When I started researching the Camino, it didn't take long until I learnt about the dreaded bed bugs.
      They are a feature.
      For a few days I was kind of paranoid about them, and thought I'd be thoroughly checking every bed, possibly spraying bed and sleeping gear, not letting anything touch the bed, not letting the backpack touch the floor, etc.
      Early in the Camino I realised that those precautions were very impractical. Albergues are generally very clean, most provide disposable sheets and pillowcase, and I got to Santiago without a single bite.

      But today, having spent my first night in Santiago, my fingers were itchy. Then my forearm. Then my other arm... yes, I got the full Camino experience, bed bugs and all! 🤣

      It's gross ,I know, but honestly they feel no worse than mosquito bites and don't cause any disease. They're just a nuisance. I'm not worried, and I think that the chance that I'm carrying any of the bugs in my clothes, etc. are very slim. I checked my sleeping bag liner and didn't find anything.
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    • Day 7

      Dinner 💓

      June 7, 2023 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

      Dinner was amazing last night!!! We went to a restaurant near by the hotel. We had no idea what to get so we decided to get get three dishes and just share that and boy oh boy…Betsy was in heaven! We had roast lamb, silver hake, predron peppers and my personal favorite, pulpo!! It was raining like crazy but we sat inside the restaurant and were watching pilgrims go by! Really good food, really good evening! We go to our next destination tomorrow where we officially start #LetsPushBetsy 😇Read more

    • Day 67

      A pilgrim no more

      June 17, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ☁️ 25 °C

      After waking back into town I found the Albergue with a lovely Italian guy called Lukas running it- he let me check in early and I made breakfast then heated down to get my bag from the post office and send off a memento and little treat for Eva. I was glad for a sturdy bag and wheels as it was a km back to the Albergue.

      After a shower and a shave I washed all my pilgrim clothes in the washing machine (shock horror) changed in to tourist clothes and headed back into town.

      I saw a sign for a massage place right in St James Square and they had a space in a couple of hours so after enjoying a coffee and paella I was led down into this old stone basement to the massage area which was fantastic.

      I then settled sleepily back to the Albergue to find Lucas had put the clothes through the dryer.

      Hopefully going dancing tonight and checking out the festival.
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Plaza de Platerías, Plaza de Platerias

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