Spain
Zamora

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
Travelers at this place
    • Day 16

      Day Sixteen: Eight Hours of Carpooling

      March 31 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 9 °C

      Today was the dreaded 8-hour carpool ride to Madrid. And we slept in a little, but we didn't have time to do anything before he picked us up. He made us walk 30 minutes to a pick-up location and even kinda forced us to come early. It was normal Ford focus, and there were 5 of us. So, the middle seat! Me and Ethan ended up splitting being the middle, but man, it killed my ass. It was worse than the flight over! When we finally got there, they even dropped us off 30-minute walk away. But that's OK, it's a beautiful city and fun just to walk around, a much needed walk after sitting for so long. There seemed to be a lot of large historical buildings too. We walked past the largest parliament? Building I have ever seen, too. Check-in was easy, and the beds seemed nice enough. The pillows were strange, though; they were super narrow and very long. There were two of them, so one was a nice cuddle pillow. But before the night we really needed something to eat. But everything was so expensive and full. We kept going somewhere and it was too full or too expensive. Finally said screw it and ended at one. It seemed seemed expensive at first, so we decided to split one order of ribs, and it turns out the dish was huge and delicious! For the night, we came to the conclusion that every new hostel we go to we should start with some event to meet the people there. So we did the pub crawl. And it started with free sangria! Anything free always tastes better. There were probably about 10 people for it, and they were all really nice! Going out, we ended up mostly hanging with this guy named Tom from America, someone from Britain, a guy from Greece, and a lady from Ukraine (who is living there now). Turns out she has to go to a shelter every night to sleep, and they can see the missiles in the sky, too. It's some really scary stuff. But it was one of the best nights. We ended up going to 4 or 5 bars finishing the night at a nightclub. And multiple times, we thought we were at the nightclub, but we weren't. The bars are so insane and fun here. Me and Ethan even used his jacket for limbo, and everyone loved it! It was one of the best nights so far. Everyone was super friendly, and the bars were so fun! I have now found out that I enjoy dancing! It was so fun that it turned into a very late night. Everything is open crazy late. The party culture is so much different, but the people are so easy-going, and I'm never worried. But I have still been smart enough to get home safe :)Read more

    • Day 5

      Neue Aufgaben

      August 30, 2023 in Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 26 °C

      Heute befiehlt König Dominik. Die Aufgaben der Carbage Run eine lebende spanische Fliege ins Ziel zu bringen und ein Foto von einem Seat Marbella Cabriolet zu machen, interessieren uns nicht.
      Der König will genießen. Tapas essen und einfach fahren.
      Hoch lebe der König!
      Was für ein entspannter Tag.
      Tachostand der Fahrt 2744 km.
      Read more

    • Day 2

      Made it -and our bags did too!

      October 9, 2023 in Portugal ⋅ 🌙 17 °C

      I swore I would never ever transfer in Heathrow after our experience last year, which was one for the record books (we made a 45 minute connection when our plane from Lisbon was an hour late into London, but it wasn't pretty). But that was where the re-routing sent us, and since we had five hours, I figured we wouldn't have to rush.

      The very nice woman in the BA lounge told me she was pretty sure my bags had made it from Chicago. I took that as a good sign and when we arrived in Lisbon at 4:30, instead of the 9 am arrival I had booked, our bags were there. YAY.

      Got the rental car, got out of town quickly, but it was a a five hour drive. I had a cup of coffee and got behind the wheel. At 10:30 or thereabouts, we rolled into our hotel. We have a room with a balcony looking over the castle. Rather than drink our welcome glass of wine in the bar, we are going to sit out on the balcony and breathe, just like Kathy told me to! Who else gives you a glass of wine to welcome you other than pousadas and paradores?!

      I saw that our hotel has a one star Michelin restaurant and the food doesn't look too out there -- no foam at all in sight on the pictures I see in the brochure. So we will splurge a little and eat there tomorrow.

      Tomorrow we will spend the day in Bragança and I will probably just sit on the balcony and not do anything while Joe naps.
      Read more

    • Day 4

      Long long dinner

      October 11, 2023 in Portugal ⋅ 🌙 15 °C

      Who has a 4 1/2 hour dinner?! I am really not a foodie, but when the opportunity presented itself to have a meal in a Michelin star restaurant, I thought, sure.

      It was course after course after course. Always small and beautifully presented. Most of it was local, all of it was Portuguese. Pretty amazing.

      My favorites were the green gazpacho, whose main ingredient was beldroega/purslane, which I had never heard of, and the cheese course. But it was all really good. Except for the foam dishes. What’s with foam?! Why would you have foam when you can have the real thing that you just destroyed and made into foam?

      We started talking to the couple next to us, a Spanish/Portuguese combo, who were just driving around Portugal going from Michelin star restaurant to Michelin star restaurant. Definitely not my mojo, but it was fun to talk to them.

      OK, so tomorrow we’re supposed to get up and go to Zamora!
      Read more

    • Day 3

      Visiting Bragança

      October 10, 2023 in Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

      This is my kind of tourism day, except for the part about Joe feeling sick and staying in bed for the morning. It seems that 24 hours of airport and airplane food did not sit well with his stomach. He’s fine now, but stayed in bed till about noon.

      That meant I had all morning to walk around town center and climb the castle walls! Lots of up and down, lots of pretty views. I just love these small cities, where life is really going on but some (but not too many) tourists come to see their beautiful historic sites. In this case, it’s basically the castle and the old part inside the walls. There is a late medieval “Town Hall” inside the walls. It´s an oddly shaped stone building (looks like a pentagon drawn by someone with bad measuring skills). But it’s a beautiful building, another one of those rare civic romanesque buildings still standing (my other favorite is the Palacio Gelmirez in Santiago, but this is nothing that elaborate). This was where the city leaders met to govern, and the meeting hall sits above the cistern.

      And for those of you who have heard a lot about the Duques de Bragança, they are from here, of course, but they were the ruling royal family in Portugal from mid 17th century till the monarchy fell in early 1900s. That’s why there are Bragança palaces all over the country. I was told there is still a Duque de Bragança, though I’m not sure how he spends his day now that there’s no monarchy.

      Around noon, I was able to convince Joe that he’d have much more fun coming along for a drive through the Parque Natural de Montesinho, a huge swath of northern Portugal that hits the Spanish border. We went to a few small hamlets, old houses all made of stone, deserted except for a few old people and the occasional café. On our way back into Bragança, I took the back route up to the castle and parked the car about five minutes away so Joe could go see it.

      When I dropped Joe off for his nap, I decided to walk back to the castle area because I had seen a sign pointing to the “”albergue de peregrinos.” I know there’s a route through here, the Zamorano-Portugués, and it’s one I’ve been eyeing. I was happy to find 5 Spanish pilgrims there, all of whom raved about the route (except for the heat). The albergue system is estupendo, they said — nice scenery, no crowds, but good facilities. Maybe part of Camino 2024?

      I’m back at the hotel with a little time before dinner. I am not sure that Joe’s stomach will be up for a tasting menu, though, so I don’t know what we’ll do. Eating a fancy meal while he watches me doesn’t sound like much fun. We’ll see.
      Read more

    • Day 13

      Porto 1,2,3 los!

      February 13, 2023 in Portugal ⋅ 🌙 9 °C

      Ich bin in Portugal, yiepieh!!!
      Portugal ist mein absolutes europäisches Lieblingsland!
      Die Portugießen übertreffen für mich die französiche und spanische Küche.
      Das einzige was sie nicht haben....die Düne,
      dafür aber soviele unterschiedliche Strände und Strandbuchten die das wieder aufwiegen.
      Und für mich als Muschelsammlerin ein Paradies!! Solche Muscheln habe ich nicht annähernd in Frankreich und Spanien gefunden.

      Na, wer möchte mit mir Porto erleben, geniessen, entdecken...?
      Read more

    • Day 11

      Hotel mitten in verbrannter Erde...

      September 6, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

      ... und einem gelöschten riesigen Flächen- und Waldbrand.
      Fotos von schwarzen Bäumen auf schwarzen Böden habe ich nicht gemacht... schwarz in schwarz. Sehr trauriger Anblick. An fast allen Häusern sind unzählige Bettlacken mit "Dank an die Brandbekämpfer".Read more

    • Day 10

      Das wird ne gute Nacht ❤️😴💤

      September 5, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 23 °C

      Ich freue mich schon sehr auf mein Bett 😁
      Gerade noch was gefuttert, und die Müdigkeit ist auch schon da.
      Heute haben wir mal etwas entspannter angehen lassen😊

      Gute Nacht allerseits, schlaft gut 💤💤💤

    • Day 4

      Day 40 - Villar de Farfón - 10 km

      October 30, 2022 in Spain ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

      Wow - day 40 and the nearly the end of the month!
      Weather: 8 - 17 degrees. Cloudy then sunny.
      Clothes: long sleeve merino top today, light wind fleece, trekking pants, and then rain jacket a bit later as it cooled down higher up in the hills - and I’m going slow with lots of stops.

      I’m so happy it stopped raining during the night.
      Three young peregrinos arrived last night; wet, cold, tired and hungry after walking some 35 km. By then it was raining too much for them to go to the Bar over the river so they cobbled together some dinner from the little shop just down the road. A tough night but the sun is out so I think things will get better for them.
      My walk plan: stop every 30 mins to rest the knee.

      The walk
      Flat agricultural land - some with corn and some fallow. There was one section after Olive de Tera where the roadside was planted with alternating apple trees and grape vines. The apple trees had all dropped their fruit - enough to make a lot of cider. I thought about how beneficent these trees are; they reminded me of Latvia - they just keep on giving.
      Just further there were some acres of abandoned vines- I think they were grapes but also some other berry vine that I couldn’t recognise. I wonder what happened.
      I am sitting outside a church quite far from town (stop #2) and had a lovely interaction with a local lady who was walking by. The Spanish quickly recognise pilgrims. It’s been a part of their culture for so many centuries and has been popularised in recent years. When you walk in Spain you feel at least recognised and sometimes honoured but always greeted well.
      The young woman from last night said she had walked in Italy and did not get the same reaction.
      Climbing a bit higher a lake appears and most of the walk is spent skirting the lake and crossing over the dam wall and then walking along the other side. Sadly there is lots of evidence of last summers bushfires. It’s lovely high country and must have been truly beautiful last spring. There are small areas that the fires missed so hopefully the land will regenerate more easily.
      Where I am sitting (resting the knee) has not been completely burnt and there are still birds chirping and flitting through the trees.
      It’s so quiet here that even with the sound of the water passing through the dam’s spillway, I can still hear the flutter of bird wings. We are far away from any motorway now so the silence behind the sounds of nature is complete. The silence of the Self.
      A new thing. I heard the bang of what might be guns. I think this is a long weekend of hunting- I read about it on the Camino Forum from someone on another Camino. Just the odd bang here and there. 🙏

      And then a surprise. 😲
      Just as I was getting a bit tired I came to the next small village. It had so many old and crumbling buildings- it felt quite ancient. It has also been surrounded by fire. I wondered how the residents were managing.
      There was a sign that indicated coffee 200 metres and then coffee 80 metres. That’s where I needed to go. And then just as I got to the end of town the sweetest little albergue came into view. It looked like a pixie house. This was where I would get coffee.
      A man was hobbling down the lane and it turned out he was the hospitalaro- Craig originally from South Africa . He and his family are Christians and have been in various countries (India and Africa) doing good works - in the best sense of the word. They decided to come to Spain and open an albergue. Ten years ago Craig and his wife Dorothea bought a virtually derelict building and made a home for themselves and a refuge for pilgrims. During the fires Craig fell off the roof and broke his leg. His home and pilgrim refuge had been surrounded by fire.
      Anyway I knew this was my stopping point today. I drank two cups of tea (PG tips from the UK sooo good ☕️) and we talked for an over an hour about spirituality and Christianity before Craig showed me to my accomodation, checked me in and left me to the shower and clothes wash routine. Dinner is at 7 - a more manageable time for me. There is no shop in town so I have eaten nearly all the food I had with me. I had wondered why last night I didn’t share anything with the late comers. Now I knew - I needed it all for myself today.
      Now I am sitting in the sun out in the front rock-garden listening to the bees and flies and soaking in the warmth of the sun - and I was just visited by a huge fat bee. 🐝
      It’s so quiet and still here and reminds my of the high country of NSW - country so close to my heart.
      And still the silence continues…….

      How am I?
      My knee is still sore so I was planning to take it easy doing a slow 15 km - which turned into 10 km. The cool autumn weather is pleasant and the clouds are parting to show blue sky. It’s supposed to be sunny in the afternoon.
      I stopped to put my leg up for 5 minutes at a small village some 2.3 km from my starting point. I guess it will be another day of very regular stops to give the knee a chance to keep healing.
      I think I might have used most of the excess resources on my body. 😂. I seem to be getting hungry more quickly, and my one big meal doesn’t satisfy me for as long as it used to. Doesn’t mean I’m skinny though. But I guess as I build more muscle I need more food.
      Today I have eaten - bread, banana, half tub of yogurt, big avocado, tuna, more bread, chocolate - and it’s only 11.00 am and I could still eat. 🥗🥙🍕🍗🥘
      Anyway all is well. I was reflecting that in the early weeks of this Camino the walking was so hard that I couldn’t wait to get to the end of the day. Not only hard because of the landscape and weather but because the body wasn’t fit. Now I am happy to walk. The pack feels fine and of course the weather is much more user friendly particularly as I haven’t experienced any heavy rain to date.

      PS. The time changed. I gained an hour today but that means pilgrim dinner is at 6 pm. Yummy bean soup plus vino - of course.
      Read more

    • Day 3

      Day 39 - Calzadilla de Terra - 12 km

      October 29, 2022 in Spain ⋅ 🌧 16 °C

      Weather: 12 - 18 degrees. Cloudy with rain forecast later in the morning and afternoon
      Clothes: short sleeve merino shirt, light wind fleece, rain jacket, trekking pants.

      The scenery
      Todays walk was through small poplar plantations with beautiful autumn leaves, and past rich farm land - mainly flat and beside a slow river. The smell of the fallen leaves in the light rain was particularly special- reminding me of the Cotter River near Canberra. The rain so far has been very light and with the warm temperatures it is not a problem. The cold downpours of my nightmares haven’t eventuated.

      Today’s adventure.
      Because of my still healing knee I decided to just walk the 5 km along the road to the next town with a hotel. However I didn’t know that this town has archeological significance and I forgot it’s Saturday. So of course the hotel was ‘completo’ - full.
      Thinking I was only walking a short distance meant I went slowly and took a 5 minute break every 20 minutes - protecting my knee. So even though I couldn’t stay the night it was a great stop I would have otherwise bypassed. I had an excellent coffee and yummy pastry. Bueno.
      The next town was only another 5 km on so I continued slowly, enjoying every moment of the day. It made me realise that walking more slowly through the day benefits both body and mind.

      I am the only one in the albergue tonight. Often the albergues are locked or have a resident hospitalaro - but this one was open, with a box for donations and a self check in system. It’s on the first floor of a medical centre- but being Saturday the services downstairs are closed. There was a lovely welcoming feeling to just arrive and open the door.
      There is a small supermarket in town and a rather up-market Bar Blanco in the town across the river.
      I had chickpea soup, pork steaks and salad and flán for dessert (with the customary bottle of wine - I don’t drink it all) . Pork is pretty much a staple in Spain so always on the menu - but I think I am looking forward to a change.
      All the ‘boys’ have just arrived at the Bar and the cards are out. It’s a serious thing with a green felt cover on the table on which to play the cards. They must have finished lunch - I wonder what the women do.
      I’ll hang around here for a while and use the free wifi and then wander back to my albergue.
      I have enough food for a light snack tonight and breakfast tomorrow.
      I heard my next stop has an outstanding restaurant - it’s all about the food. 😂

      Buen Camino
      Read more

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Provincia de Zamora, Zamora, サモーラ

    Join us:

    FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android