Sepanyol
Tui

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    • Hari 3

      Von Bom Camino zu Buen Camino

      25 April 2022, Sepanyol ⋅ ⛅ 12 °C

      Heute ging es von Portugal nach Spanien, also von Bom- zum Buen Camino, zuvor waren jedoch noch 20 Km Strecke angesagt.
      So begannen wir unseren Fußweg gegen 07.30 Uhr. Wie sich herausstellte viel zu früh, hatten wir unser heutiges Etappenziel in Tui doch bereits gegen 14.30 Uhr erreicht. Egal…!!!
      War auch der Wandertag heute eher als unspektakulär zu bezeichnen, hatten es dafür jedoch der Abend und die Nacht in sich!!! So fand heute in Tui eine besondere Fiesta statt, nämlich die Huldigung von Saint Telmo, dem Schutzpatron der Seefahrt. Diese wird alljährlich am 25. April gefeiert und deshalb muss mein täglicher Footprint hier auch enden, beginnt doch genau in diesem Moment das zugehörige Feuerwerk...
      🎇🎆
      Baca lagi

    • Hari 6

      Tui

      17 Oktober 2022, Sepanyol ⋅ 🌧 19 °C

      All I have to say today:

      Mi querida, querida España... I'm on my way home ❤️

    • Hari 23

      Cast of human and animal characters

      14 Jun 2019, Sepanyol ⋅ ⛅ 66 °F

      I've walked 57 kilometers since I last posted (80 before that) and have crossed the border into Spain. Am taking a rest day in Tui.

      Animals seen so far, besides the usual domestic ones:

      Starlings like we have, but with bright orange beaks I rescued one baby off the road and put it on a limb where its mother could find it.

      Small nondescript brown birds with a beautiful, varied trilly song, magpies, seagulls, herons, and many other birds I can't identify

      A small brown vole ambled across the trail in front of me

      Green, whiptail-style lizards

      A dead grey-brown snake (about a meter long)

      Small tree frog-size brown and green frogs near springs, Larger Leopard frog-size green frogs in rivers and ponds. I followed the frog-song and grabbed a tree frog to show Sean and he squeaked like a little girl. Apparently he has a frog phobia.

      Human Cast of Characters:

      More people are showing up on the road and I've gotten to know some of them a bit as we leapfrog past each other walking and meet up in cafes and albergues.

      Sean, the British ex-policeman who drives a London cab. We keep meeting up again and again.

      The Czech woman with her 3 1/2 year old son

      Tricia, who lives 1/2 mile from me in Albuquerque

      Father John, wearing his long black robe and carrying his backpack containing - along with his regular walking gear - props used for saying Mass along the way. He's from New Hampshire and belongs to the Brothers Fraternity of St. Peter. He was invited to walk the Portuguese camino with an American family as their spiritual adviser; he’d walked the Camino Frances a year ago. Before I met him, Sean and I were walking along and he was describing this priest in a long black robe he saw and just then we turned a corner and came upon Father John sitting on a step. Sean said, “Wow, I was just telling her that I saw a priest in a black habit walking down the trail!" Fr. John replied, "that sounds like the start of a joke."

      The next day I walked with Father John for a while and I told him about the Virgen de Guadalupe mosaic mural I worked on for the Franciscan friary. He said, " I'm surprised we haven't run across any of them. This path screams Franciscans to me." We ate dinner together; I had a glass of wine and he ordered a Mojito. He wasn't walking with the family for a few days because he's required to have a 5 day solo retreat every year and he's taking that now. Apparently drinking and goofing around with me during his retreat is ok!

      Richard Parkes, the New Zealander writer and water activist who I pass every few days, sittting outside a cafe pounding away on his solar powered laptop.

      Two impossibly tall, thin Austrian women I call “the stork sisters.”(to myself, not to them)

      The group of Germans who are absorbing other Germans as they go, like an amoeba on the trail. They greet me but usually don't invite me to sit with them, because they don't want to have to speak English. One of them whistles constantly, which I really think is worse than snoring in the albergue.

      Xiao Yin, the Chinese man who lived in France and doesn't have a plan after this. He envied my poles, so tromped down into the forest and broke a couple of sticks for himself.

      A sister and brother from Mexico, across the border near South Padre Island. They are in their 20s, she wanted to walk to Fatima, so she brought her brother along and after Fatima, they are now walking to Santiago. So nice to hear and talk Mexican Spanish! They were at Fernanda's albergue, too. Buena gente.

      Older South African couple who are forever indebted to me after I gave them my Brierley guidebook to the Camino Portugues, when they lost theirs. I keep thinking they will give up, but they are real troopers, walking some good mileage each day and I run into them again and again.

      Jared, the young climber/motorcycle mechanic from Alberta, Canada who was living in Peru and then found a cheap flight to Europe and started walking the camino on a whim. He only follows the route sometimes, then gets lost for a day or two. He has a knee injury from bull riding. We talk motorcycles whenever I see him, which turns out to be often.

      Frank and Gabrielle from Holland, with fine-tuned sarcastic senses of humor.
      Baca lagi

    • Hari 7

      Tag 6

      15 Mei 2022, Sepanyol ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

      Heute früh ging es nach einem guten Frühstück und Regen von Rubiaes nach Tui. Nach 4 km bemerkte Heiko das seine Kamera fehlt. Er ist also zurück und wir haben gewartet. Nach 2 Stunden war er wieder zurück und wir nächsten wir. Kurz vor Valenca haben wir dann das letzte Mal auf portugiesischer Seite gegessen. Das Essen auf dem Foto hat uns 23€gekostet. Dann über die Grenzbrücke und waren in Spanien. Am Freitag wollen wir dann dann in Santiago sein. Habe ich echt vergessen, in Pointe der Lima würde Heiko als 88.000 pilgern der in dieser Herberge übernachtet geehrt.Baca lagi

    • Hari 23

      TUI - Dolce vita 💃

      6 Mac 2022, Sepanyol ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C

      Heute erlebte ich schon Extreme. Eigentlich wollte ich nach Vigo. Mein Campernavi bot mir aber 5 versch. Orte an.
      Deshalb nahm ich mein Handynavi, auf dem auch die Entfernung passte.
      Puuuuhhhh, das kannte aber die Maße von meinem Womo nicht und lenkte mich durch engste Gässchen.... bis es nicht mehr weiter ging. Ich stecke fest!! Vorwärst komme ich nicht mehr weiter - und rückwärts, so eng, so schmal. Ich kam leicht ins schwitzen.
      Ein netter älterer Spanier lotste mich dann doch zielsicher rückwarts wieder raus.

      Vigo war gestrichen. Dann nach TUI, die letzte Station vor der portugiesischen Grenze.
      Kam auf einem unsehnlichen großen Parkplatz an. Die einzige Sehenswürdigkeit ist die Kathedrale.
      Zu Fuß mache ich mich mit den Zwergen auf... was mich dann erwartete: 💃🎼🎸🎺spanisches Dolce vita.
      Musik, fröhliche, schön und verrückt gekleidete Menschen, ein tolles Treiben. 🌹💃❤️🎼.
      Ja, jetzt weiß ich, warum ich direkt nach TUI fahren sollte.
      Namaste 😇🙏🍀
      Baca lagi

    • Hari 23

      Lugar de Corgo, Portugal to Tui, Spain

      14 Jun 2019, Sepanyol ⋅ ⛅ 64 °F

      After the communal dinner with laughing and singing at Fernanda's and her big breakfast spread the next morning, I headed out.

      The path passed through old oak forests, vivid green meadows and small villages, each big white house with an immaculate vegetable garden and grapevines over arbors. Everyone must make their own wine. At times, the trail followed 2000 year old Roman cobblestone roads, picturesque bridges over streams.

      The next town of some size was Ponte de Lima, a part-Roman, part-Medieval bridge connecting the two parts of the city over the Rio Lima. A small city with fortified towers and lots of narrow, cobbled alleyways, mostly just for strolling. I'm not sure why I don't live there. If you ever visit Ponte de Lima, you will wonder that, too.

      When I arrived, sitting at a cafe table outside the municipal albergue were John, the New Zealander water activist having a beer and talking with Jared, the Canadian motorcycle mechanic, debating the merits and pitfalls of different sources of alternative energy. They had just met. Two of my favorite pilgrims so far, so I crashed their party. I learned that electric cars are not really sustainable because of the batteries (wasteful to produce and to throw away), and that it's not that hard, with some new parts and tinkering, to adapt an inner-combustion engine to run on hydrogen.

      I slept in the "municipal" albergue where one of the Austrian stork sisters poked me twice during the night because I was snoring. I don't want to be "that guy" (I too hate people who snore in the albergue) so I've decided to seek out private rooms after this. Not much more expensive for vastly improved comfort and often a private bathroom and shower!

      Leaving Ponte de Lima, I fell in with Sean and the Dutch couple, Frank and Gabrielle. The three of them had developed a series of inside jokes and I was quickly brought up to speed. Together we climbed steeply 575 meters (almost 2000 ft.) on a rugged, rocky trail through pine forest up to Alto de Portela, the summit, and ate lunch. Many of the pine trees have a section of bark cut off and a bag attached below, catching the fluid. Turpentine? Sean commented that, without some level of fitness, this climb wouldn’t just be a piece of cake for a lot of people.

      Throughout the climb and the long steep decline, Sean mewled about his blisters. No one wanted to hear about my knee, though.

      At Rubiaes, I peeled off from my friends and found a comfortable hostel outside of town while they continued on. I think I was the only person staying there. I asked the hospitalero in Spanish about dinner options and, as usual, he understood me but I couldn’t understand him. But with some words in common and sign language, I figured out that I was to meet him in front at 7pm and he would drive me somewhere to eat. He drove me to a café down the road a ways, which apparently is his place too, because he went to work at the bar while I ate and then drove me home afterwards. I spotted the German amoeba pilgrim group at another table and they waved.

      Leaving the next morning, next to the church in town I found an ancient Roman mile marker! These stones were placed by the Roman military to mark each 1000 paces (counting steps by the left foot). Later on the walk, I passed another one.

      I hiked on alone through more gorgeous, rural Portugal for about 23 kilometers, meeting up and walking with Father John for part of it. I like that guy.

      Finally, I entered the walled, Portuguese border town, Valenca, passed through the fortress tunnels to emerge onto a long bridge over the River Minho into Spain. Along the Camino, there are hand-painted yellow arrows to help with navigation. However there were long stretches without them, including at forks in the road and it’s not hard to get lost. So I thought it was funny that there were yellow arrows painted every few posts along the high bridge over the river, like there was anyway to make a wrong turn?
      Baca lagi

    • Hari 9

      Über den Rio Minho 🥾

      21 Mei 2022, Sepanyol ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

      Der Rio Minho bildet die Grenze zu Spanien. Nicht zuletzt dank der noch immer beeindruckenden Fortaleza konnte Portugal seinen Anspruch auf das Gebiet südlich des Flusses über die Jahrhunderte behaupten.
      Über die Brücke läuft es sich ganz entspannt in ein anderes Land, schon sehr faszinierend. Für Fußgänger mit einem Strich markiert , der jedoch schon in die Jahre gekommen ist 😃 und man schon bisschen Phantasie braucht um es zu erkennen.
      Baca lagi

    • Hari 12

      Ciao, Portugal, ¡Hola, España! Act II

      24 September 2022, Sepanyol ⋅ ☀️ 68 °F

      Photos and more photos.

      G’night all.

    • Hari 16

      Day 9 Tui to O Porrino

      29 April 2023, Sepanyol ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      The day there were forests and bagpipes

    • Viva España

      17 April 2019, Sepanyol ⋅ 🌧 14 °C

      Nach dem (schnellen) Durchqueren der - in meinen Augen hässlichen Stadt Valenca und dem Passieren der Grenzbrücke habe ich nun Spanien erreicht. Die heutige 7. Etappe war eher durchwachsen, am Anfang recht schön, zum Ende hin im Großraum Valenca leider nicht wirklich sehenswert. Viel Autolärm, Industriegebiet und dann die volle Stadt Valenca. Nun erreiche ich mein Tagesziel Tui, die erste spanische Stadt.Baca lagi

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