Water or Wine Walking the Camino
45 Days of Walking across Northern Spain
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Friday, November 1, 2013
Walking the Camino Meseta
| Carrion de los Condes to Leon( many days of walking) |
| Burgos to Hontanas |
Already on the first day of walking the Meseta I am aware of the quiet, the hot sun, the huge horizon and flatness of space and for the first time, my aloneness, although Jim is walking ahead and pilgrim bicyclists roll on by and an occasional walking pilgrim passes me.
This is the part of the walk when I cry at the loss of my father and my youth as a toll is taken on my body. I cry for the pilgrims killed upon their Camino: from the Canadian who died so close to Roncesvalles after a major storm exploded from his start in St. Jean the day we arrived to the German bicyclist on the Meseta from many years ago who fell and hit his head to his death.
The Meseta seems to bring it all up for me and allows
me the space to grieve.
My heart is open and I connect to this world like never before.
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Albergues
| Pilgrims waiting for this Albergue to open |
Albergues can be part of a church or monastery or built in the last few years to accommodate the increase of Pilgrims.
| a new Albergue |
From between a donation to 9 Euros a Pilgrim can show their credentials, earn the stamp of the Albergue, shower, wash clothes and in some,use the kitchen and sleep with from 20 to 300 other pilgrims in bunk beds.
Hospitaleros(a) are the greeters, hosts, the support for the Pilgrims. These folks are usually volunteers who themselves have walked the Camino. They are from Spain , Germany, France and all of Europe and Korea and Asia too. Most are a gift to the Pilgrims, a few are a bane but it is all the same on the Camino.
The Hospitalero(a) sets the procedures of that particular Albergue. Doors locked and lights out at 10 PM. Lights on at 6 AM with heavenly music piped in to the dormitories or shrill alarms.
| From Holland and Germany to Hospitaleras |
Breakfast of bread and jam and coffee or no breakfast served. Pilgrim meal at 7 or 8 PM or you must go to a restaurant where they serve the meal. No wi fi( wi fee) or pay for a computer or no technology at all.
There are some larger Albergues that have from one to several private rooms with baths for up to 30E. We take advantage of this one time and it is heaven. The absence of plastic bags being rustled at 5 AM as Pilgrims try to get off early is lovely. The absence of snorers is better. The absence of the fit and not so fit hanging around in their underwear is the best. Simple pleasures.
Pensions, available rooms in the homes of the local Spanish and Hostels, a hotel setting, are also found on the Way and may cost 30 E or more but are a great treat once a week and we do take advantage .
| Estel, the peregrino rescuer. |
| Javier |
| The Hospitalereos |
| Albergue at the end of the world. |
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Three Roads
It is said that there are three roads on the Camino.
The first road is pain and suffering.
The second road is meditation and the third is enlightenment.
My experience supports this idea perfectly.
And because the beginning of every journey may have pain and suffering, the Camino is not unique.
We get stronger, meet strangers who become friends along the way who lessen our load. We learn to trust and accept. We may not understand everything that is happening to us but we have learned that things will change, over and over again. The only way to be free from the pain and suffering is to keep going forward, going through. No going back. No skipping ahead.
In the middle of our Way, we find the ability to calm ourselves one step at a time, one breath at a time. We have experienced the impermanence of pain and suffering and do not feel the sting of them any longer. We may continue to create blisters and other challenges but we have found our way to relax into it without the suffering. We have found the joy of the journey.
Finally, we have awareness and focus. We are present to the journey and are now a part of it. It is no longer separate from us.
It is said, as well, that to reach Santiago on the Camino we must use three parts of ourselves in equal measure.
The physical, the mental and the emotional. All three must be in harmony, working together. From lightly leaping through the paths on the Camino to putting one foot in front of the other to continue ; the physical is ever present.
We have learned to understand our mind and how it wants to give up and tell us this is too difficult or we are too old.
Our bodies are stronger and the load is lighter.
Our emotions are lighter as well.
Those final three mountain peaks are to dance through.
We are above all the challenges and simply feel the joy and beauty of it all.
We have become children again in our open hearts and trusting nature. The mud, the hills and mountains are our friends,our family at least for a time.
The first road is pain and suffering.
The second road is meditation and the third is enlightenment.
My experience supports this idea perfectly.
And because the beginning of every journey may have pain and suffering, the Camino is not unique.
We get stronger, meet strangers who become friends along the way who lessen our load. We learn to trust and accept. We may not understand everything that is happening to us but we have learned that things will change, over and over again. The only way to be free from the pain and suffering is to keep going forward, going through. No going back. No skipping ahead.
Finally, we have awareness and focus. We are present to the journey and are now a part of it. It is no longer separate from us.
It is said, as well, that to reach Santiago on the Camino we must use three parts of ourselves in equal measure.
The physical, the mental and the emotional. All three must be in harmony, working together. From lightly leaping through the paths on the Camino to putting one foot in front of the other to continue ; the physical is ever present.
We have learned to understand our mind and how it wants to give up and tell us this is too difficult or we are too old.
Our bodies are stronger and the load is lighter.
Our emotions are lighter as well.
Those final three mountain peaks are to dance through.
We are above all the challenges and simply feel the joy and beauty of it all.
We have become children again in our open hearts and trusting nature. The mud, the hills and mountains are our friends,our family at least for a time.
Monday, August 5, 2013
Follow that Sign!
Leaving cities or a number of villages early enough you can follow other pilgrims or listen to locals yelling the Way or stand long enough on a bridge or highway or road and drivers will slow down enough to shout and point you in the right direction. Or follow a map.
Starting out with my husband we easily spotted the signs and the other pilgrims. But when he and I went at a different pace we went a different Way as well.
Jim stopped and I kept going moving though a small town with many pilgrims and coffee shops. When I finally slowed down I turned around and no Jim could I see.
I waited and waited and walked some more and waited again.
I met a couple from Holland , Hans and Pauline who heard of my unplanned solo walk. They were concerned and could not understand why Jim and I had no phones and especially why I was not worried. I was only an hour into walking alone and believed that the concept of "worry" was just not allowed on the Camino.
I kept walking and Hans and Pauline kept meeting up with me. Each time, I worked to put them at rest and at ease. I was OK and Jim was OK and it would work out.
Six hours later, I walked into a small village and in front of me was Jim sitting with Pauline and Hans. Jim had missed a Camino sign, got off the road and ended up walking for hours on the highway. He managed to get in front of me while finding his Way back.
When he got to this small village my friends from Holland were getting settled in the town and talked to Jim about getting a stamp for their Pilgrim Credentials. Jim said, "well first I have to find my wife" and Hans said, "you mean Rosemary from Minnesota?". "Wait right here and she 'll walk into town in ten minutes" And I did!
We left our new friends with hugs and tears from Pauline and walked the last 6 km of the day together. Pauline was amazed and touched that it all worked out without phones and fears and hysterics.
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
Food
| First course on the first meal. |
Our very first night in Rocesvailles we walked into a very busy and full bar/restaurant and were immediately shown a table which happened to have an open bottle of wine on it. This puzzled me but it was my first evening on the Camino and I was just not prepared to question anything.
The wait staff came and offered us our choice from the first course, garlic soup,lentil soup, pasta, green salad or vegetable stew. We then had our second course choices, beef and potatoes, lamb and potatoes, fish and potatoes, chicken or rabbit or goat or pork and potatoes! Our dessert choices were the best! Flan, yogurt,chocolate cake, rice pudding or cheese cake and sometimes ice cream.
We find out half way through this first Pilgrim's meal that the wine on the table was ours.
The wait staff came and offered us our choice from the first course, garlic soup,lentil soup, pasta, green salad or vegetable stew. We then had our second course choices, beef and potatoes, lamb and potatoes, fish and potatoes, chicken or rabbit or goat or pork and potatoes! Our dessert choices were the best! Flan, yogurt,chocolate cake, rice pudding or cheese cake and sometimes ice cream.
We find out half way through this first Pilgrim's meal that the wine on the table was ours.
Once, we stayed in Gañon at an Albergue that is donation only but the hospitadae fed us dinner and breakfast. We ate pasta and bread and then pastries on long tables with 35 other pilgrims, singing songs, telling stories and drinking wine. Some played music for us as well.
It is unusual that the Albergue people also feed us. Some though have kitchens and several times we shopped and cooked our own Pilgrim ' meal.
Because we are walking 12 to 27Km a day through hills and mountains and valleys and towns there are usually plenty of places to eat along the way. When we see that there are no towns for that day of walking we buy bread and cheese or a couple of nights ago made rice balls in the kitchen of the albergue to take with us for the walking day. Otherwise there are restaurants and coffee bars along the way.
Our Pilgrim's meal is always at 7P.M. and my first three days of walking I was too tired to stay awake for it and suffered for that. You need to eat and eat well every day and the Camino businesses make it easy for you.
Yet,one time I had to wait 3 hours of walking until we came to a town with a coffee bar but it was worth it. Every cup of coffee is freshly ground and brewed when you walk in the door. I had been enjoying café con letche but now I have café americano which is black but is prepared differently somehow.
Our Pilgrim's meal is always at 7P.M. and my first three days of walking I was too tired to stay awake for it and suffered for that. You need to eat and eat well every day and the Camino businesses make it easy for you.
| Coffee |
It is good food, fresh, local and homemade.
The Pilgrims are honored on the Camino and folks think about what our bodies need and serve us well. They ask that we pray for them when we get to Santiago and charge us form 5 to 9 euros for our meal
It is at that evening Pilgrim's meal that the days healing begins with the shared stories and laughing . We are getting full and letting go and ready to begin again.
.
The Pilgrims are honored on the Camino and folks think about what our bodies need and serve us well. They ask that we pray for them when we get to Santiago and charge us form 5 to 9 euros for our meal
It is at that evening Pilgrim's meal that the days healing begins with the shared stories and laughing . We are getting full and letting go and ready to begin again.
| Coffee |
Tuesday, July 16, 2013
Burgos
Jim and I have walked almost 290 KM now and have about 500 KM more to go.
We have walked every day for 2 weeks from 17 to 30 KM and today, we have our first and probably only rest day. To keep our rather slow walking schedule and make it to the end in time to catch our return plane, we must walk a minimum of 19 KM a day for the next 4 weeks.
It is a bright , relatively warm sunny Saturday in Burgos. We will stay another night in our modest Albergue (5 Euros) that only holds 16 pilgrims . We were delighted to get to stay there another night, the 7 of us and just leave our STUFF.
We had our cafe and other treats and visited the Cathedral and now are hanging out at the library using their computers.
Most pilgrims have their own technology and just make certain that the Albergues have wifi which they do not all have.
All I want is a bed at the end of my walk, a bottom bunk is preferable but I imagine I could get someone to boost me up. I no long consider the humiliation of that possibility.
Amazing how things change. I no longer am as interested in the quaint little towns and villages we pass except to see if they have a coffee bar or a clean bathroom. My life has been reduced to these things.
I am still trying to figure out the very best foot care and body stretches along the way never mind yoga and tai chi. How to sooth particular aching muscles is my goal.
| The best food thus far. |
| Our Albergue in Burgos with out host serenading us. |
Burgos is also the place of transitions.
The Belgian mother, Elise and daughter, Lisa have finished their 2 week walk and now take the 17 hour bus ride back home. Lisa is a teacher and must return.
The boys, Jack, James and Henry and moving on to the end today and I suspect we will not meet again so of course I found myself weeping a bit with their hugs.
The 3 Spanish women have also finished their walk and say goodbye to the Camino.
| Burgos |
| Jim playing the Uke |
Christian , also not walking much anymore but hanging out with us at night will finish his Camino.
I am not certain about Kyoung and her mother as they had to bus in yesterday because of a foot injury of Helena. They are also determined to finish but will probably do a bus, walk thing.
We have been a wonderful group. Everything you want, support, information, love and care, laughing and crying together(more laughing) and now it all will change.
And now I say goodbye:
Most of you helped me through a very rough period on my walk with my physical body stretched to its limit and my mind resisting with periods of crazy thinking and doubt.
Having your presence and support and words of wisdom kept me going, as did the incredible food and wine of Spain.
Thank you , George for telling me that we would get stronger. You were correct. Thank you Kyoungsin for always knowing the very best Albergue where we could find rest. Sleep was medicine for me. Thank you Christian for making me laugh and feel so lighthearted for I surely would have succumbed to my fear at those difficult moments. Thank you Jim for finding the energy to play the Ukulele and get us to sing a long and be together in the mornings and evenings.
After so much walking
| Burgos |
There is nothing I would change. It was everything I needed. Stepping into the unknown and finding so much but especially finding you.
Of course that is the Camino. Rain one day, sun the next. Nothing to hold onto , every thing changes except sadly, my sore feet!!!
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