Friday, May 30, 2014

May 30 Friday - Baiona to Santiago Like A Trip Home

May 30 Friday - Baiona to Santiago
Like A Trip Home

I woke up to a bright sunny day today. Baiona was sparkling. Mr. Burple and I went down to breakfast and enjoyed our café while looking outside at the sunshine. It's really strange, but this trip I have not wanted to have tostada con mantequilla y mermelada, since the first week. I look at it on the breakfast buffet or think about it at the restaurant, and decide against having it. Very weird. This trip is so different in so many ways from my first two Caminos. It's not a value like better or worse, just very different. Maybe part of the difference is that it isn't a straight line, it's been straight and squiggly and loopy and zig zag. It's been transforming as I go. Currently, I'm calling this portion the "Camino de Los Paradores."

But, I digress. After breakfast, I got packed and headed to town to catch the bus to Vigo to catch the bus to Santiago. Surprise! I didn't get lost or miss any buses. How amazing. I chatted with a woman at the bus stop who had come out to Baiona, from her hometown, to buy fish. She said it is good and it is fresh. It comes right off the fishing boats into the market. She also wanted to know where my husband was, and whether I liked Baiona or my hometown best. I couldn't choose. They are both beautiful. But then she asked me if I would rather live in my hometown or in Baiona. That was an easy choice. I love my home, my friends, and my family. I live in paradise.   

So I got to Santiago and checked into the Parador. The room isn't as nice as the ones in Zamora and Baiona. But it is nice and has a lot of history. It used to be a refuge for pilgrims needing shelter and medical care. It was also an orphanage. 
The info says, "There was a window with a bell and a revolving compartment. A person would ring the bell and wait to hear 'Ave Maria, gratis plena' and then they would leave the newborn," presumably on the revolving platform. 

There is some very interesting history. I took pictures of some of the carvings that were supposed to represent sins. Cracked me up. Then there were the gargoyles, which are actually roof drains, that have no biblical reference. I spent an hour or so exploring this history. I may spend some more time at the end of June when I'm in town for two weeks. Anyone can go in and look at the courtyards and read to placards. You don't have to be a hotel guest. 

This evening I sat in one of the small plazas eating dinner and watching pilgrims greet people they had met along the Camino with great joy. It is a delight to watch people's whole being light up when they recognize someone they had seen or spent time with over the course of the Camino. There are always shouts of greetings, hugs, and laughter. I had many moments like those myself. It even happens on the Camino when you see someone for a few days, then you don't see them for a while, and the you walk into an albergue and there they are. It is such a treat. 

For some strange reason, I turned on the TV tonight and watched old episodes of Castle and Bones. It's a good way to improve your Spanish. And now I'm tucked into my cozy bed in my cozy room and soon it will be time to sleep. Tomorrow I catch the train to Zamora after I stop by and say "hello" to my friend John. 

Night all.   

Thursday, May 29, 2014

May 29 Thursday - Baiona A Quiet Day


May 29 Thursday - Baiona
A Quiet Day

I woke this morning to low cloud cover. There had been rain, that slowed to periodic drizzle. I have been waking up slowly the past few days, luxuriating in the absence of any need to be anywhere. It is totally outside my frame of reference, but there you go. I did some stretching and then went down for breakfast. I was a leisurely breakfast that included lots of fresh fruit, corn flakes, and café. 

After breakfast, I went out to walk around. I took some pictures of part of the fort between the hotel and town. I walked into town and then along the boardwalk. There were very few people out. I went down to the broken shell beach. I saw a sign that said La Playa Conchería. The tide was out, so I went tide pooling. There were tiny little sea snails stuck to the rocks, slugs I saw yesterday and other forms of sea life. I also found even more sea glass than I did yesterday. Collecting sea glass is very meditative for me. It was the same when I was collecting  nuts, bolts, and other objects while riding my bike. I guess focusing on looking for stuff is like counting breaths. 

After the beach I explored the rest of the fort walking all around the fort on the parapet. The place is massive! Inside the walls is a forest. It was a nice walk. I got back to my room a little after one which gave me time to shower before my massage. That was a special treat. It was so relaxing. When it was over, I had to take another shower when I got back to my room, because I was do covered in oil I thought I was going to slide out of my clothes. lol 

Then I went down and had a café. The rest of my day was spent resting and reading. I don't do either well for long periods of time. I've eaten dinner and now I'm ready for sleep. Sweet drems. 

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

May 28 Wednesday Baiona A Restful Day By The Sea



May 28 Wednesday Baiona 
A Restful Day By The Sea

It was a cornflakes kind of morning. I love the leisurely breakfast buffets where I can drink a whole cup of café before I even begin to think about eating. Then I can drink some juice and eat some fruit. This morning they even had little fruit shish kabobs. I should have taken a picture. Then I can go back for cheese, jamon, or other delights. Then I top it all of with a bowl of cornflakes. Of course, there's, at least, one more cup of coffee in the mix. All this consumed at a leisurely pace. Contrast this with a month of machine café and a couple of crackers or, most of the time nothing at all until I got to my destination about 2 pm. Many mornings I would think of all the times I had heard, "breakfast is the most important meal of the day." Oh well. If you only eat one meal a day does that qualify as the most important meal of the day? It wasn't like the Frances where I'd almost always run across a breakfast place after three miles or less, about the time my appetite woke up. 

It was a drizzly kind of morning with just a misty moisture. After breakfast, I strolled around the grounds a bit taking pictures. The I headed into town to find out where the bus stop was located to catch the bus to Vigo and to see how long it would take me to walk there. It's not far, about a fifteen to twenty-minute walk. After I located the bus stop I wandered through town and found this path that wound around the point before. I saw this sign that said only peóns could walk here. I thought that was kind of rude until a check of my Google translator informed me that   peóns in Galician (Gallego) means pedestrian. I had already decided that I would qualify to walk there, either way. 

Before I got on the walkway I saw a shell beach with large rocks to climb on. Oh boy, it was like a kid and a candy shop. I headed down to do some tide pooling. There were lots of little muscles everywhere, much smaller than the ones at Crystal Cove beach where I spend countless hours with my good friends the pelicans, starfish, dolphins and Oscar the octopus. There were also little squishy wet looking creatures attached to the rocks that looked like the top of a peeled purple plum. I have no clue what they are. Most folks who have seen the picture I took think they are some kind of sea slug. Did you know that the octopus is a member of that family? I have learned so many things since I started spending so much time at the beach after my first Camino. Don't even get me started on the sex life of starfish, how they make baby starfish. 

So I'm really enjoying this beach that is covered with crushed shells instead of sand. And as I was looking down at some shells, that looked like scallop shells that hadn't been crushed yet, I saw a piece of sea glass! I was so excited. This was just like home. So I spent a couple of hours walking and looking for sea glass. They have different colored sea glass. So I will bring some Spanish sea glass home with me for my collection. The sea weed was a very bright color of green, not the greenish brown of California seaweed. There are miles of sandy beaches too. I may try one of those tomorrow. And, John, there are sea walls with Big Thinkers. 

After the beach I walk on the path around the point and watched waves roll in and break crashing on the rocks. I love the ocean. Some people love mountains, some love deserts. I like those places too, I enjoy them, but I love oceans. I love watching them, smelling them, and listening to them. Waves sound different in the night than they do in the daylight. It may come from growing up on a small island, but I think I have salt water in my veins. I really like rivers, lakes and babbling brooks and streams. Water moving, I think that is my connection. 

I enjoyed being by the ocean so much, I decided to stay another day. I'll leave here on Friday and go to Santiago and stay at the Parador there one night, then head to Zamora and serving the pilgrims. 

While I was at the beach there was a woman there with her dog. She was collecting something too, but she pretty much stayed in one place. I don't know what she was collecting but it wasn't muscles or the unidentified sea creatures. It reminded me though of the Snail Hunters I meant to tell you about a few weeks ago. 

Snails are apparently a popular dish in Spain. When I'm walking both on the Frances and on the Via Plata, I will notice people, men usually, walking along hunting in the bushes. At first it baffled me, but then I figured they were looking for snails. I nicknamed them the Snail Hunters. At one point when I was walking by a stream, I saw what I think were professional Snail Hunters. There were three of them, that I saw and they all had on matching waders (rubber boots) and matching jackets. They were spread out hunting along this creek bed. Whenever I would see snails on the trail I would lean over a whisper to them to get off the trail so they don't get stepped on or run over by a bicycle, and to hide if there were Snail Hunters in the area. Snails lead a very dangerous life.              

But I digress, once again. The path also had great views of the fort. Looking at the rocky cliffs invaders would have to climb, coming from they ocean, just to get to the hill leading up to the fort and then the tall straight walls of the fort that would have to be scaled while people are shooting arrows at you, dropping things on you and swing sharp objects at you; I can understand why you might want to go home and forget the whole thing. The fort must have been very effective defensively. 

I spent the rest of the afternoon sorting my pictures, choosing which ones to keep and which ones do delete. I also investigated plans for the next few days and made an appointment for a massage tomorrow. My back has been bothering me ever since I stopped walking with my pack. It is so weird, but I have had a chronically bad back for forty years. Now it is riddled with arthritis and discs that have lost their grip. But on my three Caminos, I've had no trouble with my back. My regular doctor, my back doctor, my massage therapist and my chiropractor all think it makes sense but have different bio mechanical theories about why it makes sense. And it has been suggested, more than once, that I should just wear my pack around in my everyday life. lol. 

Well it's almost midnight, so I will send this off into the inter webs and go to sleep. Night all!

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

May 27 Tuesday Zamora to Baiona I'll get to where I'm supposed to be(oh dang I can't believe I did that) when I'm supposed to be there.


May 27 Tuesday Zamora to Baiona
I'll get to where I'm supposed to be (oh dang I can't believe I did that) when I'm supposed to be there. 

It has been a very long day. Yesterday when I went to buy I train ticket to Vigo, I asked for the 10:46 train and was told that one only runs on Saturday. The morning train on weekdays is 9:17. So I booked that one, figuring I still have time for breakfast. I looked the ticket over when I was at the counter and again when I got back to the hotel. Leea and I once had a mishap where the person at the ticket counter issued the tickets for the wrong date and we didn't notice it until we went to board the train. 

So this morning I set the alarm for 7 am, figuring that would give me time to check out and be at breakfast when they opened. Then I could leave the hotel at 9 am and get to the station before 9:30 to catch the train at 9:46. Anybody see the problem with this thought sequence. The problem is I got to the train station around 9:20 leaving me 26 minutes to wait for the train. But my train had already left at 9:17. Somehow I had got the 46 stuck in my brain and didn't remember my train was at 9:17. What a way to start the day. So I was told the next train wasn't until 2:40 and would not arrive in Vigo until 7:40 pm, after getting to Vigo, I still had to get from the train station to the bus station and get a bus to Baiona. So with the change, I'd get to the hotel about 8:30 or 9. 
I walked over to the bus station to see if the was an earlier bus. No luck there. So I had four hours to kill and a backpack. Fortunately, the bus station had a Consignia (luggage storage) where I could leave it for 1€. I went and saw the Cathedral and noticed that the iterating little buildings one the river that I wanted to see were right below the cathedral. So I saw both of those things, had a diet coke on the Plaza Mayor and then wandered back to the train station, still with forty-five minutes to wait. 

The train was a little late but finally came. My seat was comfy and because the train wasn't very full, the seat beside me was vacant, so I could spread out. Oh yeah, the original train was direct. This one required me to change trains in Ourense. The train in Ourense was twenty minutes late. Normally the trains in Spain are pretty much on time. Today the only train that was on time was the one I missed. lol, I spent a good part of the day kicking myself for the dumb mistake. But oh well, as Willy says, "There's nothing I can do about it now. 

The train rides themselves were scenic. I love riding on buses and trains, looking out the window and relaxing. Then after the next to the last stop, right before Vigo, the train came to a stop. Not too unusual, but them it didn't start again for five minutes. Sometimes that happens when they get off schedule and they have to wait for another train to clear the tracks. Then it was twenty minutes and the train hadn't moved. Sometimes trains have mechanical problems. Once coming home from San Diego I had both things happen and we were two hours off schedule. I was bummed because I was looking forward to watching the sunset over the ocean from the train. It was dark by the time we got going. 

This it turns out had something to do with an emergency and a person. There were Bomberos and medical people involved. I don't know if someone on the train had the emergency or if someone outside the train had the emergency. But we finally took off. The funny thing was the other passengers. After the first few minutes, they all started talking to each other about the train stopping. Then they started getting restless. Then voices were raised. Then they started getting irritated. It was like a bunch of chickens in a locked hen house. I swear it was entertaining. I just kept reading my book. I didn't figure my knowing why it was stopped, or my being upset about it being stopped was going to make it move any sooner. 

I got into Vigo about 8:30. I did not realize that Vigo is a pretty large city. When I got off the train I went in the station to the information place and asked if the bus station was near there. The fellow said it was far and that you needed to take a local bus to the bus station. Remember now, I'm going to the bus station to get a bus to Baiona and once I get to the station I'll have to wait up to an hour for the bus, because at this time of the evening they start running every hour, instead of every thirty minutes. This puts me in Baiona after dark, and once there, I think I have to walk from where the bus stops out onto the Peninsula where the Parador is located. Oh, and did I mention, it is raining. Of course in Galicia, that means it is a day that ends in "y." It's always raining in Galicia. That's why it is so green. So I walk up to the next taxi in line and ask how much it costs to go to Baiona. He told me, it was within reason, and off we went. 

I got to the hotel a little after nine, I think, took a nice hot shower washed some clothes, and got down to dinner about ten. I never eat that late, but I hadn't eaten since breakfast. It was yummy. Of course, it was fancy, but it was very tasty. I'm just sorry I couldn't eat even half of it. As usual, the waiter kept asking me if everything was all right as he removed the plates still filled with food. I've gotten used to reassuring waiters that the food is fine, I just don't eat a lot of food at one sitting. 

So now Burple and I are in our warm comfy room, full and sleepy. Night, night.

Monday, May 26, 2014

May 26 Monday Zamora Slow River Day


May 26 Monday Zamora
Slow River Day

I woke up at 7 am or so and laid lazily in bed until 8:30 or nine reading and resting. Who is this person who has inhabited my body? This is not me. I don't lay in bed unless I'm sleeping. Dear me. Will this become a habit? A lifestyle?  

I eventually got up, got myself together and wandered down to breakfast. It was so nice. They brought me my whole little pot of coffee and another little pot of not milk, so I could mix my own café con leche. I drank a cup. I need caffeine before I even think about eating. Them I got some melocotón (peach) juice, some slices of watermelon, pineapple, cherries, and pimientos padrón! They had pimientos padrón for breakfast. It was spectacular! Then I noticed the corn flakes! Real honest to goodness Kellogg's cornflakes. I don't think I told you about my experiment. I tried some Spanish cornflakes about a month ago and they just didn't cut it. And I don't especially like Kellogg's cornflakes at home with American milk. Last year in Santiago I ate Kellogg's cornflakes by the half box full for breakfast and dinner. So it must be the combination of Kellogg's cornflakes and Spanish milk that I like so much. So I grabbed a box and a bowl and had me a treat. Yummeee!

After breakfast, I headed to the train station and got a ticket for Vigo. From Vigo, I need to take a bus to Baiona to stay at the Parador there. I wanted to go to Baiona last year but the timing didn't work. It is supposed to be spectacular. It's built inside an old fortress that protected Vigo Bay. One side of the Parador faces the Bay and one side faces to sea. It is on the Spanish coast, very close to the Portuguese border. I hope I'm not disappointed. I also hope to eat some local seafood. 

I had packed up a bunch of stuff I wouldn't need while staying in hotels the next few days and left it at the albergue to lighten my pack. 

I enjoyed the walk to and from the train station. It's about twenty minutes each way. Lots of people were out walking and doing their daily shopping. When I got back I did a photo shoot of storks and their babies living in two nests between the albergue and the Parador. Then I went for a luxurious walk along the river. It is so beautiful. I just strolled, yes, me strolling, who knew? Crazy, huh? Took a bunch of pictures. 

By the time this was all done, it was time to eat lunch/dinner. I basically fell into the habit of eating one meal a day while walking. Spanish dinners are too late to eat much. I don't sleep well on a full stomach. So I would eat around two or three when I finished walking. I seem to still be doing that only a little later today because I had breakfast. So Mr. Burple and I sat out on the Terrace of the hotel and watched the storks while we ate a bocadillo. We had a diet coke with our bocadillo, then some café and chocolate brownie ice cream. It was a very relaxed meal. That ebbed about 6 pm. 

Since then I've been posting pictures and reading. And now it is time to sleep. I have to get up by 7 am so I will have time to eat some corn flakes before I walk to the train station to catch my train. It's about a four-hour train ride I think. So night all. Sweet dreams. 

May 25 Sunday - Montamarta to Zamora A Change In Delicate Direction



May 25 Sunday - Montamarta to Zamora
A Change In Delicate Direction

Well I woke up earlier than I needed to this morning? But the sun was up. In the Casa Rural there was a coffee pot and coffee, old school American style. So I filled the carafe with water, poured it in the well in the coffee maker, scooped some coffee in the basket and pushed the button. It was nostalgia. And the coffee was yummy. Sat and reflected on the journey so far and the one to come. It is all one journey. It is life. Grateful I get to experience it with all it's ups and downs, shifts and changes. I have to say this morning, yesterday didn't seem so terrible any longer. 

I lingered over my coffee and then got up and started getting ready. Last night I saw everyone who had walked from Zamora to here today. Four others were staying at the other Casa Rural. So the only ones who chose to go on were Linda and Claud. I was a little worried for them. I hope they made it to the next pueblo and found a place to sleep and a way to get rid of the bed bugs. Late this evening right before dark, so about 9pm, the French hipster and the older man showed up. I found the owner of the Casa Rural and he found them beds. 

There was a tv in the kitchen sitting room, so last night I turned it on to see if it would show the big futból match tonight. The two major Spanish rivals, Real Madrid and Atlético are playing for the Spanish title. It's kind of like the World Series or Super Bowl. It's also kind of like the Yankees and the Red Sox. Real means royal in Spanish. Atlética is more the team of the working people. I know those are simplistic concepts, so I hope no one gets their panties in a twist. No such luck on seeing the game at the Cada Rural. It's a channel you have to pay for. Apparently the only place in town to watch it is the bar on the plaza. That bar is about as big as my dining room. So I don't know if I want to watch the game that badly. There will be a festa in the plaza as well. They have installed a traveling electric bumper car ride for the kids. The fun probably will start about 9pm, about my bed time. 

There are some kids in this pueblo and parental units. But the old folks are by far the majority of the population. This is true of many of the pueblos I've been in. I think the young have left the pueblos for the larger towns and cities. Th reasons for leaving are probably as varied as they are similar; the economy, jobs, education, night life, etc. 

I had a little dilemma this morning. The information I got about a bus tomorrow, Sunday in Spain, ran the gamut from there will be no buses, it's Sunday to there will only be one at 7:15pm. I was told three or four different times for a morning bus; 8:55am, 9:15am, 9:30am and 9:40am. So I got my stuff together and headed to the bus stop about half a block from the Casa Rural at 8:50am. As the terrors and frustration of yesterday had slipped into a misty dim memory, I thought I could just continue walking this morning. If there was no bus, plan B was to either stay in Montamarta another night or continue walking. I think walking would have won out.  I had ruled out hitch hiking this time, though it turned out fine last year. While standing waiting for a bus that might never come I was occasionally tempted to stick out my thumb. 

I had decided that if the bus came, I was meant to go to Zamora. If it didn't come, I was meant to continue walking. My god takes many forms, even a Spanish autobus. lol While waiting for the bus my friend Trish kept me company in a Facebook message conversation. And, eventually the bus came at 9:45am. I put my pack in the luggage compartment under the bus, hopped on board, and paid my fare.. The fare was a whopping 1.45€. As the bus rolled along the highway I looked out the window at the green rolling hills and thought, "It wasn't that bad, why did I stop?" Then I saw the construction and the big high future overpasses, and the narrow place to walk on the side of the highway while big buses, like the one I was on swept by me. And I remembered the walking part if this adventure was going to end in five days anyway, so get over it. Iade a reservation for that night at the Parador while on the bus.  

We got to Zamora and the bus and train stations were both dead. So I decided I would have to gather in go tomorrow. It took about 20 minutes to walk from the bus and train station to the old part of town. I stopped at my favorite little cafe panadería and had croissant a la plancha and café. Then I went and checked in at the Parador. 

The hotel is lovely. It is a former palace with a central courtyard, old squeaky wooden floors, and a gentle view of the river and green hillside. The room is spacious and very comfy. Everything must have been comfy because I didn't leave the hotel all day. I had a luxurious long hot shower. They even had conditioner for my hair. It made my hair happy. And big fluffy towels. I washed some clothes and took a wonderful nap. After the nap I went down to the poolside terrace café and had some croquettes, pastries and a diet coke. Then I had a very nice FaceTime chat with hubby. 

After I talked to the love of my life,  I spent some time on the internet researching possible destinations. I also decided to spend another night in this comfy place. I'll go to the train and bus stations tomorrow and work out how to get to where I want to go. Meanwhile, the Dodgers were playing an early game in Philadelphia, so at 7pm here, I got my AtBat app going and watched Josh Beckett pitch a "No Hitter."  I couldn't have done that with no wifi in the pueblo. This tells me that everything is exactly the way it supposed to be and I am exactly where I am supposed to be, when I'm supposed to be there. 

Now it's time for bed. 

Saturday, May 24, 2014

May 24, 2014 Saturday Zamora to Monamarta A Day Of Twists and Turns


May 24, 2014, Saturday Zamora to Monamarta
A Day Of Twists and Turns

I did not sleep well last night. It was cold and this is the first albergue I've come to that had no blankets. The hospitalera said this is because of bed bugs. I thought that made little sense but, oh well.  I put on most of my clothes. I guess I should have put on my rain jacket and rain pants too. They are waterproof, so they hold in heat. So I'd fall asleep, then wake up cold, again and again. I finally gave up at six and read some comments on Facebook and checked on the Dodgers, they won. I went downstairs to see if I could help set up breakfast which is at 7 am, but all the stuff was out and no one was there. I waited until 6:45 and since there was still no one there and I figured people in my room would be starting to get up I went back upstairs to get my backpack ready. 

When I was done I went back downstairs, had some coffee and a couple of crackers, and took off. This was the earliest start I'd had the whole trip. They first one-third of the walk was the usual tedious experience when you walk out of any big city. First it was hard to even find the way out. There was an official sign with an arrow pointing left, but when I went that way I passed three locals who all agreed that was the wrong way. So I went back and looked at the sign again. Sure enough, it pointed left. About, this time, a couple of French guys came by and they thought the way to go was straight. So I followed them. We saw some other arrows indicating we were on the right track. Then, as with any city, you pass through there was a bunch of industrial stuff. 

We finally cleared the industrial junk and were moving along pretty well when I took a wrong turn. I saw the arrow, I looked at it and registered "go left" and so I did. After walking about fifteen minutes, I see the two French guys walking back towards me. They said that way went to Portugal. We actually aren't all that far from the border. So we walked back and looked at the arrow and sure enough, it said to go straight, not left. If the two French guys hadn't gone the wrong way too and doubled back, I would probably be in Portugal this evening. That would be a new one, even got the Queen of Lost, to end up in another country altogether. 

So we get back on track and come upon the construction kerfuffle. Apparently they are building a new freeway which goes right through the Camino route. The two of my Camino guides talk about it, but I had no idea that it would be so confusing. So there were six or eight of us kind of traveling in the same direction when we hit this area. We all hot separated, scattered, lost in different directions. I ended up walking on the edge of the highway with oncoming traffic coming at me at a rate of 50 to 60 mph. It was terrifying. I had to do that for a couple of hours.

At one point I wonder how everyone else is doing. I haven't tripped over any squished bodies with backpacks so I figure they are somehow muddling through. I finally come to the gas station which is supposed to be a short distance from the albergue. To get to the gas station, I have to dart through oncoming traffic from both directions. It reminded me of double Dutch jump rope. I get there and I ask the guy working there where it is. He says there isn't one and something about there being a restaurant in seven kilometers. That's about an hour and a half of walking! I'm tired, my knee is hurting, my right foot is cramping, my nerves are shattered from walking on the highway, and I need to pee. First things first. I ask him if I can use the restroom. He says I can. So I go to the bathroom and try to pull myself together. I leave and ask him did he say seven kilometers. He says, "No, seventy meters." 

So I carefully time the traffic again and dart back across the highway. I like to face the traffic. I guess I want to get a good look at what kills me. I get to the restaurant, dart across the highway again, and the restaurant is deserted. But, I see a sign that says albergue. Relieved I dart across the highway again to walk down the road looking for the albergue. I see another albergue sign that points off the road. So back I go across the highway. If you are getting tired of this, just imagine how I felt. With a heavy backpack, it's not so much a dart as a lumber. 

I approach the albergue expecting to see other pilgrims there hanging laundry, waving to me to join them. Not even close. It too is deserted. And has a gate that is locked with not one, but two chain locks. As though we tired pilgrims wouldn't take one lock seriously. Oh, dear, what now. Not the exact words I was muttering, but you get the idea. About then I notice Linda and Claud coming up the road. Which surprises me, because they were ahead of me. We discuss our predicament. We decided to continue up the road and see if we can find some locals and get some answers. 

The first guy we talk to tells us the albergue is closed because of bed bugs. Linda and Claud look confused, so I explain bed bugs. They both say, "Oh, that must be what these bites are." I check them out and sure enough, that's what they've got. I've slept in the same room with these people the last two nights. I start feeling all itchy. Of course, just talking about bed bugs make me itch. We decide to get a coke and explore our options. I check the bus schedule. There is a bus going bak to Zamora in twenty minutes. Then I realize it is Saturday, and the bus doesn't leave for two and a half hours. 

They want to push on and walk another 12km. This late in the day, that's about three to four hours. It is already 1 pm. I'm tempted, but I don't really want to spend the night in an albergue with two people who are probably transporting bed bugs. And at this point, there isn't much they can do about it except get naked and set their packs and clothes on fire. We do find out there is a Casa Rural in town. So they leave to keep walking. I go look for the bus stop. I'm pondering sitting there for two hours waiting for a bus that doesn't come. It's Saturday. By the time the bus doesn't come everything could be closed. 

At this point, I'm asking God, what is the lesson here. There's a pile of horse manure, there must be a pony. If the lesson is humility, it's done. I just want to sit down on the curb and cry. I'm thinking, "If I thought it was cold and hard to sleep last night, what will it be like outdoors on a hard sidewalk." Suddenly I hear someone yelling, "Peregrina!" I look up and this guy is coming towards me. He says he has a Casa Rural right up the street and that another Peregrino is already staying there. It could have been a pile of straw in a barn and he could have charged 1000€. I was desperate. As it turns out, it's a pleasant little room I'm sharing with the other peregrino. It is on the highway so there is car noise, but it's just tired on the road and I assume it will quiet down tonight. There is a little kitchen common room with stuff for breakfast and a freezer for my gel pack for my knee. The cost? 20€. He assures me there is a bus tomorrow at 9:30 am and that indeed I have located the bus stop. 

So I go get something to eat. I relax. On the way back to the Cada Rural a bus pulls up. I ask if he goes to Zamora he says that is another bus line. I asked if it would be here tomorrow and he said it would, but it stop where he was stopped now, it would stop down at the bus stop. So reassured, I am laying in bed writing this and icing my knee. As you may have gathered I am going back to Zamora. When I get there I will check the buses and trains and see where I want to go to rest and relax until next Saturday when I need to be back in Zamora to begin my hospitalera shift. I checked my guides and the next couple of days are going to be more  on and off the highway and lost direction because of the highway construction. Also, the fellow who owns the Casa Rural was telling the other pilgrim that there are fewer and fewer albergues ahead. So, it is with a heavy heart, but a thought for my sore knee, that I'm saying, "I am done walking for this Camino. I'd rather remember the beautiful experience it has been than to muddy the memory with the frustration and terror of today. There are few pictures from today. But after this was all settled in my heart and in my mind, I sat in the Plaza and watched three storks in two different nests, and saw one of them fly and soar.

Friday, May 23, 2014

May 23 Friday Villanueva de Campeán to Zamora

May 23 Friday Villanueva de Campeán to Zamora

I forgot to mention about snakes. When we were in Cásceres, Marilyn from South Africa mentioned that she had seen a snake. I looked at her astonished because I didn't think there were any snakes in Spain. At least, I'd never seen any while hiking. She showed me a picture she had taken. I didn't think much of it. Then she started telling me about all the deadly snakes they had in South Africa and I immediately reconsidered any plans to go there. Then I'm walking along the river on the bike and walking path in Salamanca some days later and a snake slithered onto the path. It looked just like the one Marilyn had taken a picture of. It was about three or four feet long, skinny and green. I said to him, "I don't think you want to come out here. You might get run over by a bicycle. He seemed to consider my comment and then slithered back into the bushes. I thought, "Darn, I didn't take a picture." Well, what are the odds? I had walked that path a hundred times in 2012 and never saw a snake. 

Back to the present. When I woke up this morning it was raining pretty hard. Oh well, rain and mud today.  I got up, packed up and put all my rain gear on. When I walked out the door it had stopped raining. It was mostly blue skies, but there were some dark clouds around the edges. I left my rain gear on and started walking. Mr. Burple was tucked in all cozy under the backpack rain cover, taking a nap. After about an hour I started getting hot and I noticed the sky was all blue. So I took off the rain gear. It was a brisk day and there was some wind, but it was great walking weather. The vistas were amazing once again. They just go on and on. I'm going to miss walking when I stop. 

The one problem with today's walk is that you can see Zamora for more than two hours before you actually get to it. But I wasn't a hurry. I was pretty sure it would still be there when I got there. Sometime before we got to the city there was a big monument thing consisting of three large stone pillars with writing inscribed on them and a round shallow well for depositing your promised. I took pictures of all the writing so I can translate it later. I didn't feel like doing it standing up. Then as we got closer to the city there were little stones marking the kilometers

I visited this city when I was a student in Salamanca. They took us here on a bus and we walked around. It is a beautiful city. It's one of the walled cities built on a hill for defensive purposes. We entered the city crossing a wide river on an old bridge built by the Romans. There certainly is a lot of their stuff still around. I didn't do any sightseeing today because I will be here for two weeks starting June 1. I got to the albergue at 1 pm, but it didn't open until 2 pm. So I went to a small panadería café and had a croissant sandwich. It was yummy. Then I checked into the albergue. They have wifi and a freezer for my gel pack I use on my knee. So all is good. I haven't found out if they have blankets yet. 
I don't quite know how far I'm going from here before I turn around to come back. I have to stop somewhere with a bus the comes back here. I think it will be easier to get that information once I'm in the pueblos. The natives are familiar with the buses that run through their pueblos. 

The French guy with the stinky feet is here, but he must have taken a shower because he is not odiferous tonight. I saw all sorts of storks flying today. They remind me of the pelicans at home. I saw a few rabbits today, but they move too quick to get pictures. 

Well, it's time for bed soon. For some reason, I'm very tired tonight. 



Thursday, May 22, 2014

May 22 Thursday El Cubo de la Tierra del Vino to Villanueva de CampeánShort Trip To Strange Place


May 22 Thursday El Cubo de la Tierra del Vino to Villanueva de Campeán
Short Trip To Strange Place

Last night was cozy. It turns out there were seven Spanish guys on bikes. Three in the room I was in, two in the room next to mine, and two slept on beds the owners set up in the living room. I thought there were more than five in the shower kerfuffle. Then a gal from Holland came late and the owner said they were full. He called the other hostal and they were full too. I asked about the Municipal hostal and he said it has closed. That seems to be happening a lot along this route. Anyway, he had a bunk bed in an outbuilding and she slept there. I asked her this morning if it was comfortable and she said it was fine. We had breakfast together and then we left. The bikers had declined breakfast and left earlier. Wise choice on their part. I paid three euros for cold café and white bread toast. 
Somehow I knew when I woke up, that I was going to walk today. I must have known because I got up and started packing my bag to walk. Before the bikers left the guy in the bed next to me asked if I was tired, did I sleep well, or did he bother me. I said, "No, why?"  He said his friends said he snored. They were both laughing and teasing him. I told him I had slept soundly and didn't hear any snoring. We all wished each other a Buen Camino. 



Well, the choice today was to walk eight and a half miles or twenty miles. Though with my knee the way it is I thought eight was a good choice. Plus there was supposed to be rain and lightning. I'm happy to report there was neither. Just lots of cloud cover and a few sprinkles. It was a blustery day as Pooh would say, cold and windy. A great day for a walk. And a beautiful place to walk in. It did get muddy later on the journey, but it wasn't too bad. On some of the downhills, there were big drop offs in the road and the mud was slippery. I'd go to push myself up or out to jump a crevice and my push foot would slip. I had visions of me doing the splits and being unable to move. 

I didn't see another pilgrim the whole day. In fact, I only saw one other person the whole day, and that was a farmer getting in his tractor. Mr. Burple was tucked in under the rain cover on the pack and slept all day. He did pat me on the back when I accomplished difficult maneuvers. This is easy to do because he rides in my pack which is on my back. Or maybe he was just scratching my back. 

I didn't see anyone in Villanueva either. It was like a ghost town. The Spanish must go to ground when it rains. Both of the hostals were open, but nobody was in either one. I put my stuff in one of them, which turned out to be the private one, which my guide says was owned by the same people who owned the bar. I thought good since neither hostal had a freezer, if I stayed at the one owned by the people who owned the bar, I could probably get ice for my knee. So the lady came by and said she would be back later and asked me what I wanted for dinner. I thought that was weird, but she said she would be back to get me at seven to go to her house for dinner. 

I thought it was strange, but I thought it was just a new experience. I went to look for the "bar" and found it, but it wasn't a bar. It was a temporary setup being run by the Mayor, whom I met today. She told me the owners of the bar had just closed it without any notice. So she was running this temporary thing as a service. There was no food, just café beer, sodas, etc. I asked if there was a tienda nope, no tienda. Luckily I had some cheese, pepperoni, apple and peanut butter in my pack. So I had a café at the Temp Place and went back to the hostal. Mr. Burple and I had a make do lunch. After lunch, I went out to see this huge old abandoned building and to take some pictures. Then I went back to the Temp Place. When I got back to the albergue, it was still empty, it was dark even with the lights on, and it was cold as outside. So I went over to the Municipal and there were two pilgrims there, the place was really light even with the lights off, and they had two heaters. I decided to move there. I called the lady from the other albergue and told her I was moving. I thought she said not to worry about it. But she showed up at the Municipal and demanded I pay for her  albergue. I told I didn't stay there, didn't take a shower there or anything. She insisted I pay her. I told her to call the Police because I wasn't going to pay. 

So I am all comfy in the Municipal and now I think it is time to sleep.  

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

May 20 Wednesday Calzada de Valduciel to El Cubo de la Tierra del VinoWhat a Long Strange Day It Has Been


May 20 Wednesday Calzada de Valduciel to El Cubo de la Tierra del Vino
What a Long Strange Day It Has Been
The three French guys slept on the floor in the albergue and didn't block the way to the bathroom. Two of the guys were together. They came earlier in the day. They were both very tall. The older guy looked like a professor type. The younger one was like a young hip black guy with a jaunty little hat. Nothing like the practical hiking caps and hats the rest of us wear. And even his hiking clothes were in vivid colors. He was cute and had the nicest smile. 

The third guy came later and was older than the other two, like my age. Since coincidently the were all French they began chatting in the common room which is where they were going to sleep on the floor.Then the most recently arrived French guy took off his socks and boots, oh my goodness did his feet stink. Within minutes, the whole smelled like his feet. The rest of us fled the room I did tell him, informationally, that there was hot water in the shower. Apparently, he couldn't smell his own feet. And I guess the other two didn't smell it either because they stayed put while the rest of us were trying to discreetly leave the room while gagging. It was awful

Two German gals asked me if I wanted to go with them to the restaurant. I decided to tag along. We ended up sitting with two guys who were staying in the hostal above the hotel. One of them was German and I guess he's written four books about his various Caminos. The other fellow was Australian and was quite the expert on all things, Camino, leading me to believe he must have walked, at least, ten of them. Later in the conversation we learned this was his first one. ; )
I had some homemade flan and an Aquarios. I didn't want to drink café because it was 8 pm. By the time we got back to the albergue, it was 9 pm and I needed to ice my knee again before I went to bed for the night. All the lights were out and everyone was sleeping. So I had to rustle quietly to ice my knee and get ready for bed. 

The forecast for today was a little rain and winds. It had rained during the night and when I got up it was still raining a little. So I put on my rain jacket and rain pants, got my pack together, and took off. The two German women were taking a bus because they were going to spend a day in Zamora, then a day in Salamanca where they would catch a bus to the airport to go home. They are some of the folks who walk on their vacations from work, so they only have a little time each year. Some of the other folks were talking about taking the bus too. They must have all gone down to the bar for breakfast because no one started walking when I did. The young hip guy was still sleeping and the guy walking with him was drinking coffee. 

I started out. Saw a horse first thing. I was walking on a wide slightly muddy trail and the views were incredible. Them the trail turned right and narrowed significantly. It was two narrow tracks with high plant life on either side so it was hard to use my poles. It was also muddy. Then what was a narrow trail narrowed further, so it was really questionable whether this was a trail at all? My first thought was that I had once again missed a turn or taken a wrong turn. So I stopped and consulted my online guide and indeed this was the "trail." Eventually, it met the highway and turned left and for the rest of the day we walked on this track along the side of the highway. It was so weird because I would look to the left and there would be these amazing landscapes of endless wheat, plowed fields, or trees. I would look to the right and there would be a busy highway with huge trucks and cars whizzing by me. They were close, usually at least 100 feet away. 

There was mud on top of the mud. Last year I walked in the rain on the Frances, but I was in an area that was more slippery rocks than mud. I had never experienced my boots getting heavier and heavier as the mud caked on. And there were water elements. I came to one I just could not circumnavigate. I had to backtrack to find a place where I could climb up on the side of the highway and walk on that until I could find a place I could climb back down to the trail. The mud was slippery and a couple of times I almost lost my balance. I thought, "this is Nancy the Intrepid Explorer and her trusty sidekick Mr. Burple. He said, "Get serious! Sidekick?" Every once in a while, it occurs to me that I am talking to myself or to a stuffed animal. I'm not sure which is more questionable, sanity wise. But oh well. 

Then the winds started! Oh Lordy, 22 mph. Chilly with gusts. Not what I ordered. I'm more a warm breeze kind of gal. There was no way to dress for this. The sun was hitting me on my right side and the chilly wind was hitting me on my left side. I was some sort of schizophrenic body temperature. My right side was saying, "You have too many layers on you are going to roast. My left side was saying, "You should put your rain jacket on to protect you from the wind. " My right side would respond, " are you crazy, she will melt in that thing" and, so it went. It took me a little longer to get to where I was going because the wind was blowing me around. A couple of times it almost knocked me off my feet. It was a cross wind most of the time and I had to walk 45 degrees off straight forward in order to walk forward. From above or behind I must have looked drunk because I kept veering to the right and then stumbling back to center. Winds are even more fun if you already have a balance problem.  I kept thinking about how nice it would be if they were tailwinds and just pushed me along forward. lol

I didn't see a single person all day, except those whizzing by in motor vehicles until the two French guys came by. The older one just flew by me, then the hip guy came by going a bit slower, but passing me. Just as I was entering the town with the two French guys slightly ahead of me, this young woman came toward me carrying a sack full of bread. She stopped and gave me this delicious light flaky confection that had just the right amount of sweetness. She told me all about the different albergues in town and the restaurant which for only eight euros gives you a lot of food. This just perked right up, a cookie and a friendly person. Then as I was closer to town and reading one of the signs for an albergue, this man came up and said he was a Hospitalero at the albergue and he would show it to me. He did. It had a freezer for my gel pack for my knee, a washer, and dryer for my clothes for 2€ to wash and 2€ to dry, sheets and blankies, and a twin bed. It was a deal. Since it was starting to rain again, there was no way to dry clothes on a line. 

I was the first person there so I got my choice of beds in a room with one bunk bed and two single beds. I decided to go eat before taking a shower since I didn't need to hurry to wash my clothes and hang them out to dry. The place is run by a couple. The woman reminds me of a younger version of my Spanish Mom, Torji. Very kind. The husband is very helpful and friendly. The wife put my gel pack in the freezer. I went to the restaurant and got the Menú del Día and had a café. By the time I left the restaurant it was raining again. So I was a little wet when I arrived at the albergue. It was swarming with Spanish men. I think there were six of them bicycle pilgrims. Their stuff was everywhere and they were everywhere. More specifically they were all taking showers and giving owner their laundry to wash and dry. There's only one bathroom so I was glad I had used the bathroom at the restaurant. I guess I was last in line for the showers. They all got cleaned up and went to eat. 

Three of them are in the same room as me. I often find myself as the only woman in a room with men. It is weird. But they all seem nice, if a little noisy. By the way, I've come to believe that Spanish people are hard of hearing, because when they talk on the phone to each other they speak at a volume that leads me to believe the party on the other end of the line ( I guess that is an outdated expression. What is it now, "at the other end of the cell tower?) is deaf. 

My knee is still doing well though I think today was harder on it than yesterday. Tomorrow there is supposed to be rain with thundershowers and lightning. I can deal with the rain, mud, and water elements; but I'm not wild about the idea of lightening. I can stay here and just change albergues. This one is booked for tomorrow. I can take a bus from here to Zamora or I can walk. It will depend on the weather and how I feel about it tomorrow. The weather is better from Friday until the end of the month. So if I take the bus to Zamora, I'll just start walking again on Saturday out of Zamora. 

Time to rest. Night all. 

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

May 20 Tuesday - Calzada de Valduncirl On The Road Again


May 20 Tuesday - Calzada de Valduncirl
On The Road Again

Had my alarm set for 7:30 am because there were no other pilgrims in my room to rustle around packing and waking me up. But I woke up at 6:45. So I laid in bed for about five minutes reading the two comments I had received while sleeping. Then I got busy getting ready. I checked out of the hotel and was on the road by 8 am. It felt marvelous! But getting out of Salamanca was a nightmare. They tell you to go straight, but when you're going through twenty rondas, it's hard to keep track of what is straight. But People saw me going the wrong way and they would call out to me and point to the direction I needed to go. 

I had dressed for cold weather because it had rained last night and yesterday had a very chilly wind. I stopped on the outskirts of town to have a grande café and when I used the restroom decided to take off my stretchy pants that I wore under my hiking pants. Then I got on the road again, I mean literally on the road. About a kilometer down the road I suddenly for some strange reason thought about the pants I had taken off. These are what I call my Star Trek pants because they have a silver material on the inside that is supposed to keep you cool when it's hot and warm when it's cold. Couldn't prove it by me, but I'm very fond of them. I bought them on my first Camino at a Chino Bazaar after I lost my yoga pants. Because of my fondness for them, I took off my pack and looked for them. They weren't there! Darn. I'd left my pants in the bar. It's been over thirty years since that had happened. hehehe Well, I didn't debate for long, I turned around and went back and got them. After all, they are my Star Trek pants. 
So I got back on the road again and stayed on the road for about five miles (7.2km) to  Aldeaseca de Armuña. After that pueblo, I was supposed to be walking on a dirt track through fields of sunflowers. Somehow I missed the turn. I'll tell you it's not hard to do. From Salamanca to that pueblo is the most poorly marked part of the Camino so far. Finally, after another 4 miles on the road, I got to Castellanos de Villiquera. From there on it was well marked for the next three miles. 

The day was sunny, but cool, with bunches of clouds on the horizon. The landscape was exquisite. There were wheat fields with the wheat waving in the breezes that rolled over the fields. There were tiny wildflowers in reds, yellows and purples dotting the canvas. Water elements appeared, but at the side of the trail, not in the middle of it and they shone dark blue reflecting the darkening sky. 

I arrived in Calzada de Valdunciel about 12:30 pm along with about five other pilgrims. I had only seen two others while walking, but we all arrived in a bunch. The door to the albergue was open. There was no Hospitalero there, just one other pilgrim. I grabbed a bed and headed for the shower. After that, I washed my clothes, hung them on the line. Then I walked down to the restaurant and ate. They were nice and gave me some ice for my knee. I went back to the albergue, iced my knee and took a nap. 
When I woke up, I needed to find some more ice for my knee. There isn't even a refer raptor in the albergue, never mind a freezer. So, I went exploring. I found the tienda, but they didn't have any frozen vegetables, only fish. I didn't think frozen cod would work too well, it would be more expensive, and I would probably wind up smelling a lot like fish. 

Well, all the beds are full, there are eight beds. No hospitalero.  He did come by to check us in but then left. So three French guys have come in who are going to sleep on the floor. Ok by me, as long as they don't block the path to the bathroom during the night. lol

Monday, May 19, 2014

May 19 Monday Excitement


May 19 Monday
Excitement

I'm eating breakfast and watching the workers take down the temporary structures in the Plaza. Hopefully by this afternoon it will be clear and tonight I will be able to see it in all its splendor. Today I am going to walk by the river where I spent so many hours in the winter of 2012. It was the coldest winter in Europe in a very long time, but I just bundled up and walked. 

I love walking by the river, on the beach, on country trails, on the Camino, and even on city sidewalks. To me there is a form of meditation in the smooth, continual rhythm of each foot hitting the ground, the breath calming in sync with the foot steps, and the mind letting go quieted by the rhythm of the feet and the breath. For me it is a transforming experience. I don't know if this happens to other people. I know my mind disengages, because sometimes it  recognize when it engages. Often I when this happens, I "come to" looking at a beautiful composition for a photograph. I don't know how this happens. People will look at my photos sometimes and comment that I have a "good eye" and the photo is usually one that has been taken when I've "come to" and noticed it. 

This is one of the reasons I call myself a haphazard artist. I don't usually sit down with a plan to sculpt something, make a particular photograph or paint a certain scene or object. I sometimes wish I could do this. But, when I try, I freeze and my mind goes blank. Same happens with writing. I just sit down and spill out my thoughts. Some people enjoy reading them. People have suggested I write a book. My life appears interesting to others, partly due to the time I grew up. Folk music, Elvis, the Beatles, living in the Haight Ashbury, hitchhiking up and down the California coast, etc. I could go on, but then I'd be writing a book and my mind would go blank. 

This inability to plan a work of art drove my graduate committee nuts. They kept asking what I was going to do. I would say I didn't know, but I thought I would start by throwing a thousand bowls. They would look at me quizzically. At some point they asked to see my sketches of what I was going to do and I would look at them quizzically. The bowls evolved into an installation piece. But I'm not really sure how exactly that happened. I can work at improving my skills, but I can't plan the art. It comes in a zen way and walking is a part of that. 

 But I digress. Good heavens how do I get off on these tangents? Anyway, around noon I went to spend some time with the river, just strolling, believe it or not. I walked and walked and took pictures just as I did before. I had some pretty amazing reflections. There was a sad or maybe lonely over tone to my walk on the river. I don't believe I had remembered that a big part of my time here was about aloneness. For a number of reasons, I didn't really fit in with the other students. They were friendly and kind, but I was like their mother or grandmother, yikes. At home I socialize with all ages, but then it wasn't happening. And I didn't speak Spanish well enough to have discussions with the people I lived with, though they were very kind and caring. It wasn't a bad time or feeling. I'm just a people person and I was more or less without people. In some ways it was very good. I got time for introspection and learning. Anyway, today's walk made more aware of the changes in me at the time. 

I'm happy to report that my knee did very well today. It's so weird to walk without pain or limping. Tomorrow the plan is to get up and go wall to the next town. Wish me luck!

Saturday, May 17, 2014

May 17 and18 Saturday and Sunday Salamanca Days Running Together



May 17 and18 Saturday and Sunday Salamanca
Days Running Together

This evening the Plaza is going wild. It' Saturday evening in Salamanca. There are kids activities in the Plaza. Young people like fifteen to thirty years old are dressed in costumes and getting ready for tonight's fiesta/party in the Plaza. The musical stuff in Spain usually starts about midnight and goes until five or six in the morning it's crazy!  And tonight Madrid Atletico won the Spanish League Title in a playoff against Barcelona. This part of Spain is very excited about that. This is all about fútbol mind you. It's Spain and fútbol is the name of the game. 

The Plaza was humming. And tonight I will be very glad my room is an interior room. I will be able to sleep. By the way, when I was writing about my room being small I didn't mean it was a dump or terrible. It's just small, cozy; but very comfortable for laying in bed reading mystery novels. 

Those windows you see in the structure surrounding the Plaza are apartments. The ones under the flags are government offices. Two neighbors in the apartments were out on their balconies chatting this evening and I got a picture. It is a lovely evening in Salamanca. There was also a wedding party or reception in the Plaza. The tables were shaped in a horseshoe and covered with white table cloths. It was lovely. 

My knee was feeling better today. I walked to the Crepería, to Smooy, and to the market. There was discomfort, but not pain. I have one more day of total rest, a full day of mostly rest, and a compression knee brace. So I'm looking forward to getting back out on the trail Tuesday for ten or eleven more days. 

I had a good night's sleep. Woke up about eight iced my knee with the peas that I kept in the mini bar. They were cold, not frozen, but cold. I went downstairs for the breakfast buffet. The woman who works there is very nice. Every morning she asks me how my knee is and do I need more ice. She fills up my quart size zip lock bag before I leave. That's lasts in the mini bar until late afternoon, early evening. 

There is a stork in the bell tower across the plaza from where I eat breakfast. This morning I saw its babies. Well, not baby babies. They looked to be adolescent, bigger than babies, but not ready to leave the next. Luckily I had my good camera with me with the zoom and I got some pictures. Then I went out for a stroll to see if any of the supermercados were open where I could get some peas or ice later. Nope. It's Sunday in Spain. But the little Fresh and Go, kind of a mini mart, convenience store of the larger supermercado. They will be open until 23:00, or 11 pm. Good news. 

There is something happening here that I don't understand, to misquote Bob Dylan. As I was walking down one of the main roads from the Plaza on my way to the market, an ambulance with its lights flashing, followed by a blue van, followed by a Red Cross (Cruz-Rojas,) moving slowly like a procession. Well, it's a part of the old town where cars are not allowed, except early in the morning for deliveries, so I'm thinking may this is just protocol when someone is being transported and time is not critical. But then, a military jeep pulls up stops and talks to some soldiers and then the jeep joins the procession. These are soldiers in combat fatigues, not riot gear. They are not Policia Local or Guardia Civil, they are military. I decided, I think wisely, not to take pictures. 
On my way back from my futile store search I noticed a protest of some sort was being organized in the little park and on the street/walkway. I took some pictures, but I couldn't translate the banner. If anyone out there can translate it, let me know. 

I continued on my way and went through the Plaza. I heard the Happy song playing and went over to check it out. There were some people on the stage dancing to the music, in what had to be a well-rehearsed routine and children in the audience who had obviously witnessed the rehearsals, dancing along more or less in sync. There were also children and adults painting with poster paints on this long sheet of butcher paper attached to a wall of one of the temporary buildings housing the Book Fair. It all looked like great fun. I wonder if they will have electronic Kindle Fairs in the future. 

More good news, my didn't hurt this morning. I'm still resting and icing all day today and most of the day tomorrow.  Right now I'm listening to Vince Scully and watching the Dodgers on my IPhone. Amazing. 

May 16 and 17 Friday and Saturday - Salamanca If It Be Your Will



May 16 and 17 Friday and Saturday - Salamanca
If It Be Your Will

Well after being a cranky pants on Thursday, I woke up and went down to the hotel buffet. The buffet. It had lots of yummy things, including cornflakes and my favorite cookies. I also had a view of the Plaza out of the dining room so I took a few pictures. Then I asked the woman working there if she could get me some ice for my knee and she said she would be happy to do that. So I went back to my room and iced my knee. While I was icing it I wrote to Anai and said if she had any spots available anywhere for the first two weeks of June, I would be happy to be a hospitalera. I thought the chances were slim because that is less than two weeks away and certainly they would be all posted by now. So I let it be and waited to hear from her. 
I decided since I was going to lay in bed all day and I have excellent wifi. I would finish sorting my photos. As I was going through the photos to date on the Via Plata, I thought how lovely it had been and how grateful I was to have had the opportunity to do it. I was thinking if I don't get to walk another step, this is enough. Then for some reason, I continued back through my pictures. There were pictures of last years Camino on the Frances, including my time spent as a hospitalera in Bercianos and working in the Pilgrims Office in Santiago as an Amiga. Good memories. Then there were photos of my three months in Salamanca living with a Spanish family and the person I call "Spanish Mom," Torjí. I studied Spanish at a school here. It was a study abroad program with students from Saddleback Community College. The other students were mostly under 21. I like to call it my trip to Spain with "Sixteen Drunken Teenagers." Though they weren't all teenagers, three were even over 21, and they weren't all drunk, at least not all the time. It was a good time and I had lots of pictures of my solitary walks along the river sometimes one of the Bears would accompany me. 

In the Salamanca pictures were also pictures of the trips I took while I was living in Salamanca. My friend Eileen, who was living in London during that same three-month period, and I went to Lisbon, Amsterdam, and Prague. I also spent a weekend with her in London and a few days with old friends on the Southern coast of Spain. Fond memories. 

Then I went through the pictures of the three weeks I spent with my youngest daughter traveling to Morocco (including a hot air balloon trip and a camel ride,) Istanbul, and Barcelona. After that, she went back to the US and I went to SJPP to start my first Camino. 

Then I went through the pictures of the three month trip I took with my youngest daughter in 2009 when we wandered all over Spain until towards the end we went to Barcelona, where I had emergency surgery, and then we went to Paris for ten days, where I was thankful for every day I got to be alive. 

Then there were the photos of the three-month trip when my husband and I wandered around Spain by bus and Caravana, starting in Barcelona, going across the north coast, spending time in Santiago, where I learned about the Camino. Our youngest daughter joined us for two weeks in the Caravana and we saw Seville and Granada. Then she went home and we wandered back to the Southern Coast and hung out. It was an amazing trip. That was followed by a trip to the States and then to Costa Rica for a month in Tamarindo. 

There were photos of my Bicycle Tour of China during the SARS epidemic. It was supposed to be 16 people on bikes, but I was the only one who showed up on China. It was amazing!
Then in my memory was the time I fell in love. I was on another school type tour organized by a very disorganized person in the art department. But before I met up with the "tour" I went to Paris, Madrid and Barcelona. By the time I met up with the tour, I was in love, with Spain! I was already in love with my husband, had been for quite some time, but I had never been in love with a country. I appreciate the one I live in, but I don't think I'm in love with it. 

Anyway, after this, there were pictures of my family and friends from Holidays and other celebrations. 

Well, after this I had to laugh at my silly self. Who could be a cranky pants with memories like that? And then I saw the picture that I had posted of my Camino pin that says, "Turn It Over" and I did. I heard from Anai. She had not one, but two possible hospitalera postings for me for the first two weeks of June. One was in Zamora, about four days walk from here, and one was in Estella, on the Camino Frances, a couple of bus or train rides from here. I told her Zamora. Then I thought about it and I thought that is just what would be easiest for me. It may not be what is needed most. So I wrote again and ask her to tell me which one would be most helpful. She said, Zamora. So that is where I will be with a Spanish man named Jose Luís. She says he is a veteran Hospitalero. Geesh, I hope it's not the guy I ran into earlier on the Via Plata. The one I thought should retire. lol 
My knee is better. I'm going to stay here into Tuesday. So hopefully, I can see the Plaza Mayor in it's pure form without all the clutter, visit my Spanish Mom and drop in on some friends Monday night. Then I'll walk Tuesday and the next nine days until it is time to go to Zamora, or back to Zamora because hopefully I will have passed it walking. : )

Well, that's all for now!