Post-Camino observations

Warning – This post will be boring unless you are a Camino fan. I started at St. Jean Pied de Port on October 14 and arrived in Santiago on November 27, exactly 6 weeks and almost 800 km later. For me, 6 weeks was the right amount of time. I found that 20 km/day was a…

Day 41: Ribadiso to O’Pedrouzo (23 km)

The weather was back to great today –  cool and crisp at times, but mostly sunny. As my last cow photo of the season (unless something really interesting happens tomorrow) here is a woman taking her cows out for a walk. Do you think that is a pooper-scooper bag in her right hand. Today included…

Day 40: Palas de Rei to Ribadiso (25 km)

The subject of today’s post is WET. That should be no surprise when you put the words Galicia and November together. Same as Vancouver and November. No Camino would be complete without a long wet day. The photos cannot communicate the overall dampness, boot-squishiness, rain-jacket-claminess and fogged-up glasses of the day. It was cool (about…

Day 39: Portomarin to Palas de Rei (25 km)

Back to normal work walking today. Since my rest day, my friend NY-J has caught up so I expect we’ll walk into Santiago together. Although there are more people on the trail since Sarria,  the mood is quite solitary (partly because of the iffy weather) and many/most places are closed. One can’t count on accommodation…

Day 38: Rest day in Portomarin

Remember that fabulous dinner last night? Well? It didn’t agree with me so I had a bad night. Good thing I had the room to myself. I am wondering if the strange (to me) mushrooms on the veggie platter were a problem. Even though I’ve been trying to push ahead before the rain comes, and…

Day 37: Sarria to Portomarin (24 km)

The book says only 21 km,  but I walked to the Sarria train station first and 24 is what MapMyWalk says. More country roads, farmyards and old stone structures. It goes on and on! I feel like I’m walking across a whole country on a route traveled for 1000 years. The weather is expected to…

Day 36: Triacastela to Sarria (21 km)

Here’s a short post to catch up. The weather was OK and the walk quite pleasant – forest paths and country roads that go straight through little settlements. There are signs of commerce during the busy Camino season, but most are closed now. Here is a truck full of new concrete marker cairns, being installed…