Day 9: Quintana de Fuseros - Congosto, 27 kms
Juan Luis is 30 years older than me and wakes up one hour later in the morning. Still he catches up with me before the first or second town along the way. I wish I will have his speed when I am his age..!
Today I walked slower than usual. It was flat the first part from Quintana through a couple of small villages. Then a lot of ups-and-downs, an overgrown path, a goat trail so steep downhill I had to hang on to the trunks by my side not to tumble down... Above all, the hill between Noceda del Bierzo (where there is an albergue) and Labaniego was murderous.
Before Losada I met a farmer walking with his three dogs. We were heading in the same direction so we talked for a while. He proposed I stay on the road into Losada because the Camino makes unnecessary detours... If I follow villagers' advice it is not cheating, right? I took it as a permission to walk into Losada on my beloved asphalt.
In Losada the bar at the community swimming pool was open and Juan Luis was already there. The woman in charge was so energetic and chatty that I mistook her for the owner of the bar La Madrileña, who
@WestKirsty had told me about and who I would meet further down the Camino. She threw a load of muffins, biscuits and croissants on our table but would only charge the coffee. We stayed a long time talking and laughing with her.
One topic of conversation, that would come up in other bars as well, was the detour we would have to make the next day from Congosto to Cubillos del Sil. It takes 13 kms to do a U-turn around the lake Embalse de Bárcena, while it is only 2-3 kms as the crow flies. Juan Luis wondered why one couldn't just build a bridge over the narrowest part of the lake; the woman shrieked and said she would never step on it as she is afraid of heights. Jokes aside, she said people in the vicinity had already wanted that bridge to be built and now they hoped that the politicians would get their act together and make it come true. It would shorten the next stage with 10 kms...
The Camino takes you on a hike to the Sanctuary of Virgen de la Peña just before Congosto. We didn't want to go all the way up there but suddenly we noticed that was where we were heading... I fished out Google Maps and took us down to Congosto as fast as possible.
Since it was Monday the restaurant where the hospitalera works was closed and it is the only game in town. Through WhatsApp I had ordered dinner that she would prepare for me, and it waited for me when I stepped into the albergue. The albergue consists of three barracks next to the football field that were previously changing rooms and showers. It looks absolutely hideous from the outside, while it is clean and cleverly constructed on the inside: bunkbeds, AC, showers, toilet, and even a small "kitchen" in a corner with a coffee machine, microwave oven, and a box with breakfast for the next day. All donativo. (The dinner I ordered through WhatsApp was 7 euros though.) As I had been the first one to call yesterday I got building number 1 for myself. Had another pilgrim come along he would have had to share one of the other barracks with Juan Luis, according to the the hospitalera's mother and her friend who laid out the rules for us. Apparently, first caller gets the grand suit all to him-/herself.
We thought Antonio would be waiting for us in the albergue. But the ladies told us he had chosen to continue to Ponferrada..! From Igüeña! That must be close to 50 kms!! Unfortunately we wouldn't see him again.
The bar La Peña is right at the other side of the football field and luckily open on Mondays. I mooched their wifi and made several bookings in advance on the Invierno (a Camino that starts in Ponferrada) to be sure I could stay in my favorite places there.
I flipped through the register in the albergue. Almost everyone had come from Igüeña, not Quintana de Fuseros. I saw
@WestKirsty's name and, further back, @SaraDhooma... I felt honored to stay in the same place as legendary pilgrims!
I needed a good night's sleep to prepare for the last stage of 34 kms, where I would have to walk nine of them on the Camino Francés to Villafranca del Bierzo. After meeting so few pilgrims on the Baztán, the Viejo and the Olvidado, I knew I was in for a change tomorrow...
Last chapter coming up soon!