Kiwi-family
{Rachael, the Mama of the family}
- Time of past OR future Camino
- walking every day for the rest of my life
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Crikey! Frying up bacon and eggs in the Albergue in the morning? I'm not sure how the hospitaleros felt about that! They need everyone out ASAP , with the kitchen clean and tidy!dplandis said:I tried to stay in albergues with kitchens whenever possible, so I could prepare my breakfast food and coffee. Whenever I had the chance I would make bacon and eggs (got some jealous looks from hungry pilgrims .
Beware that Mondays are taken as the rest day by many bars. We started early from Belorado, expecting to have our breakfast at the first village, Tosantos, only 4 Km away. No luck there, or at the next 2 villages. We walked 12Km to Villafranca Montes de Oca before finally having our much-needed café con leche etc.hi everyone! i have a question!!! if you get up early every morning and leave the albergue about 07.oo,you dont get brekfast there,right?you just have to eat something on the way. what time they usually serve breakfast?
Too true! And if one is on Camino for any length of time, it is very easy to lose track of what day of the week it is. Always keep a stash of eats - granola bars, dried fruit and/or nuts, chocolate - in your pack for such eventualities. More than once, these saved my baconBeware that Mondays are taken as the rest day by many bars. We started early from Belorado, expecting to have our breakfast at the first village, Tosantos, only 4 Km away. No luck there, or at the next 2 villages. We walked 12Km to Villafranca Montes de Oca before finally having our much-needed café con leche etc.
All day, and the same applies in France! Sundays and Mondays see a lot of closures. Not everything, of course, but many stores and bars are closed.when you mean mondays are closed...all day??? or just they open a little late?
All day, and the same applies in France! Sundays and Mondays see a lot of closures. Not everything, of course, but many stores and bars are closed.
That would be a strategy. Or carry your own breakfast (we are talking bread, butter, and jam here). Or keep walking until you find a place that is open. Many times I have cursed a half-dozen places for being closed and denying me my coffee; but it always ended well.Does that mean or suggest that, if you can afford it, staying in a casa rural or hotel is the best solution for eating etc on those days?
My son came up with an idea on this; he had some plastic tubes whose bottoms opened and could be sealed with a clamp. He filled one with jam and the other with peanut butter; the products could be squeezed out of a small opening which was sealed with a screw-on cap. He was able to buy baguettes and always had peanut butter and jam sandwiches whenever he got hungry. The tubes allow one to carry the products in a light and not easily breakable container. This was a very effective and economical solution.That would be a strategy. Or carry your own breakfast (we are talking bread, butter, and jam here). Or keep walking until you find a place that is open. Many times I have cursed a half-dozen places for being closed and denying me my coffee; but it always ended well.
So glad to hear this............I would tend not to pilfer extras from a breakfast buffet, no matter how much I'd paid for the room. I'm not a member of the deserving poor, and I don't want those businesses to be slowly bankrupted, one tiny Nutella pot at a time...
There are plenty really small villages on the CF with only one bar! They have busy weekends and need one day of descanso.No sé lo que pasa en el Camino Francés, pero en el norte, generalmente, si hay más de un bar en un pueblo, no cierran todos el mismo día sino que se turnan el día de descanso para que la gente tenga donde comer o tomar algo. Me parece rarísimo que la mayoría de bares cierren los lunes. No digo que no sea verdad pero, al menos por mi zona, eso no pasa.
I do not know what happens in the French Way, but in the north, generally, if there is more than one bar in a town, not close all the day but turns the day off so that people have to eat or drink something. It seems very strange that most bars closed on Mondays. I'm not saying it's not true, but at least in my area, that does not happen.
I regularly walk for two to three hours before eating, and then typically some fruit, bread, cheese, or yogurt. It is the coffee I like!which is only about an hour and a half of walking. Even if one had to walk on an empty stomach for an hour and a half, I think that everyone would survive.
Sorry, I'm bad at math and think in miles rather than kilometers. It takes me an hour and a half to walk a 3.5 mile city stretch (from the ferry terminal to my home) that includes inclines, declines, and flats. Regardless of the math, children and adults in Africa routinely fetch water and firewood for their families on an empty stomach and somehow manage to survive. I think that the biggest issue that most people have with international traveling is that their normal routines are altered. I think that one of the many ways that we can grow as individuals is to learn how to adapt to different circumstances without stressing out about all of the minute details. There are things that each of us find comforting. For me, this is coffee in the morning and a pillow. For others, this may mean breakfast before we start our day. Howeveer, I think that instead of planning out every possible scenario, one might just consider making a few adjustments ahead of time to tackle your fears. Which again, for me, would be lack of caffeine, but for another might be not eating at their regularly scheduled mealtime.8km, Tammi, is just under 5 miles.
The Spanish are surviving with their particular dietary habits -- most of them looked pretty healthy to me!
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