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LIVE from the Camino Manzanal alternative and Invierno from Astorga

AlanSykes

Veteran Member
Time of past OR future Camino
Except the Francés
The helpful person in the tourist office strongly recommended not walking up the Puerto del Manzanal instead of the usual route. Grudgingly admitting that the two are almost equidistant, especially if you allow for the massively greater ascent to "the far famed pass of Foncebadón". "And him?" I said, pointing to the nearby statue of 15th century guide writer and monk Hermann Künig, who went up by Manzanal. "Oh, him, he was an idiot": I paratranslate, but I think that was the gist - he added, reasonably, that there was an infrastructure of monasteries and albergues back then which no longer exists on the northern route.

Anyway, shortly before dawn this morning, watching Jupiter fade into the still almost full moon, I hadn't quite made up my mind. But the promise of a near perfect autumn day made me, again, opt for the route less travelled. And I'm so glad I did. The mountain route was a delight. To my surprise, there were yellow arrows and scallop shells almost all along the way - not having to check the direction at every junction makes for a much quicker walk. Mostly pines on the eastern approach to the pass, then a mix of oak and pine and a few chestnuts - the deciduous trees still in their autumn glory. Presumably the wind I ran into a few days ago was less ferocious here.

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To the north I could see the pass I miserably walked down from Vegarienza to Igüeña on the Olvidado almost exactly a year ago (14 November 2023, to be precise, I see from my notes here) - a horrible day in continuous driving rain on a slippery path. Today's walk would have been no fun in such conditions, and I'd have stuck to the normal route. But in the perfect, still, dry, clear it was a delight. At about the halfway point I passed the ruined Romanesque monastery of San Martín de Montealgre, where Künig almost certainly stayed. Only the rebuilt bell tower, and part of the apse, remaining.

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The bell will have sounded out along the near deserted valley for Martinmas a week ago - would love to have heard it. Most of the way there was the sound of water, but occasionally not, and then the silence was almost unnervingly intense. Very few birds - once, possible the first I've ever come across in Spain, the cawing "nevermore" of a raven.

Shortly after, the pleasant mountain village of Torre del Bierzo appeared. The bar at the edge of the village told me I was the first pilgrim they'd seen in a month, and gave me a generously large bowl of sopa de ajo as a tapa. "Pilgrim rocket fuel", somebody on here called it. Certainly kept me going.

Nervously wondering if I could make it all the way today, I had noticed there was a train back to Astorga from Torre del Bierzo at 4pm every day, if exhaustion or bad weather set in. A useful safety blanket, but not one I needed. The next few km along the río Tremor were less spectacular than before, but more autumn colours, a bit more tarmac and, eventually, the hostal Tio Pepe II, in Las Ventas de Albares, a few km before Bembibre, where I sleep tonight - I booked it from the bar in Torre del Bierzo: 35€, perfectly decent, no real alternative anyway. I assume for much of the year it would be possible to stay in Torre del Bierzo, almost exactly half way between Astorga and Ponferrada, and much nicer.
 
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Hi Alan, enjoy the breakfast at Pepe 2. I did the VK from Leon early last month(now way marked 👍). Künig was pretty clear that you don't go through Astorga but keep it "3 leagues to the South". The point of bifurcation was the "Mirador de Trobajo", the base of which about 5km outside Leon, is passed unknowingly by thousands of pilgrims every year. It was at this point you went left to bypass the "mountains of Leon" or right to Astorga.

The current VK route, however, climbs unnecessarily a significant hill to Folgosa de la Ribera rather than following the Rio Tremor to Torre del Bierzo and joining the old Roman road/Manzaneal route there rather than at Albares.

Künig was no idiot - he just liked food and wine more than hills.

Not sure of your route but if your going to Ponferrada via San Miguel de las Dueñas the @ 10 km alongside the canyon is one of the best walks I've done on any camino (Ruta La Senda de Los Canteros)
 

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Passing through Bembibre with Jupiter fading to the west, I noticed a huge sign promoting the area's festival of the "exaltación del botillo", a local speciality with protected status, involving stuffing bits of pig into a pig's lower intestine, and then smoking or otherwise curing it.

The Boeza flows placidly through Bembibre, and the Manzanal arrows continue. It's a much shorter day than yesterday, and I wasn't expecting much excitement. I was wrong. To get to its confluence with the Sil at Ponferrada, the Boeza had to cut its way through a spectacular canyon. Partly through granite cliffs and a quarry that Gaudi used for the silvery grey stone in the Bishop's Palace in Astorga. Unexpected and amazing, and much more fun than the Sil gorge coming down from the Olvidado.

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Künig was pretty clear that you don't go through Astorga but keep it "3 leagues to the South". The point of bifurcation was the "Mirador de Trobajo", the base of which about 5km outside Leon, is passed unknowingly by thousands of pilgrims every year.
I walked from the Vía de la Plata, joining at Astorga, missing Künig's detour by a day or two. Enjoyed following him last year from Villafranca del Bierzo up to Lugo and (a bit) beyond.

the @ 10 km alongside the canyon is one of the best walks I've done on any camino (Ruta La Senda de Los Canteros)
Yup, it was glorious.
 
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Crossed the Sil in the gathering dawn. Low clouds, not promising well, but failing to live up to the promise. Although the clouds were still below 1000m nearing Cornatel, so I took the short cut to Borrenes past the Ermita de la Virgen del Carmen. A bit boggy in places, but entirely off road. The view from the "banco más bonito del Bierzo", by the castle, would have been of the inside of a cloud.

At Borrenes I took the side route to Orellán and on to the mirador over Las Medulás. A few flashes of sunlight to illuminate what is arguably the world's first post-industrial landscape. Spectacular in any light.

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Walking down it was really depressing to learn about the ink disease - "la tinta" - that is killing off thousands of the chestnut trees. A horrible little fungus that eats the roots and kills the trees that have provide work and income - and beauty - here for hundreds of years. Heartbreaking.

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I had planned to stay in Las Medulás, but after an excellent lunch in Mari Fe's restaurant (fabada, yum), I felt fortified to carry on an hour or so to Puente de Domingo Flórez. The route down from the mines was a real treat - distant hazy lines of hills and valleys merging with the lines of clouds and stretching out to infinity.

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Well, until the day after tomorrow, anyway. Momentary panic in Puente de Domingo Flórez when I saw construction workers outside the La Torre hostal. "Oh no", I thought, they've closed the place for rebuilding work. Luckily they haven't, just some cosmetic work on the outside seating area. So I'm happily installed at the bar, with a charming barmaid who spent covid locked up not learning English in London, and a really delicious golden glass of Valdeorras, in the golden valley.
 
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Looking at the Aemet website last thing last night, it assured me there was a 100% chance of rain for every hour of today from 3am. So it was a very pleasant surprise, looking out shortly after 7, to see the waning gibbous moon and even Jupiter faintly visible, and a totally dry street.

The bridge over the Sil from the hostal takes you into Ourense province in Galicia. My 6th (and last, claro) autonomous region of this camino, and my 11th province. A couple of the province's distinctive (and distinctively ugly) bus shelters appeared, reminding me of several occasions unhappily sheltering in them hoping the rain, or sleat, or wind or snow would let up.

But not today. A really not bad morning to O Barco. They're putting in a massive road bridge shortly before the town, but it hasn't (yet) affected the course of the camino. It was almost sunny going along O Barco's very pretty riverside esplanade.

The otherwise deserted bar I happened to stop in was playing Aretha Franklin, and had pictures of Cab Calloway on the walls. A pleasant blues pause.

The golden valley's vines were still sporting their golden - and a few deep red - leaves.

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At A Rúa I stopped for an excellent 12€ lunch at A Lareira. Including a bottle of Valdeorras red, a mix of godello and palomino grapes, and only 12%, ideal for lunch. My first ever red godello - didn't know it existed. Now in the Pensión Fabio at the Quiroga end of town. Really very pleasant, and much (much) more comfortable than last night - cheaper as well (24€ en suite, rather than 28€ baño compartido yesterday). The forecast for tomorrow is horrible again, but I can hope that it's as wrong as yesterday's. Eventually, like a stopped clock, it will be right and I'll get drenched, but it's Galicia in November, so almost inevitable.

Are there many chestnuts affected?
Looked like most of them. Many dead, and many more dying.

At least there are lots of new young, unaffected, Ash trees here

I've had 5 huge old ash trees die (and blown down) at home (near Hadrian's Wall) and dozens of younger ones dead or dying, but many others seem to be surviving. And no trouble burning the dead ones (on an open fire), so I'll probably never be cold again as long as I live.
 
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At some point in the 4km of A Rúa's really dreary sprawl, the km markers counting down to Santiago drop under 200.

The promised rain once again failed to materialise while I was walking, but the clouds stayed low and thick for most of the day. To brighten things up a little, I put on Delibes' Galician Coppelia. It may be "the other" Galicia, but the mazurkas cheered me up a lot on a fairly long fairly dull day, and one with no coffee en route, other than a kind person offering refreshment in Montefurado, roughly a third of the way to Quiroga. The village gardens were all complete with cabbage patches, as you would expect in (this) Galicia. Occasional views of the Sil gorges appeared through the cloud, and the noise of the main road was fairly constant.

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A few signs of ancient mine workings, and a tunnel to divert the Sil to help extraction, all evidence of Rome's insatiable lust for gold. At some point I crossed into Lugo province. The Invierno is, I think, the only camino that goes through all four of Galicia's provinces.

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Sadly, many more dead and dying chestnuts.

For some reason both yesterday and today the blue camino line of the usually highly reliable mapy.cz has gone a completely different (and mostly longer) route from the yellow arrows. I stuck with the arrows.

Storm Caetano is now really chucking it down - 20mm in the last couple of hours, they say. But it looks as if tomorrow may be dry - if a bit damp underfoot.
 

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