- Time of past OR future Camino
- Frances 2016; Mansill de las Mulas to Finisterre/Muxia 2017; Aragones 2018; Suso/Yuso, Meseta 2019
This journey for me came together through indecision, nothing "clicked" until I started reading about this marvelous route which has it all: mountains, history both religious and political, and an aerodrome. So I did it all, most guides mention 6 stages, I walked the route in 11 days starting at Somport ending at Puente la Reina. Since usually I do not care for buses, I took the regional train from Zaragoza leaving before dawn and watched the sun rise as the landscape changed from flat brown (autumn) farmland to steep rock faces with soaring vultures to green trees and tall mountains tipped with snow. The train arriving at the historic station in Canfranc passed the roundhouse (hidden from the path) with 11 vintage, dilapidated train cars, as @amancio said, a step back in time. The walk down the mountain passed bunkers from 3 different eras of Spain's past. To save my knees I took a taxi from Jaca to the monastery of San Juan de la Pena. My driver was a real gift, 4 hours instead of the usual 1 hour to explore the monasteries old and new, the churches of Santa Cruz de la Seros and his favorite overlooks back to the Pyrenees. On the way to Arres I stopped at Santa Celia to go soaring, a sailplane ride (non-motorized transport) for a peregrina, much to the amusement of the men in the local bar. The aerial views of the mountains and foothills, and the valley extending from Jaca to Yesa were glorious! I stayed in Ruesta and was included in a fascinating post lunch (non-confrontational) political discussion. After Sanguesa, I saw no other pilgrims for three days as I walked to Javier, the monastery of Leyre, the Foz de Lumbier and on to Monreal. Since I was not having a guided tour of the monastery of Leyre, the visitors office gave me a key to the church and crypt and told me to lock myself in, seriously! The Foz de Lumbier is a different world! The Aragones ended with the jewel, the church at Eunate which was open. The only thing I missed was the 5000 year old dolmen near Villanua, being too occupied with watching out for the large killer (really!) rocks on the path. Perhaps return in the spring to see that dolmen?
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