- Time of past OR future Camino
- CF Fin/Muxia CI CPr 2022
Via Podiensis CF 2024
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Last stop leaving Betanzos on the Ingles. Run by a very nice couple, named for their daughter, if I remember correctly. We enjoyed a juice, toast and coffee breakfast to fuel us on our way.
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I will always remember him for his astounding commitment to supporting pilgrims on the Way, for nearly a decade, if I recall rightly.We met him in 2017 and had the most wonderful watermelon he provided. He is a gem!
Wow! Did you backtrack or crawl forward? After this the bridge into Portomarin must have been very easy. Glad that you made it safely.View attachment 99975
Whenever I'm at a fork in the road, I always take the path on the left, and it usually works out well for me.
Until I took the path on the left on the final approach to Portomarín...
I scrambled down reasonably easily - but I was grateful that it wasn't raining that day!Wow! Did you backtrack or crawl forward? After this the bridge into Portomarin must have been very easy. Glad that you made it safely.
Me too! Started off quite inoffensiveView attachment 99975
Whenever I'm at a fork in the road, I always take the path on the left, and it usually works out well for me.
Until I took the path on the left on the final approach to Portomarín...
May I ask what was requested ?View attachment 100071
As I crossed the Miño, I looked down for signs of the old, drowned Portomarín.
Instead, there was an unexpected request to consider...
Minimalist pilgrim on the Le Puy route between Moissac and Auvillar.View attachment 100044
" Minimalist " pilgrim. Somewhere on the Camino Vasco Interior 2019.
I forgot to write down the exact place where I saw it ( again! ).
I had to look closely!View attachment 100071
As I crossed the Miño, I looked down for signs of the old, drowned Portomarín.
Instead, there was an unexpected request to consider...
Look closely again at the grass near the river.May I ask what was requested ?
The journey is never endingEarly spring morning mists mingle with wood smoke and hover over the houses between O Pedrouzo and Santiago de Compostela. The fields have been sown and life will go on as it has for hundreds of years, while this pilgrim deals with mixed emotions nearing the end of this Camino. I wonder why I am already starting to miss it! The pueblos, the people, their culture, traditions and history; the food and goodwill; the walking, the good weather and foul weather; fellow like-minded pilgrims, encouraging each other, helping each other; some good days, some hard days, some really challenging climbs. Yet the Camino has been a decidedly positive affirmation and has infused my spirit with something that is hard to express. It's no wonder why I am already starting to miss it!
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I couldn't decide which was more unusual - the wood pile or the house across the street.
Ameyugo, Via de Bayona 2019.
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It is surreal and magical!Tap the photo to see the Magic.
I would love to hear more about how it went for you in Casa Loncho. When I last walked through, they were thinking about opening an “all you can eat” buffet retaurant in the café. I think the best place to eat in town, by far, is As Pías. I have stayed once in the municipal albergue in Olveiroa, but find that for me the best way to get to Fisterra or Muxia is to spend the first night from Santiago in Vilaserio.In front of Casa Loncho, Olveiroa, where we stayed on our way to Finisterre/Muxia. One of the villages many Horreos just in front. Very agricultural village. June, 2018.
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I think we slept in the same room! The people who run this place are wonderful. They have been very successful and could probably now sit back and live off the fruits of their labor, but they are in there hands-on for all the tour busses that come through. And the peregrinos get special attention and care.View from the little balcony of my room at Complejo Rural Agoga at Las Medulas. I spent one and a half days there viewing the breathtaking landscape and exploring the paths and tunnels of the historic Roman gold mining site. One of the places on the Invierno that makes me want to return to this camino.
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Oh,yes it is open!
Hi Laurie,I would love to hear more about how it went for you in Casa Loncho. When I last walked through, they were thinking about opening an “all you can eat” buffet retaurant in the café. I think the best place to eat in town, by far, is As Pías. I have stayed once in the municipal albergue in Olveiroa, but find that for me the best way to get to Fisterra or Muxia is to spend the first night from Santiago in Vilaserio.
I really enjoyed my stay there. Very relaxing sitting on that lovely little balcony mid-afternoon with tea & cake and my book. They were such kind hardworking people. As I was leaving in the morning, the woman gave me a bag with an orange, some cheese and bread. "For energy in your day" she said.I think we slept in the same room! The people who run this place are wonderful. They have been very successful and could probably now sit back and live off the fruits of their labor, but they are in there hands-on for all the tour busses that come through. And the peregrinos get special attention and care.
I'd been lollygagging up the hill, wowed by the flora, so I was well behind Sabine and went another way altogether:@VNwalking took another road
WOW that's a very modern Parador with a stunning location. I only stayed at one (in León) for a luxury rest day and was quite pleasantly surprised at the cost - wasn't nearly as expensive as I'd imagined. Mind you we didn't get the luxury accommodations they portrayed in the movie "The Way"Oh,yes it is open!
Parador Costa da Morte (Muxía) | Paradores de Turismo
El Parador Costa da Morte emplazado junto a la bella Praia de Lourido es un edificio de nueva planta..www.parador.es
I liked it too in 2010. It is similar to a pleasant private club; all is comfy, gracious and very relaxed.View attachment 100461
Old fashioned charm. The lounge at the hotel Norte y Londres in Burgos. CF 2011.
Haha, I have this photo too.an early morning mist on the way out of Portomarín.
It does it for me too. Gorgeous!but there's just something about this one that captures the Camino for me
Probably means "slipper"y trail ahead!
Theatregal,The Abbey of Eskirotz and Ilarratz, also known as the Iglesia Parroquial de Santa Lucia, a few km after Zubiri. It looked abandoned and partially in ruin when I was there in Sept. 2012, though the tiny graveyard was tended. It is now owned privately and being restored.
La Abadía soñada de Neill Le Roux
Una antigua Abadía abandonada que originalmente fue una iglesia románica del siglo XII vinculada a los monjes benedictinos. Un sudafricano jubilado y su sueño dwww.diariodenavarra.es
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Yes - I've seen their site. As soon as I can walk again, I would love to visit them and maybe help out for a bit. Although there are other routes I've wanted to walk before returning to the Frances again, I'm feeling drawn to it as 2022 will be ten years since I first walked the camino. There are so many places along the Frances that I've learned about and researched - places I missed or didn't pay attention to when I first walked.Theatregal,
What a splendid place for re-purposing! I wonder how the work has progressed. Have you seen this web?