Tonight there is one pilgrim and Phil at the albergue. The pilgrim is from Burgos and Phil has apparently not lost his Camino counseling touch. Every albergue we've served, I am usually the organizer, cleaner, and cook. Phil is the listener for the pilgrims. We were calling him Dr. Phil for a while at a few places as he listened to people with their stories of transition, camino crushes, spirtitual renewal, grief, and so on.
Today he and his pilgrim spoke of the Camino. The pilgrim shared that he had not had any faith before the Way, but that God was changing him from the inside now. The two of them discussed how the Camino does change you. The pilgrim said he sees now that it is not about the walking, but about the journey and the people he has met. He shared that his hips and legs were hurting from the walking, but that he feels good in other ways. Phil said after an hour of talking in Spanish his brain was hurting, but he was glad to be able to talk and understand with a little help from Google Translate once in a while. He said when he did not use the right word or pronunciation his guest helped him.
Phil's needing and using his Spanish in this community. Monica the shopkeeper speaks in Spanish and so does the Alcalde (town mayor). He's spoken to the mayor in person and by phone and also to Abdulla the local handyman who comes by to fix things and empty the trash in the cans out front. He's also communicated with the ayuntamiento over in El Burgo Renero as this abergue falls under their jurisdiction and they send him the vouchers. If there are work orders, they also take care of any issues. He did find out that Mass in this community is on Friday at 5 p.m. so he missed it this week, but hopes to catch it next week.
Phil brought downstiars an small electric oil heater tonight in the common room for a little while because it is cold tonight. His pilgrim was exicted! He is looking around for the stuff to make a fire in the wood stove tomorrow. He says there is a wood pile out back, but that the wood is mostly too big for the stove and needs to be split. He has no ax to split it with, but will look in the "bike shed" tomorrow and may have to call someone to come take care of it.
I've been reading about the change in the electic costs in Spain this spring. There is a new graduated rate and the electricity is lowest on the weekend and overnight. Overall the electrical costs have gone up enormously and even the central government is getting involved although that too has been a controversy.
On the homefront today, there is a freeze/frost warning for Sunday or Monday. We may also have snow so I have picked all the green tomatoes and brought them in. They are in a box now with a banana to try to ripen them. Laramie, Wy, where we live is at 7,200+ feet and it just isn't the right climate for tomatoes (or a lot of other flowers and vegetables) I have about 100 green tomatoes and have not picked a ripe one yet this season
although maybe 5 or 6 were starting to turn. I do feel lucky in some ways because last year it snowed the first week in September just after we had moved here from Boise, ID.