Samos to Ferreiros (Friday, June 25th)
We left our beautiful alburgue in Samos early.
A lot of the early part of today's walking was wooded and cool. It is very beautiful and, again, almost as if we are walking in a fairytale land.
Though much of our walking this morning was in woods, we did occasionally come across a lone Galician farmhouse or a small village, which generally reminded us of just how poor this area is.
We enter the city of Sarria a little while later. They are doing a lot of construction on the street on which we enter. There is a Visitor's Office, so we go in and get a map, which is helpful. A picture on the map shows that they have a Corpus Christi flower display here, too. Sarria is an interesting looking city. the first part is fairly flat, and then it becomes the city of 69,000 steps (only a slight exaggeration!) At the bridge where we cross the river (Rio Sarria), there are lots of caravans that look like they they are sort of permanently set up, but they are not open for business right now and the flaps are all pulled down. We have also noticed electric decorations across a lot of the streets.
From Sarria, we head back into the countryside again. As I enter one small village, it is apparently time for the cows to come home. The path I am walking on is perhaps five or six feet wide and defined by stacked rock walls on either side. The cows are in a small field, also defined by rock walls around it, ahead off to the left. The farmer has come to call the cows with her trusty herding dog, opens the gate, then turns and heads back up the path. Most of the cows are smart enough to come back out the gate onto the path, turn left and head back up to the barn-house for milking or feeding or whatever normally awaits them this time of day. But not one lone cow who decides to rebel! She will have none of this following the herd mentality today! She wants to turn right and come down the path towards me! Aaagh! I stop in my tracks while I'm watching all this happen.
Not long after, I pass this very important marker. It is the 100 kilometer marker. That's all the further we have to Santiago!!! Hard to believe, from that first sign we saw at Roncevalles for 870 kilometers. Wow. In order to receive the Compostela, the special certificate, pilgrims have to physically walk the last 100 kilometers. (or do whatever means they are claiming) Another way to look at it is, you only have to do 100 km to get the certificate, which is what some people do, so the traffic picks up a lot from this point on. They actually have "police" checking to see that nobody cheats! So all the rest of what we have walked is icing on the cake in once sense, but for us, we have the experiences, the graces, the strength we have gained, the personal satisfaction of having walked the hundreds of miles that have preceded these last 62 or so. I have my two little rocks from Jerry Hall road with me. And I pull one out and place it on top of the marker. It's the little one on the very top, just to the left of center.
Not too long before I reach our destination for the night, I come to a woodsy area that has a creek running through it. The creek is shallow but very broad. The people who maintain the Camino have come up with an intriguing solution for the path to keep our feet dry!
Not long after, I enter the little village of Ferreiros where our hostel is. You might guess by looking at it's name that the town has something to do with iron, and the town's name actually means "blacksmiths." There don't seem to be any forges or blacksmiths in sight any longer, however. The hostel is one of the not-terribly attractive, but functional government-run white and blue buildings that looks like a big FEMA trailer. It holds only 18 pilgrims and I am #14. I hope that Stella is not too far behind. She gets in at #17! The bathroom is not great (Stella is so much more tolerable about these things than I am!) But at least we have a bed for the night. There is a rainstorm after we get settled. Afterwards, we have a beer at the little cafe next door. There isn't much of anywhere to explore, but we head down the road and discover a little restaurant. Apparently, it also has an alburgue - if only we'd known! We have a delightful dinner with a very funny waitress.
Ferreiros to Ventas de Noran (Saturday, June 26th)
We're out of our trailer-alburgue early and eager to get down the hill for cups of caffe and tee. Then it's off into the early morning mist again.
When the water is lower, you are supposed to be able to see the ruins, but we were not able to see anything. There is just a narrow walkway along the bridge on one side next to the auto traffic.
From Portomarin, our journey this day is mostly through fields and groves
Ventas de Noran to Melide (Sunday, June 27th)
Almost all of the last week we haven´t had internet access, so it is a lot to catch up on. I will start with today and as I can, I will fill back in. Guess what? We are 31 miles from Santiago as of tonight!!! Wee Haw! Stella and I did 18 miles, more than 27 km today, plus a few late this afternoon trying to find a place to stay here in Melide. We had planned to have a shorter day, about 18 km, but we got to where we were going to stay, Vilar Casanova, and found that it was not a great alburgue. It was also in the middle of nowhere with nothing of interest around it, and it was only about 12:30. We would have been bored for the rest of the afternoon, so we decided to do about 10 km more and get a little further down the road. We had thought that Melide was supposed to be a little more medieval and attractive than it is, but apparently it is not. It is, however more of a city, and we did have stuff to do this afternoon (walk, walk, walk, look for a place to stay, walk).
It was a gorgeous day. We have been blessed in our weather. Other than the first mountain crossing and the three days of rain on the meseta, we have had lovely and cool weather. We have had rain twice in the evenings after we have arrived, including last evening. Today started out foggy and cool and stayed nice and cool all day until late this afternoon. Today´s walk was mostly wooded and shady, and a good bit downhill and not so steep. There are few villages along the way, but here and there a farm or two. As we left Ventas de Noran, we passed the Cross of Lameiros, which dates from 1672.
There are lots of interesting characters to meet on the Camino. Today, we met John de Verra, a retiree from London, England, but whose family was originally from Verra, Spain. His ancestor fought on the losing side in the Battle of Trafalgar, but eventually became a chandler in the British Navy (we got the WHOLE story). He was quite a character. Travels Europe in his RV now, no strings attached. Made it quite clear, first to me and then to Stella when she came up, that he was looking for a traveling partner. He really was very lonely and was just looking for someone with whom to converse in English. Stella was brave enough to have a cup of coffee with him. If you´ve ever watched the Britcoms and you know what Onslow and Daisy´s dishware looks like on ¨Keeping Up Appearances,¨you´ve got a good idea about how clean (or not) it all was! John used to be a stage director for a West End Theatre and then he was in TV production for a couple of decades for British TV before he was downsized. Now, he wants to travel Italy from top to bottom and France and a few other places. Mostly, he just wants company.
The rest of the journey today was through quiet shaded paths. One of my pre-arrival questions was, are there squirrels in Spain? Well, the answer is yes. But not many. In all the woods and forests and parks and trees that we have walked through and by, I have seen a grand total of two (yes, two) and Stella has seen one. And they are not grey like the ones we have in the US, but dark brown, like the color of a mink coat. I did see something about the same shade of gray in a farmyard yesterday, only it was much bigger. And it had bigger haunches. I didn´t get to see it very well. I suppose it could have been a bunny. But I really think it was more like a very big rat. It certainly wasn´t a cat.
After the big park in which we meet John, and the other woods, we reach the little city of Palas do Rei. For a change, we find ourselves going DOWNhill through much of it.
As we are headed out of Palas do Rei on the other side of town, we find this lovely two-pilgrim statue in a dance. It's hard to get a good picture of it.
We continue to walk through shady, mostly wooded lands today. We are in the province of A Coruna. We notice for the first time that they have placed litter barrels along the way - and the pilgrims are using them! It's one of the cleaner segments of the Camino! It is very pretty countryside. We stop at a really nice little cafe for a break and they have some interesting clay Celtic jewelry for sale. I find a necklace for Stella as both a birthday present and a memento of our journey together, and a similar one for Mom. Both of them remind me of the pilgrim statue we just saw in Palas do Rei - it is two people dancing, dressed in traditional Galician attire. For Stella, it is a reminder of the wonderful marriage she has with Dave, with whom she has been through so much and who at this very moment is at home redoing her entire kitchen for her! And for Mom, it reminds me of the dance she had with my dad for 53 years.
We meet some more animal friends along the way.
Along the way, there is a monument with this Cross of St. James on it.
I'm a little ahead of Stella as I finally reach Melide and cross over this beautiful, stone arch bridge.
After getting settled in, we go downstairs where we know they have some computers available and try to catch up with some emails home. Then we head out to explore the city some more. It is an interesting little place, though not as attractive as we had expected from the guidebook description. The city is considered the "geographical heart of Galicia." The core of the city is medieval with several old churches and some other buildings. There's a museum here, too.
It is interesting being a pilgrim versus a tourist. There is part of the history and story that we are taking in, and we did the tour of the monastery in Samos, but it is different. The focus is more on the journey and the bigger picture perhaps, not the details? I'm not sure that's really right. Here's another stab at the difference. Tourism is about learning all there is to know about some place - the history and the people and the culture. Pilgrimage is about getting quiet and walking into the depths of the experience of it in time and space. Allowing what is important to saturate you and what is not to slip off. That's closer. It may still be not quite right. Allowing space for what God wants to show you in a particular place and time. Getting closer to what the difference is. There are times when I wish we had more time or energy or money to stop and look at interesting things, although then I wonder why - would I really remember it in the blur of all we have experienced? Now, I remember things about how the layers of leaves felt on the mountain, and how the rain felt like a water pic on the meseta and how sometimes it was all I could do to put one foot in front of the other as prayer to say yes to God, and somehow this is more important to me as pilgrimage. Or the conversations I have had and the faces of people I've met, and I think that is the take home, not some display some place in a building.
We have dinner at a little restaurant on the corner of the main streets in downtown. It is wonderful watching everyone go by on this sunny Sunday evening. I'm getting sadder that our great adventure is getting closer to its end, but excited to be reaching our goal. It's such an odd mix of feelings. I can't wait to get to better, healthier food, but I love being outdoors, seeing new places, meeting wonderful people. We walk slowly back to our home for the night.