So where are we walking next?

After walking the Camino Frances in 2016 we have really been bitten by the long distance walking bug.  We loved the Camino and northern Spain so much we intend to return in 2018, if our bodies are still in working order.

In the meantime, in 2017, we intend to do some walking in Ireland. In the southwest of Ireland we are going to walk three Way-marked Trails on the peninsulars that stick out into the Atlantic Ocean : The Dingle Way, The Kerry Way and The Beara Way.

So why go to Ireland? Well, Barbara toured there with her sister in 2014 and thought it was very beautiful. The forebears of the families of both Paul’s father and mother are from Ireland and he wanted to see the land where his genes have come from. And Ireland is a small country with a big reputation.

The Dingle Way is 195km, The Kerry Way 215km and The Beara Way 162km. So a total of over 570km. A bit less than the 800km of the Camino Frances but a good stretch of the legs anyway.

We will experience windswept beaches, wild Atlantic waves pounding against rugged cliffs, emerald meadows, soaring mist shrouded mountain peaks, glinting loughs, sandy beaches, woodlands and bogs, endless green fields crisscrossed with tumbledown stone walls, medieval ruins, ring forts, wedge tombs, stone circles and standing stones, charming villages with colourful shops and pubs, working fishing ports, and of course rain, mist and sea fog.

We will walk on quiet tarmac roads, board walks, holly lined boreens, bog roads, rocky mountain tracks and of course icky, sticky mud.

ireland_blog

ireland-ways

 

Camino Quilt Update

Hi

The Camino Quilt is coming along. The top is almost finished. Just some pieces needed to complete the border.

The designwork is all done and we now have a three arch bridge, a castle with flags, a church bell tower with three bells, candles, poppies, chestnut trees, milky way stars, yellow arrows, a St James cross, a Knights Templar cross, a San Anton cross and a San Juan de Ortega cross.

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When the border is complete then let the quilting begin!

Buen Camino

 

The Northern Explorer

This was a very nice experience which we enjoyed very much. Very relaxing, comfortable and stress free. We only had “carry on” luggage of a small bag each so we walked the 4km from home to the train station. It was a clear, crisp, still morning, just not quite a frost and we were excited to be off on another little adventure.

Only one other passenger boarded at Paraparumu and the train was five minutes early already. The Northern Explorer consisted of a diesel locomotive, a luggage van, a passenger car, a cafe car, two more passenger cars and a covered outdoor observation car. Each of the passenger cars could seat 60 but there were only about that number on the whole train. All those that started in Wellington were in the last two cars and those of us who joined further up the line were put in the front car. We had a four seat pod with a table to ourselves. The seats are comfortable, a bit larger than airline economy seats, but not reclining.

The train is not super quiet and smooth like the fast trains in France but it is not jerky or swaying. Just the usual rumbling train sounds and sqealing from the wheels around tight corners. It seems to have good noise insulation and is warm, light and airy. The windows are huge with only one pillar near the centre of each carriage. The windows curve over as part of the roof as well. The doors between carriages and from the carriage to the outside are all automatic glass sliding doors. There is a platform lift arrangement for getting wheel chairs on and off.

We stopped at Paraparumu, Palmerston North, Ohakune, National Park, Otorohonga, Frankton, Papakura and Auckland. Only at Palmerston and Frankton could you get off for a few minutes and then not to leave the platform. We were ahead of schedule all day and even after waiting about 20 minutes in Frankton still arrived in Auckland 25 minutes early.

There is no food at the station stops, it is all on board in the cafe car. The food is all by Wishbone and pretty good. The usual Wishbone fare: muffins, cookies, cakes, slices, wraps, sandwiches, filled rolls, hot meals (vegetable lasagne, Thai green curry, roast chicken etc), Kapiti ice cream, snacks, bars, tea, coffee, juice, sodas, beer, wine and mixes. It is available all day except for a few minutes at stops as the cafe staff also load and unload the luggage. You can also set up a tab and just pay once at the end of your journey. We went to the cafe car to eat but the train attendant will come to your seat to take your order and bring it to you.

There were only three train attendants and they did everything except drive the train. They did ticketing, luggage, making announcements, manning the cafe, being the barista , cleaning the carriages (at least five times) and answering all questions. They were friendly and attentive and I think one of the best things about the trip. There are overhead TV screens with continuous train tracker maps so you can follow progress. There are also headphones for a commentary and public announcements when approaching stations, points of interest etc.

New Zealand was looking absolutely fabulous. A sunny day, everything lush and green. Millions of cute new born lambs, calves, foals and even a field of goats. The mountains were clear and blanketed in pure, white snow. The train slows at points of interest like the five huge viaducts near Mangaweka, the Hapuawhenua Viaduct near Horopito, the Raurimu spiral etc. You can go out onto the observation car at any time for a blast of cold air and the smell of diesel fumes.

On flat, straight sections we did 100+ km/hr as we overtook cars on the open road. But a lot of the time it was much slower. There is a 870 metre rise to the highest point at Waiouru and a lot of it in the central North Island is twisting and turning. The super fast trains in France and Spain are on flat straight tracks and they make very few stops. This just isn’t possible here without a tremendous amount of earthworks, viaducts and tunnels. The fast European trains run on dedicated tracks that they don’t share with freight or commuter trains. It took us an hour and a half from Pukekohe to Auckland at a very slow speed as there was a commuter train just in front and another just behind.

In Auckland the Northern Explorer used to arrive and depart from Britomart Station, right in the middle of Auckland CBD at the bottom of Queen Street. It now uses The Strand which is at the bottom of Parnell Rise, about 2km from Queen Street. However a complementary shuttle is provided to take you from Parnell to Queen Street. This takes about 10 minutes.

When we arrived in Auckland it was dark but clear and mild. It was 6.25 pm and we had been on the train since 8.45 am. 681 kilometres. A long day but a good one. The Northern Explorer is not the quickest or cheapest way to get from Wellington to Auckland but it is one of the most relaxing and stress free.

 

Quilted Memories

I am a quilt maker.

While walking the Camino Frances I thought of making a Camino quilt containing some of the things we remember, for example the St James Cross, other crosses, poppies, scallop shells, yellow arrows etc.

This is a work in progress with bell towers, castles, candles and a bridge still to come.

Completion will be in about nine months, so watch this space.

Barbara

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What about the toilets?

Basically there don’t seem to be any public conveniences in Spain, at least not on the camino. We saw two in 800kms. It does seem to be acceptable to use the facilities in cafes, bars etc. Only in the last 100km from Sarria did we see signs saying toilets were for customers only, and then there was often a €1 fee for non customers. We used cafes but always bought something, a coffee, some fruit, chocolate bar etc. It makes it easier if you can train your bladder and bowels to use the facilities at your overnight accommodation.

Obviously people get caught short and so you have to go in the bushes. Easier for the guys. The path and picnic areas etc are often littered with toilet paper/tissue which is not a good look. Either bury it or carry it out. Swot up on the book “How to shit in the woods” before starting the Camino. Be prepared also for different cultures having different levels of privacy accepted for relieving yourself.

There is also a surprising amount of litter on the path. Plastic bottles, wrappers, juice packets etc. There are very few rubbish bins provided so you have to carry your litter out. Some pilgrims (usually Canadians) pick up litter as they go. In the villages, towns and cities there is no house to house refuse collection. Each street will have large plastic rubbish containers for waste and recycling and people bring their household rubbish /waste to these. It is so easy to use these to dispose of your rubbish.

Infrastructure
Walking the Camino is not tramping in the wilderness. It is a walk through rural and urban Spain. Spain is a sophisticated European nation and so all the infrastructure you would expect is available pretty much all the time. Every village will have a pharmacy, towns will have medical centres, doctors and dentists. Large towns and cities have hospitals. They are experienced in all the ailments that afflict pilgrims and are well used to people walking in off the street and saying “I have a problem”. You don’t have to carry vast supplies of plasters, knee bandages, antiinflams, creams, etc. You can restock as you go.

Outfitter shops are available in large villages and towns. Shoes, boots, sandals, socks, back packs, day packs, everything you could want. They have the most hi-tec socks I have ever seen and a very popular super soft soled sandal that some of our friends with blisters bought. Sim cards, batteries, chargers, new phones, cameras etc all readily purchasable.

Transport is also available, either buses or taxis. There seems to be good bus services between towns and around cities. Taxis are available everywhere. Just go into any cafe, bar, albergue, hotel and ask. The rate seemed to be €1 per kilometre. We knew people who were injured but their partner was still walking so they used a taxi so they could meet up each night. Another guy did the same with a rental car. Some people use the local bus to get in and out of the large cities. People with knee problems might use a taxi to get over the steepest hills, or walk half a day and then taxi.

There are companies everywhere that will transfer packs, bags etc. If you are carrying all your own gear but get injured or tired it is easy to arrange transfers at hotels or albergues. The state owned post office (Correos) also have a good, well used service.

Internet coverage is excellent, wifi (pronounced weefee) is free and available in pretty much all cafes, bars, hotels, albergues etc. We had only one hotel in a remote location that had no wifi. About 3 hotels where the service was weak or intermittent. Sometimes it is only usable in public areas of a hotel.

Weather
Everyone who researches the Camino Frances will hear stories of snow and sleet on the Pyrenees, nine days of forty degree temperatures on the meseta, thirteen days of continuous rain and cold in Galicia. Well, that was not for us. We had 34 days walking in a lovely Spanish spring. Four days on which we used our ponchos. Only for about an hour or two in light drizzle each time. One day with a strong cold wind for a couple of hours. Five days when it got a bit hot for us after midday. Otherwise it was ideal weather for walking. Nice crisp mornings, very little wind and sunny days. The only really wet day was down in Finisterre after we had finished.

Food
Although we missed our oatmeal the food in northern Spain is delicious. It is a very fertile area so there is always plenty of fresh vegetables and fruit. And of course it is world renowned for its wine. The food, like pretty much everything else, is cheap compared to NZ. Wine is from €1.95 a bottle. The standard evening meal is the “Peregrino Menu” which is available at every cafe, restaurant, hotel, and costs from €8.90 to €14. It consists of a starter, main course, dessert, bottle of wine, water, bread and sometimes coffee. The starter, main and dessert will each have about six options and vary a bit depending on the specialities of different regions.

Starters could be: mixed salad, russian salad, pasta salad, lasagne, lentil soup, galician broth, gazpacho, spaghetti bolognaise.
Mains could be: roast chicken, grilled veal, beef or pork, pork chop, paella, regional casserole, whole grilled fish (hake or trout), octopus. All with chips – no salad or vegetables with the main course.
Desserts could be: flan, rice pudding, yoghurt, ice cream, fruit (one piece eg kiwi fruit or orange), santiago cake (made with ground almonds).

It can be as fast or as slow as you like. Done and dusted in three quarters of an hour, or spread over two or three hours Spanish style. If you don’t want the peregrino menu there is usually an a la carte menu with a much larger selection of many speciality dishes.

Breakfast can be as basic as coffee, juice, bread and jam. Most places will also have cold ham and cheese and yoghurt. Bigger hotels will have croissants, fruit, cakes and occasionally scrambled eggs and bacon.

Lunch can be bocadillo (sandwich with cheese/ham), tortilla (potato and egg omelette), or empanada (bread type pastry with meat/ vegetable/fish filling). Every village also has a supermarket with everything you would expect. Chocolate is incredibly cheap, €1 for a large cake. You could live very cheaply on wine and chocolate. But not lose much weight.

Accommodation
I wrote about albergues in an early post so won’t say much about these. There are hundreds of them, varying widely in size, facilities, rules, etc. We only saw a few that were “completo”, full. In the summer the popular ones fill quickly.

We used a softer option. Prebooked, prepaid, three star hotels. These were booked by Caminoways who also arranged bag transfer each day. The hotels were excellent with a wide variety ranging from family run country cottages, intimate little hotels in small towns and villages, luxury rooms in monasteries, typical chain hotels in large cities. All had great facilities, most had breakfast, dinner and good free wifi available. Spain does hospitality very well.

Language
The language of the Camino Frances is English. It is possible to walk the entire 800km without using a single word of Spanish or French. But that’s not much fun and not very polite. The Spanish are very friendly and helpful, even more so when you make an effort to use their language. When in Rome do as the Romans and all that. At least learn some basic conversational phrases to order food etc and the best communication is always a smile. Attempt to speak some Spanish and two things may happen. First they will respond in English. They are just as keen to practice their English as you are your Spanish. An interesting conversation is you speaking basic Spanish and they speaking basic English. The second is they will respond in a torrent of high speed Spanish. You will stare at them like a stunned mullet. They will realise you know less Spanish than their two year old child and change to English or speak in slow simple Spanish with hand gestures. You will usually be with your new pilgrim friends and by combining knowledge you get by. Other pilgrims who can speak several languages will gladly help you out. If you do know some Spanish and love languages you will have a ball. Every day you can practice and improve. There are heaps of fellow pilgrims to talk with if you know some Italian, German, French etc.

Camino Blues

We are home. At least the body is. The head space missed a connection and is stuck in a transfer lounge in some timeless airport cathedral. It will get here eventually.

Flying is a great way to go somewhere but a lousy way to come home. 36 hours, 3 bus rides, 1 train ride, 5 flights, 7 movies which merged to became one huge long complicated plot. How can you savour all the memories of a wonderful experience while going through all that. I should have started walking from Santiago and just come home slowly. Barbara always can’t wait to get home, me not so much.

We were proceeded by an angel. There was fresh milk in the fridge, the hot water had been turned on, there was a welcome home sign. We saw hundreds of images and statues of angels in Spain. I know a real one right here.

The battery charger is hooked up to the van, the first load of washing is on, there still seems to be enough money for the insurance and the rates. Home.

We went round to our local cafe and Trevor had forgotten our regular order. He always used to know two long blacks and brioche. He and Vivienne want to do the Camino next year so we talked about our experience but I just didn’t know how to explain it. Barry joined us. He walked the Camino last year and talked non stop about his journey. I didn’t understand much of what he said.

Barbara wanted to go to the beach, her happy place. So we walked down there. The tide was in and the waves were smashing against the sea wall so we didn’t actually go onto the beach. I thought this is where we should burn our boots and walking clothes. Not the lighthouse at Cape Finisterre. This is where our camino ended. There was a sign “Light no fires”.

The first load of washing was done. After the beach I even felt good about that. Until I discovered a red paper tissue had been left in a pocket and was now in a zillion pieces on every item of clothing. Welcome home. 

Tomorrow I will open the shed. Get the bikes out. Go for a little ride up to Peka Peka. We haven’t been on a bike for 8 weeks. We live on bikes. It will be strange at first but after a couple of kilometres it will again seem like the bike is part of your body. Welcome home.

Out of the mist

When we awoke and looked out the window this morning the mist level had risen from about our knees up to just over our heads. We thought about having a quick breakfast, being mountain goats again, and going back up to the lighthouse in the hope of the views being better. About two seconds later we decided, nah. 

A long leisurely breakfast, at least by our standards, and the day was getting clearer with no rain. We could have caught an early bus but decided to stay and wander around the village until lunchtime. Finisterre is a delightful village. A large working fishing fleet, snorkelling, kayaking, nice sandy beaches and a popular holiday destination. The village and boat harbour are on the protected inland side of a peninsular with some wild surf beaches on the exposed Atlantic Ocean side. We easily filled in a couple of hours before coffee and going to the bus terminus.

The bus we came down on was an “express” and had taken two hours. The return bus was a regular hop on, hop off bus and took just over three hours. That was okay because it was a flash new double decker bus. Some very non-saintly use of the elbows and a bit of foot tripping by Barbara saw us in front row seats on the top level. It felt like we should be actually driving the bus.

About half the distance back to Santiago is along the coast and is very picturesque. Lots of seaside towns full of marinas, hotels, acres of umbrellas and tables. I would say they are very popular for weekends, holidays or a place for a holiday house for people from Santiago. Very much for the locals as this area is not part of the camino highway.

The bus drivers are amazing. I don’t know how they fit the huge buses through narrow winding streets, dodging cars, pedestrians, dogs. Never missing a beat. Yesterday in the rain we weren’t enjoying Finisterre much but after this morning’s lovely walk and an exhilarating dodgem ride this afternoon we were much happier.

We are back in the same monastery/hotel for our last night before flying home. The hotel kept our bags here so we could travel light going down to Finisterre. Went out and bought the obligatory tee shirt this afternoon, although I wondered why. The tattoo will be a reminder of our camino far longer than any tee shirt.

We will go out shortly for our last peregrino meal and bottle of vino tinto.

On the way home I will try and put together a few thoughts on our camino.

Finisterre II

 

Finisterre

 

Good old tv

Finisterre, for the Romans, finis terrae, the end of the world. For them the most western point in Europe and beyond, nothing. It’s not strictly true. There is a cape in Portugal and another in Spain that are slightly more to the west.

Finisterre is on the Atlantic coast about 100km from Santiago. You can walk from Santiago in about four days and some do continue their journey. We took the bus – 2hours.

There are some rituals relating to Finisterre. Pilgrims wash themselves in the ocean and burn their boots /walking clothes. We never saw an ocean. Maybe there was one. The rain and mist made lighting fires impossible.

Getting the bus was a bit stressful. Seats are not able to be pre-bought or reserved, strictly first come first served. On Sundays there are four buses, the first at 9am,and we didn’t know how many would want to go out there. The bus depot was a twenty minute walk from the hotel which we turned into a forty minute walk by missing a street turning. We got to the ticket counter (for some reason up on the second floor!) a couple of minutes before nine. The ticket seller told us rapido, rapido, so we ran for the bus and just got on. Only two empty seats on a sixty seat coach.

Finisterre was rainy and totally shrouded in mist. We retreated to a cafe for coffee and santiago cake while trying to get our bearings and find our hotel. We had lousy directions and hadn’t done any research and it was Sunday morning so the place was deserted and everything closed. When asked, the Spanish always feel obliged to give you directions, even if they haven’t a clue. So they are not always helpful, although we usually can’t understand what they say anyway. Eventually we stumbled across our hotel and of course they weren’t ready for us. It would be at least an hour. The helpful man at reception suggested we go and look at the faro, lighthouse, on the headland, and the “traditional”  route started from the hotel and was only 2km, shorter than going up the road. Yeah right!

The track was traditional for goats, narrow, twisting, muddy, no directions. Eventually it changed into a dirt road and passed through something dark which may have been a forest. In the mist we couldn’t see a thing and after an hour were sure we were lost. Some parked camper vans emerged from the mist and we stumbled across a road and then a coach and car parking area. We searched about for a bit, may or may not have seen a building, a cross, a brass boot, some burnt clothes. A stranger appeared, took our photo for us and disappeared. I never ever saw his or her face. There are stunning views and fabulous sunsets here. Who knows?

Finisterre looks like it is a lovely little fishing village. If the rain and mist clear I will go and have a look this evening or tomorrow morning. We are back in the hotel and have dried off a bit. Not much to do so I might have to watch TV.

Every single cafe, bar and restaurant in Spain has a large screen tv in the corner and the volume is turned up LOUD. There are only two things on Spanish tv: sport and game shows. The sport is 90% football and maybe a bit of motorcycle racing.

The game shows are the same as everywhere else in the world. But in Spain, no matter what crazy, inane action is going on, there is always one common ingredient. Outrageously attractive young women in tight skirts perched on high stools. They are a permanent fixture on every set. The really creative thing is how the producers have made them an integral part of any and every show.

It’s still raining and the tv is on. I’m not much interested in football so will just change channels. A ha.

Sorry, I got a bit distracted there, lost my thread.

Barbara is asleep so I’ll put the tv on mute. The sound is pretty irrelevant to these game shows anyway.

Catch you later.