While
it’s currently June 5 here in real-time Arundel, Maine, by cleverly utilizing
the time-travel capabilities of our “Wabac” machine, when I push this blog-button,
we are instantaneously transported back Castro Dozon, Galicia in NW Spain and its
6 AM on May 19th. The rustle of the awakening perigrinos has brought us out of
a good night’s sleep in the albergue as people are already packing the
backpacks and taking the albergue-provided sheets and pillowcases off their
bunks. The day appears to be going to fulfill the forecast of being sunny and good
walking weather. The sleeping area has lots of big windows opening up to nearby green hills and overlooks a municipal swimming pool out back; the place feels good, kind of like like
sleeping outdoors.
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| Elaine Hopkins |
We
were planning on walking 20 km today to A Laxe for the night but the “perigrino
grapevine” says that the municipal albergue there has suddenly closed and we
find there are no other places with available rooms in the area due to a big
motorcycle rally. So Plan B calls for us getting to A Laxe today and then getting a cab to drive us ahead 16 km to Bandeira for the night; next morning we’ll
be cabbed back to A Laxe, pick up our walk to Bandiera and spend a second night
there. Elaine Hopkins, our Sanabres walking
partner & good friend, was more adventuresome and already has left to walk further
ahead to Silleda (half-way between A Laxe and Bandiera) and we’ll catch up with
her tomorrow.
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| Leaving the busy M525 |
So
after an quick breakfast of yogurt, a fresh peach, some of last night’s bread and
the ever-essential tea (Elaine left an English teabag for Joan; I’ll wait for my café con leche on the
road), Joan & I head out around 8 am, walking along the not too busy M525
highway for a few miles until, with lots of yellow arrow signs alerting us, the
Camino bears off to the left into a welcome silence of woods and pasture. This
turns out to be a fairly flat stretch for the next several miles and we walk
alone, enjoying the quiet and the beautiful flowers and scenery we pass
through. Once again, experiencing the world at 2.5 mph is so different from our
normal life back home, all hustle, noisy and time-absorbing. Walking gives us a
chance to just “be”, to listen and watch for the little beautiful things that
pop into our lives. It gives us time to absorb the beauty of the world rather
than just let it slide past, un-noticed in the turmoil of daily life.
There
was one stretch when went down a long hill, passed on a high bridge over a major
highway and the Renfe railway tracks and then headed back up the hill on the
other side of the valley. We’ll see this scene again a week later, when we're on the train back to
Madrid, ruefully noting that the train ride from Santiago to Ourense only takes 38
minutes while it had taken us 7 days to walk the same distance.
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| A "Full Alistair" rest |
Around
noon, we came into the outskirts of a village and there decided to have lunch
and a rest. This must be a school yard and there are wide steps and a covered patio
fronting the pathway a few yards away where we’ve been walking. Shedding our
daypacks, Joan & I both lay down and enjoyed what we’ve been calling “a
full Alistair”. Alistair and Sally are a wonderful couple from New Zealand we
met outside Zubiri back in 2013 when we were walking the French Way. Alistair
was a barrister and a man who figured out that the secret to enjoying this
walking stuff was simple – just take care of your feet. So at lunch he would
remove his shoes & socks, massage his feet with lotion, change into fresh socks
and then –putting his feet up -take a good rest for a half-hour. Awakening
refreshed, back on would go the socks and boots and off he’d go! A “half-Alistair’ means just taking off boots
and maybe rubbing the feet; no nap or lotion involved.
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| Daphne & her frends from Malta |
As
we rested, three young women perigrinas passed by and we chatted briefly,
learning they were from Malta. We would meet them several times again as we
traveled, once quite meaningfully close to the end but the next time was a few
hours later in the town of Estaciaon de Lalin, where we took a early-afternoon
break at the Taberna de Vento. There we again met the three ladies from Malta
(Daphne was the leader and had walked the Frances before). The signpost outside
of town said the albergue at A Laxe was only 3 km ahead but we knew that was
wrong, since it was easily 10 km, according to our maps.
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| Church at A Eirexe |
The quiet little
village of A Eirexe was deserted (it was siesta time!) and an old church off to
the right was being rebuilt but otherwise, no sign of life. Closer to A Laxe,
we were startled to come across an old lady and her two dogs, sitting on the
wall way out on a deeply wooded pathway. She had a black lab puppy, who spotted
us coming and charged up to greet us, all puppy-slobber and wiggles. The woman
spoke no English but we conversed as fellow dog lovers can do. Her other dog
was a very old golden retriever, so we showed her pictures of our Finnegan and
everybody felt good at our shared experiences.
As
we closed in on A Laxe, faded signs appeared tacked to phone poles or trees announcing
the building of a big new luxury hotel or of a sports complex; these appeared
to be victims of the Big Recession that hit Spain hard in ’09 and is still
working itself out. When the village of A Laxe finally appeared, split down the
middle by the ever-present M525, we walked down the hill and started into town.
We stopped at the first bar on the left and met Romero, the owner there. While we waited for
a cab, he told us of his father’s love for Rome and all things Italian, thus explaining
his name. He was a very nice guy and took good care or us.
After
a short cab ride we came into Bandiera and went into the Hostel Condo Rey, our
home for the next two nights. We met Rick, the owner, who spoke no English (nor
did anyone else at the hotel) and Joan again did her “Starship Enterprise Universal
Translator” thing, which involves the application of her limited Spanish, some full-body
miming, gesticulating arms & hands and Google Translate. Amazingly it seems
to work and in no time we knew how the laundry service worked (not well), where
the ATM and supermercado were located, how to get the hot water fixed and what
was for supper that night. We settled
into our small room on the first floor; cramped it was but sweet to think of
being in one place for two whole nights!





Well, that's a photo I didn't know you'd taken. Good to see what you got up to in my absence.
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