The Journeyers

The Journeyers
Karen, Beth, and Jerri

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Notes From Jerri

October 23
We are back in body, if not in mind (or in blog entries).  There is, of course, far, far more to tell about this trip than we can ever let be publicly known.  I am sure Karen has much more to add, and I will put in a few details here and there, so don’t give up following us.  I did not read any of Karen’s blogs while we were in Spain and only now have had the chance to see what she did.  Amazingly, she managed to keep you all pretty much up-to-date on where we were and our general condition, despite terrible WiFi access and one-finger typing, often in the dark or in weird places.  And she was restricted to whatever pictures she could take on her camera phone, as we couldn’t download my camera to hers.

We’ll try to fill you in on more details, but here are a few that come to mind.  My “rental shoes” (as Beth calls them) actually lasted quite well until the last week.  I didn’t get any blisters until the inside linings started to disintegrate, and then I got one really horrible, bloody blister (the kind where you can’t walk, talk, or sleep) over the side of one foot ON THE LAST WALKING DAY.  Between the two of us, we used up all but a few tablets of the 500 mg ibuprofen I brought on the trip.

At the airport on the way home, my backpack with everything in it weighed 6.3 kg (13¾ pounds) and I can assure you that everything weighs quadruple what the scale says when you are carrying it around on your back all day, every day.  We had one day (the last) without our backpacks and poles and we both felt so off balance, we actually had difficulty walking.

Karen (being a much nicer person than I am) wrote a very benign account of our fun two weeks in Pamplona with Beth in the hospital.  I am here to tell you that medicine in Spain is just like in the USA and you don’t want to experience it if at all avoidable.  I felt like I was at work except that it was all in Spanish.  Our language skills improved dramatically, just not with the vocabulary we would have desired.  And we won’t go beyond merely mentioning our experiences with the (US) insurance company.  Just thinking about that makes the steam start to emanate from my ears.  But I finished knitting 14 baby hats through the experience, if that gives you any idea.

I wrote a journal every day and filled up three books of comments.  And that couldn’t really capture the experience; I was just able to try to write down enough hints to remember stories to tell later (and I have many).

In case you are wondering if we are transformed by this experience, I can’t speak for Karen except to say she is skinnier and a lot browner.  As for me, I look exactly the same except I am never, ever wearing those clothes again.  Lots of beer and wine kept my weight up and I already had white hair before we started. Mostly, it is hard to believe we actually did the whole thing.  We walked far more than 500 miles and, like many people we met, we were actually sort of sad to see the trip end.

Cat Count

October 23
Being Jenistas, we could not go on this trip without getting our daily cat fix. As you can see, some days were better than others.
Day/place
Cat Tally
Total Cat Count
9/11 St.Jean
2
2
9/12 Orisson
2
4
9/13 Roncesvalles
0
4
9/14 Zubiri
5
9
9/15 Pamplona
7
16
9/16 Obanos
9/17 Estella
9/18 to 9/28 Pamplona
0
9/29 Torres del Rio
9/30 Navarrete
34
10/1 Najera
4
38
10/2 Belorado
7
45
10/3 Atapuerca
4
49
10/4 Rabe
1
50
10/5 Castrojerz
8
58
10/6 Boadilla
2
60
10/7 Carrion
14
74
10/8 Mansilla
4
78
10/9 Leon
4
82
10/10 Astorga
2
84
10/11 Foncebadon
10
94
10/12 Ponferrada
10
104
10/13 Villafranca
16
120
10/14 Cebreiro
19
139
10/15 Calvor
7
146
10/16 Sarria
5
151
10/17 Portomarin
5
156
10/18 Arzua
9
164
10/19 Arca
5
169
10/20 Santiago
12
181
10/21 Finisterre
8
189

Monday, October 22, 2012

Perspective

October 22
Now that I'm home with reliable computer and Internet connection, I'll be catching up.  I just thought I'd say a word about the blog.  It obviously has gaps.  I'm sure it would be totally different if Jerri had written it.  We all differ in what strikes us as noteworthy, interesting, and worth sharing.  Our photos reflect this as well.  I did my best to relate what was going factually, but inevitably my thoughts and feelings bled into posts, too.  I guess what I'm trying to say is that, even though we shared most of the same events, how we experienced them may differ.  This blog mainly tells my side of the story.

Jerri will be sending me her photos and I will do my best to reference any post that a photo relates to.  Jerri will also be sending additional material for posts and I'll get them up as soon as possible.  These will be opportunities for you to see/read things from her point of view.

Home Again

October 22
This post will be very short.  Sure, many hours will pass before I arrive home, but most of them are of the usual travel variety.  There are only a few things I will bother to mention.

There is awful fog this morning, causing delays and some cancellations.  Fortunately, our flights leaving Santiago and then Madrid are unaffected.

My trekking poles made it all the way from Colorado Springs to Santiago, and then Iberia Airlines manages to lose the duffel bag containing them somewhere between our small regional jet and the baggage claim carousel in Madrid.  I have to fill out a claim form to have the bag delivered to the US once--I mean if--it is found. (Two days later, Jim finds it hanging from our front door knob when he goes to get the newspaper in the morning.)

Boarding the plane in Atlanta, a man behind me makes a remark about the Camino.  In the brief conversation we have walking down the jetway, I learn that he and his wife are planning to do it next fall.  We exchange e-mail addresses for future questions/answers.  What are the odds?

And what is the first thing I do when I get home?  Soak my feet and legs in epsom salts, then fill the tub up with scalding hot water to soak all of me before putting on a completely different set of clothing (flannel pajama pants and a sleeveless T-shirt) and climbing into my very own, Egyptian-cotton-sheets-and-thermal-blanket bed.

Although this concludes the journey, I do have additional photos and random thoughts to post later.  I will also check in on the blog itself to address/answer your comments/questions.  Thanks for being with us in spirit. 

¡Buen Camino!

Sunday, October 21, 2012

To the End of the World and Back

October 21
Our walking days are not quite over.  This morning we have to walk to the bus station--a few steps compared to the distances of the past weeks.  Only one bus company is open with ticket agents on duty and it is not the one we supposedly want.  According to the posted information on the window of the bus company we do want, on weekends we wait by platforms 6-10, and when the bus comes, we pay the driver on the bus.  We eat breakfast at the station restaurant to kill some of the time, then sit on a bench by the appropriate platforms.

It's a good thing we have the look of peregrinos about us.  As we're sitting there, a woman approaches and asks, "Finisterre (aka Fisterra)?"  We tell her that, yes, we're going to Finisterre and, when it's clear we all speak English, she tells us the bus behind us is going to Finisterre, leaving at the time we are expecting.  Several people are waiting by the bus and they all have tickets--the bus is operated by the company with the open counters in the terminal.  My bad, apparently.  On the backside of the bus schedule given to us at the tourism office is a different list of weekend itineraries, run by this Monbus and another company.  We trudge back up to the terminal and buy our tickets; I'm extremely grateful that woman thought to approach us.

It's a three-hour ride out to Finisterre because there are so many local stops.  Since only about eight of us boarded in Santiago, Jerri and I sit on opposite sides of the aisle so we can each have a window seat.  When we get beyond the city, we see water on Jerri's side of the bus.  We had remarked earlier in our trip that we had never seen anything bigger than ponds of water on farmland.  This looks like a huge lake.  It turns out to be a bay.  We are driving along the coast.  I totally enjoy this trip--it reminds me of the Pacific Northwest:  ocean to one side--mostly rocky shoreline, some sandy strands--and pine forests and hills to the other.  The villages and towns do not have a beachy feel to them, as if we were in Florida.  They are rather more like Oak Harbor, Washington and the San Juan Islands.

During the drive, we start to spot Camino markings.  Some part of me regrets not walking this--I'm positive the view alone would be worth it.  My feet, on the other hand, are relieved that we're riding.  From my side of the bus I miss the highlight of the trip, though--dolphins in one of the smaller bays.

The bus disgorges us onto a street close to the water, surrounded by shops and bars/restaurants.  It doesn't take us long to find the Camino markings directing us to the cabo (cape) and the faro (lighthouse).

We are not the only pilgrims making our way there; some have arrived by bus, some are still walking from Santiago, and others have made the town of Finisterre an overnight stop to visit it properly.  As we walk, I spot more bits of Ireland here and there.  We pass a pilgrim monument--our last--

 ...as the road begins to climb and wind its way out to the point.

Cabo Fisterra (Cape Finisterre) is more than I expected.  There is so much more than the lighthouse.  There are various things to see--a cross...

...a peace pole, plaques, the 0.0 km Camino marker...

...art, a hotel and restaurant, and souvenir stalls.  The standing mosaics are very cool--my favorites are the mermaids and Sponge Bob.

The souvenir stalls offer practically as much Celtic fare as they do items related to the coast, lighthouse, and Camino.  I'm sorely tempted, but I think of how ridiculous it would be to backpack six weeks across Spain without buying anything beyond Camino items that I can wear (bracelets and pilgrim shells), then go home with Irish souvenirs.  The lighthouse itself is now closed to the public, but the adjoining building contains a small museum/art gallery (of course we get a sello here).  We explore this all leisurely.

The most meaningful part for me, though, is standing at the "end of the world" (Cape Finisterre is the westernmost point of Spain and, looking out at a horizon of water, it is easy to see how people back then would have thought so).  By the peace pole...

...I pick my way almost to the edge (I do respect the height of the cliff, the wind around me, and the rocks below me) for a photo.

When we venture to the other side of the museum to view the entire lighthouse (situated behind the museum), I realize the promontory extends farther here.

Also, there is a cross and scorch marks I want to investigate.  Apparently, pilgrims burn clothes, boots, or other significant items here.  I wouldn't do it myself, but I get it.

I convince Jerri to come out this far so I can take a photo of her for her kids to see.

Then I start picking my way to the point.  In my path is a woman sitting on the rocks, what looks to be a bodhrán (Irish frame drum) at her feet, crying; to respect her privacy, I veer away from her.  There are more burn spots scattered about among the rocks.  I had planned to go to the tippy-tip, but I realize that I'm descending the farther out I go and will soon drop out of Jerri's sight.  I would also wind up disturbing a man, not visible until now, who is perched out here, staring out at the ocean.  I wouldn't dream of intruding upon him for a photo.  So I turn and wave at Jerri until she signals me that she has taken the picture.

On my return, I give the woman an even wider berth and think about her and the man, reminding myself again that everyone has a story.

Before we leave the cape, Jerri stops at one of the stalls to look at postcards and we meet up once more with Linda and Andy.  They are the only familiar faces we get to say goodbye to.  Seeing them makes me wonder about the other people we met, how they have fared since we last saw them, whether and when they arrived in Santiago, and what tales we would tell each other if we had the chance.  A sort of surreal feeling--a bit of sadness to know it's over, this Camino that has been my life for six weeks, and now bumping into the door of my real life that has been there all along, waiting for me to pass back through tomorrow.

The walk back to town doesn't feel nearly as long as the one we took to get to the cape.  On the other side of the road, more people are headed out, including a small of group of pilgrims carrying firewood, and a pilgrim family with two donkeys.  We speculate about the possibilities--assuming they traveled at least the last 100 km--of what they do with the donkeys when they stop and how they feed them along the way.

Back in town, we can only wander.  Our guidebook does not include the trip from Santiago to Finisterre.  We see quite a few cats and leave kitty treats for all of them; there is no reason to hoard them anymore.  There is an old castle overlooking the harbor, housing a museum that has closed minutes before we discover it.

Below the castle is a tiny sandy beach, where we take photos--again, especially for Jerri's kids to see (the one of Jerri is on her camera, another hole in the blog).

We eat at a seaside restaurant (yep, we get a sello here, too), drafting posts and journaling until it's time to wait for the bus.

Quite a crowd is waiting for the bus to Santiago.  The company must be aware of this pattern because a double-decker bus arrives to pick us up.  Most of us boarding in Finisterre are pilgrims or tourists.  However, at the various stops on the way back to the city, mostly students board.  The scenery is just as beautiful the second time.

Back at the seminary in Santiago, the man in the reception office helps arrange a taxi for our trip to the airport in the wee hours of the morning.  Then we go to the basement and use a computer to check in online.  After that, it's a matter of preparing ourselves and our belongings for a 4 a.m. departure, then climbing between albergue sheets for the last time.

Total distance walked:  8.8 km

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Cathedral of St. James

October 20
What can I say about the Cathedral?  It is singularly overwhelming.  The architecture, statuary, etc., etc., are more than I can absorb.  I'm sure I'm not conscious of everything my eyes see.  Some observations: confessionals with signs announcing the language spoken/understood within; all the side chapels are behind locked gates; despite all the grandeur, the pews are still the same plain, wooden benches we've seen everywhere else.  Some highlights:  descending into the crypt to kneel before the casket containing relics of St. James; ascending the High Altar;...

...touring the attached bishop's palace museum.  Some things that disappoint me:  I forget that I want to see the Porta Santa (Holy Gate) of the Cathedral, also known as El Perdón (the Door of Pardon); we don't have the opportunity to attend Mass here; and most of all, the Tree of Jesse is entirely inaccessible.  I knew that it is no longer permissible to touch the central column like they do in the movie The Way, but now, with a railing all the way round the column...

...I can't do the other ritual either, head-butting the saint: touching your forehead to that of the saint whose kneeling figure is carved into the back of the column, facing the altar.  All I can do is take photos of the column, the shiny spot worn into the marble by millions of hands...

...and the kneeling saint.  Not even close to a consolation prize.

Back outside, we look down on the praza, taking in the surroundings, pilgrims lounging against their backpacks in the sun, and groups who appear to be meeting at this prearranged spot as they arrive from the Camino.  I feel surprisingly detached, numb even.  I suppose that, even though I didn't expect any great revelations or profound spiritual experiences, I believed having gone on this significant, challenging journey would have affected me in some way.  Yet, standing among all the history, all the magnificence, aware of the joyous, celebratory atmosphere, I feel unchanged.  I have no new insights to life or myself, no paradigm shift, no new awareness or growth.  I wonder how anyone could live through the past six weeks and not be a different person.  What does that say about me?  It is a depressingly anticlimactic moment.

We descend and ask a passerby to take a photo of us together.

Then we drift through the streets.  We pass two closed (of course) libraries; get excited upon finding an open church, only to discover it is a museum; browse through a couple of shops; and tour the Museo das Peregrinacións, pilgrimage through the ages.

We head generally toward the street leading back to the seminary while we look for a place to eat dinner.  We have two criteria:  food available now (we're too hungry to wait until 7:00) and WiFi.  I want to at least send a short post saying we have made it and received our compostelas.  We inquire at two or three places before we find a bar that has both.  I'm lucky enough to even spot a table next to an outlet.  The meal is very good but we have to laugh that I purposely order a small dinner (a wedge of tortilla) to save room for a piece of Santiago cake, but I am served a whole tortilla the size of a personal pizza.  I don't quite finish it.  Suspecting the portions of everything are large here, I order one piece of cake for me and Jerri to share.  The serving that comes proves me right.  Through the entire meal, though, I am unable to connect to the Internet.  The man who serves us, who seems to be either the owner or manager, fiddles with the router a couple of times without success.  I give up on it and settle for composing some drafts.

On our return to the seminary, we see evidence of roommates who are currently absent.  After preparing for tomorrow and setting the alarm, we turn in for the night.  Despite the void--or perhaps because of it?--I'm physically and emotionally wrung out.  Sleep, I hope, will be a welcome escape.

We're Official

October 20
As it turns out, we spend hours in the old quarter (one could spend days here).

From the seminary, we make our way, without backpacks (not only does walking minus my pack and poles feel weird and off balance, it feels like cheating to not carry the load all the way to the Cathedral), to the Camino and follow it to the old town.  We enter through the famous Porta do Camiño (Gate of the Way), which we either miss or don't know what to look for because, frankly, neither of us notice anything impressive.  The quarter is a warren of narrow, crooked streets connecting numerous plazas, in no orderly pattern.  All sorts of shops, restaurants, albergues, and businesses crowd together in the streets, offering an abundance of input for the senses.  The area is bustling with people--tourists and pilgrims--and we encounter a jam on a staircase leading down to an arch, under which street performers have drawn a crowd.  Other street artists we pass are a mime, head-to-toe in white and posing as a statue of Ghandi, and a bagpiper (yep, I walk most of the way across Spain to keep bumping into lovely bits of Ireland).

Kiosks dot the squares; statues, architectural features...

...and the almost unconscious watchfulness for familiar faces vie for attention.  None of this prepares us for the Praza Obradoiro, the plaza in front of the main entrance to the Cathedral.

Using the limited and somewhat inaccurate map in the guidebook, it takes us awhile to find this praza; but, as the Cathedral is the center of the old town, we realize that finding it, and the praza, will make it easier to find the other places we're aiming for--the pilgrim office and the office of tourism.  Our approach to the praza is from the back of the Cathedral.  This view whets the appetite for the main course.

Entering the praza is overwhelming.

I know immediately that I will take only a few photos here.  I could never do it justice, nor would I know where to begin.  There is simply too much to take in.  I do take a pair of pictures from the front steps of the Cathedral, looking down on the praza, to represent how futile it would be to try to capture this place.  In the second photo, there is a huge chartered coach to the right and it looks like a toy.

Although the Cathedral, and so much more, is temptingly right in front of us, we had decided on our way here that the pilgrim office would be our first stop.  Upon arrival, and with great anticipation, I climb the entrance stairs with Jerri.  We enter a waiting area.  As the clerks (I don't really know what their title is) become free, they come for the next in line.  Jerri and I get escorted to the counter at the same time.  We hand over our credencials and fill in our information and signatures in registry books.  Then we wait while our compostelas (religious certificates of completion) are prepared.

It's very moving when the clerk hands me mine and points out my Latin name (Catherinam Mariam) and today's date handwritten into the original Latin text of medieval compostelas.  I place my pilgrim offering in the box on the counter and ask if they sell tubes for the compostelas.  The clerk tells me they are available at most souvenir shops.  Sure enough, directly across the street, we pop into a shop where the saleswoman has a supply of them right behind her counter.  Our compostelas safely tucked into tubes in our bags, we venture off to find the office of tourism.

As we wend our way in the direction the map indicates, we bump into Texas Girl.  She walks with us a bit.  I ask where she got the tourist map she's holding.  She got it at her hotel, but she says that she's seen them in stores, etc.  It seems reasonable that we'll be able to get one in the tourism office, which (practically pulling my hair out now) is closed.  The only thing that keeps me from screaming is that, according to our map, there is another tourism office in the area.  Indeed, as we're standing there, referring to the map for directions, a woman stops and tells us the other office is pretty much just down the street.  And it's right where she said it would be.  Inside, we get a much better city map, information on taking a bus to Finisterre, and have our map marked with directions for the easiest route to the bus station.  We also get a sello.  No, we no longer require them, but to us, our Camino is not finished yet.  Besides, we like collecting them.

Guided by our new, improved map, we return to the Cathedral.