Posts Tagged With: Camino 2025

Torres del Río to Logroño: 23k day

Morning shadows

I realized in the morning that I’d not arranged for my bag transfer the night before, and hoped to talk to the front desk person about it. I went downstairs at 7:00 and no one was there, and there wasn’t the usual pile of bags for Jacotrans to pick up.

Just then Hale FaceTimed me and I walked around talking into the phone like an obnoxious American. It was great to chat and to catch up with details at home. By the time we hung up I had got up the courage to make a phone call to Jacotrans in Spanish.

The driver answered and over the roar of the engine he said in effect “don’t worry, it will be alright!” They’re so nice. They must run into this all the time. And I need to chill out. I put my bag downstairs and had some coffee and tortilla with the women I’d met the night before.

Finally I was off and walking, and walked for a bit with my Swedish friend. We were about 45 minutes out when I put my hand in my pocket and felt the hotel room key. Drat!

I stopped and made my second Spanish phone call of the day. The guy at the front desk asked where I was staying next, and said I could leave them there. The inner critic was shaking her finger at me, but I decided to shake it off. Unfortunately, my Swedish friend had walked on, and I thought I’d catch up but I didn’t see her again.

The poppies were out and I found myself just enjoying the walking. The path started out flat and then climbed and went down and up several times.

I walked for awhile with the woman who had gone to UCSB, and learned she had roots in Alameda. After an hour or so she said see you later and took off up the path. She was walking at a faster pace.

I stopped at a food truck for a few minutes, then kept going.

Getting warmer on the blacktop. Viana up ahead

The path popped out onto the roadway, just as the sun was climbing in the sky. It was really warm. Viana was out in the distance, and I wasn’t that tired, but was feeling the heat and the sun on my legs.

Viana just ahead

I felt physically strong even though I kept being passed by just about everyone. The walk up the final climb into Viana was ok, no huffing and puffing. I noticed there were a lot of new apartment buildings at the edge of town. On my first Camino, Casa Ivar was the first building all by itself and now it was surrounded by much bigger places.

The Camino through Viana

Viana has a cheerful vibe. The Camino runs right down the middle of it, and there are bars and restaurants on either side. I tucked into the cathedral to cool off and realized it was Sunday morning and Mass was underway. I sat on a bench in the back that circled a pillar, edging my pack off my shoulders. There were lots of people in attendance, and some families with children. There seemed to be recorded music of a choir that supported the congregational singing, and was very well-integrated into the liturgy. At the Peace, I wandered outside, refreshed a bit from sitting against the cold stone pillar.

I walked down the Main Street and found a place to sit outside and order lunch. Should I taxi to Logroño? It was another 8k. The guys sitting next to me at the cafe said don’t believe the guidebook, it’s more like 12k.

We said Buen Camino and I noticed that across the street was a Pilgrim Welcome center. I stuck my head in, and saw the young woman who had been at Oasis Trails, and staffing the food truck several days ago. Her name was Clarissa. We laughed when we recognized each other. The Pilgrim Center was a respite spot run by the Dutch evangelicals. She made me a very nice Cafe con Leche and I decided to keep walking to Logroño. I was impressed with the Oasis Trails people, they were truly caring.

On the way out of Viana I ran into Mari, the German woman I’d met in Torres del Rio the day before. She was already at her albergue, and loving Viana.

Perhaps one of the things I’ve noticed this time is that I’ve met people I really like but I’m on a different timetable than folks walking straight through to Santiago, I would’ve liked to spend more time with her and others. But I’ve been working on being grateful for the connections I’ve made and enjoying them without laying out too many expectations on them.

I remembered the walk out of Viana as pleasant, through the backyards and vegetable gardens of regular people.

Grapevine on garden shed
Buen Camino mural is a little faded
but still familiar
The other side of Viana

Now it was getting hot. The path took me alongside the back of a church where a big picnic was going on. Kids were running around the town spigot with their water pistols as I filled up my water bottle. Whole families were relaxing on blankets under the trees. The name of the place was Virgen de Cuervas. I looked inside the little church. There was a huge statue of the Virgin. It must have been their feast day,

Virgen de Cuervas
Families celebrating

On I went, and the route into Logroño seemed to have changed since last I walked it. For awhile it ran through a running grove of trees

Path into Logroño

There, on the side of the path, was another Spanish Civil War plaque.

Spanish Civil War memorial

Basically, it says, “In this place assassinated in 1936 on 3 September 27 neighbors of villages were victims of Franco’s fascism. The towns that forget their history are condemned to repeat it.”

It was a quiet spot along a leafy ditch near the side of an ordinary road. Once again, I was reminded of Spain’s violent past not so long ago. It gives me chills to think how easy it is for communities to descend into violence.

The rest of the walk was really hot and without shade. The Camino was now routed onto a blacktop path that wound its way under freeway overpasses. I found myself getting into that very slow, one step at a time mode. A few bicyclists were pushing their bikes, too.

After the long slow climb on the blacktop, Logroño came into view. It’s a major city, and thankfully, the Camino enters it by a less populated side.

Logroño
Camino plaza with symbol and the bridge into Logroño

My legs were really red and hot from heat rash when I made it into town and found my little hotel. Lots of steps to get upstairs to reception where a nice woman welcomed me and stamped my pilgrim passport. I collapsed on the bed and elevated my legs to help them out.

There’s a reason I don’t usually walk more than 15k and I was thankful I didn’t have any blisters. But it was a good day on the Camino!

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Los Arcos to Torres del Río, 8k

When I set up my itinerary I wanted to be sure to have plenty of time to see several churches: Eunate, Los Arcos, and Santo Sepulcro in Torres del Rio.

Back in 2013, I walked through Torres del Rio in a hurry and had popped my head into this mysterious church. Like Eunate, its purpose was unknown; it wasn’t a parish church, and had ties to the Knights Templar,

This time I wanted more time to soak in its aura. Which led to the decision to stay over in Torres del Rio even if it was just 8k from Los Arcos.

Santo Sepulcro in Los Arcos

I made a reservation at Hostal San Andres on Booking.com, but I kept going back and forth whether to change my plans since it meant I’d burn a day and would need to jump ahead by a bus or taxi later on to get to Burgos on May 28.

I ended up keeping the reservation and not rearranging everything. I walked leisurely out of Los Arcos. I got to Sansol in about two hours. Torres del Rio is downhill right next to Sansol; somehow they’ve remained two villages.

Hostal San Andres was a hotel and albergue combined, and had a restaurant/bar. It even had a pool, but it was under maintenance. I my snarkier moments, I thought of these places as part of the “Pilgrim Industrial Complex.” It was a thriving business on the Camino. I hung out on the patio blogging until it was time to check-in. The church wasn’t open until four so I had a lot of time.

I talked to two women from SoCal and Idaho, who were walking when they wanted and taxiing otherwise. There now seem to be more pilgrims like them, and me, who have walked before and have a different focus than getting to Santiago.

Once I’d checked into my room, I walked around the town, which had several albergues. One was right across from the Santo Sepulcro and had a Knights Templar theme. In fact, they had some official connection to them, or so they said on a plaque out front.

Albergue in Torres del Río with Franciscan Tau, Goose foot, and Knights Templar cross
over the door

I felt I’d entered a time warp walking into their courtyard. Pink Floyd’s “Dark Side of the Moon” was blaring from the speakers. It took me back to high school.

It worth noting that Pata de Oca means goose foot, so this albergue was named for the sign of the goose foot in the Game of the Goose legend.

At 4:15 I arrived at the door of the Suplico but no one had unlocked it yet. I chatted with a nice woman about my age from Berlin who was also interested in the site. She had never traveled alone and was really enjoying the freedom, and the art along the Camino. Finally, she called the phone number on the door and got ahold of the person with the key. She was on her way.

I’d seen this lady earlier sitting on the patio drinking coffee with her friends. She probably grew up in the village and this ancient site had been a part of her world for as long as she could remember. She collected a euro from each of us and opened the door.

It was cool inside and silent.

It was as I remembered it, serene and elegant in its simplicity. The 13th century crucifix seemed to float above the altar.

The ceiling had ribs that converged to make an eight-pointed star, like at Eunate. There was just a handful of carved figures that were a bit enigmatic.

Also like Eunate, light came in through small alabaster windows, and the light was was pure and cool. A bench ran around the perimeter of the octagonal space. I sat for a long time taking it all in. The German woman sat there, too.

At 5:00 the local lady said there was mass being celebrated at the parish church at the top of the hill. We both headed up the hill and got there just in time for mass to begin. It seemed like the best kind of progression after soaking in the tranquil spirituality of the Sepulcro.

Mari, the German woman took communion, and I did not. It feels like the right thing to do this time around, though I did take communion on my prior Caminos.

After doing the usual shower and reshuffling of my belongings, it was almost time for the pilgrims dinner at the hotel/albergue. It was quite organized, everyone had an ticket. Pilgrims were hungry at 6;00 and dinner was at 7:00. There was a lot of milling about and grumbling, especially when they announced dinner would now be at 7:25.

I sat with a Swedish woman and we had a great conversation. She also had three children though they were a lot younger. It was her first Camino and she was going all the way to Santiago. She was impressed with the efficiency of the waiters, and how they cleared the plates when each person was done. In Sweden everyone waits for the last person to finish before clearing the table. We talked a little about American politics and I explained (at her request) about the three branches of government, and what checks and balances were and how they weren’t checking and balancing right now.

Dinner was good, salad and salmon, with red wine, plus dessert.

She introduced me to a woman from Santa Barbara who, like me, had also gone to UCSB , but four years later. Small world.

It was one of those communal pilgrim gatherings I’ve delays enjoyed. This time I was out of synch with people and hadn’t walked with them for the last week. They had become a kind of fellowship from starting at St. Jean at the same time. But that was ok.

Even though I’d only walked 8k, I was tired and was glad to go up to my little modern room to read, and rearrange things one more time.

I guess I was so tired that I forgot to register and pay for the transfer of my bag the next day online, but I didn’t notice that until the morning.

Categories: Camino de Santiago, Churches on the Camino | Tags: , , , , | Leave a comment

Roads not taken, revisited: Eunate, 9.2k to Obanos

I fell in love with the Francés the first time I walked it twelve years ago. And I was walking fast, trying to keep up with the traditional stages, walking 20k+ a day. I remember thinking, “Wait, I want to see that!” But either I was moving too fast or I was just too tired to walk a couple extra kilometers off the Camino to see some of the places just off the Camino.

The ancient church of Santa Maria de Eunate was one of those places. I distinctly remember standing on the trail with my new Camino friend Monika at the crossroads for the road to Eunate, and her telling me I should take the detour. But I was way too tired to do an extra 3.5 K and back.

When I started planning this Pamplona to Burgos Camino, I wanted the freedom to take those roads I didn’t take before. I wanted to say yes to the detours. And I wanted to make sure to see Eunate.

On Sunday I had my chance to say yes. I left the cute albergue in Uterga at 8:00 and walked out of town with two young guys from Hong Kong then said goodbye to them where the detour to Eunate branched off.

It felt funny to leave the well-marked Camino, but I soon found that the road to Eunate was well-marked, too.

It was a quiet walk through open fields, some of which were recently harvested white asparagus, which is more popular in Europe than the green kind.

For a few moments I caught a glimpse of the church way out there.

The church of Santa Maria de Eunate is unique in a number of ways. One, it’s all by itself out in the countryside, which is unusual for a medieval church. No one really knows why it was built. It could’ve been a burial chapel, and there’s good reason to think it was built by the Knights Templar, who were very involved on the Camino. Its octagonal shape is similar to the lines of the church in Torres del Rio and the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem which were both built by the Knights Temples lar.

Eunate also has a separate unattached arcade surrounding it. That’s totally unique.

The word Eunate mean 100 doors in the Basque language. Scholars think that there’s sacred geometry involved at Eunate. There are 33 openings in the arcade. Jesus lived 33 years which is considered a sacred number. If you go around the arcade three times, you get 99, plus the front door equals 100.

I walked up to it at 9:30, just before it opened. An American woman I’d met the night before at the albergue in Uterga was already there, and it was fun to have someone who spoke English there to talk about it.

Once the gate was open, I slowly took my time walking around the outside of the church.

It was built in the twelfth century, so it’s ancient, and like many churches along the Camino from that era, Romanesque in style.

The stone is quite worn, and has an interesting texture.

Stone on outside wall of Eunate

Looking up, there are carvings of heads around the edge. Some have noted that the faces, though worn, have features that could be Moorish.

There were so many churches being built at that time along the Camino, that groups of artisans, artists and builders came from France and other parts of Europe and worked as teams on church after church. Historians think this could be one of the churches built by these international builders.

There are some fanciful carvings, too. On a corner capitol there’s a man with a spiraling beard.

A man with a spiraling beard

The capitols on one half of the arcade also have unusual carvings. What are those creatures that look like lions?

The arcade is quite beautiful the way it encircles the church. It does remind me of the circular movement of the labyrinth.

The interior is very simple. The windows are alabaster not stained glass. And there are alabaster skylights.

Now I wish I’d taken more photos inside.

At the center of the church sits the Virgen de Eunate. She is actually a copy because the original disappeared in the 1970’s. I’m intrigued by that because medieval Spanish Virgens had a habit of moving around on their own volition. And sometimes they were discovered in caves or trees.

The Virgen from the opposite angle

I sat in silence in the church taking in the shape of the space and the focus on the beautiful Virgen. She holds a sheaf of wheat as well as the Christ child, both symbols of abundance, it seems to me.

There is a quiet energy to the space, a barely perceptible feeling that I enjoyed. I love how the apse has columns and an arcade that echoes the one outside. The church feels centered and almost modern the way its unadorned by gold retablos and random saints or the more usual impression of stained glass. The alabaster windows let in a quiet shaded light. The place feels grounded in the earth; it has been there for 800 years!

I was hoping there’d be a mass there on Sunday, but it’s only celebrated on special occasions. There’s an association of friends of Eunate that support it, and weddings are held there.

While I was visiting a group of people arrived with folding tables, food and wine, and set up a private party in the old albergue next door. They weren’t very interested in answering my inquiries. That’s ok, sometimes in Spain I realize that I am very much a guest from another culture.

When it was time to walk on to Obanos, I had some questions about the way back. Someone told me, oh no, don’t take that trail. Finally, I consulted Apple Maps and started down the trail anyways. It led through a field of wildflowers.

When I got to a T, I had to choose left or right on a wider trail that went into the bright green wheat fields. Just then, a Mom and her teenage son walked by and pointed me in the right direction towards Obanos. They said “Buen Camino” and walked on talking animatedly together. They reminded me a bit of the Virgen and her son at Eunate.

Local Mother and son on the path to Camino
and Obanos

I’m so glad I took the road not taken, and said yes to Eunate.

Categories: Camino de Santiago, Pilgrimage | Tags: , , , , , | 2 Comments

Planes, buses, time zones, joy

I’ve been planing this Camino since January. I think that diving into the details helped me get through the first 100 days of…you know what.

Today, embarkation day finally arrived. And just in the nick of time because I was driving myself crazy trying to pack, and keep my backpack a reasonable weight. One thing I’m noticing is that my last Camino was ten years ago, and things change. More necessities are needed. I finally made a deal with myself that I’ll use the bag service to lighten my pack.

I knew that I’d probably see some pilgrims at the gate and I wasn’t disappointed. A group of three women talked to me when they saw the shell on my pack. Two were walking from Sarria, and one from St. Jean. Later as we were disembarking, two other women said they too were walking from Sarria!

One unpleasant sign of the times: there were ICE officers stationed on the jetway as we boarded.

The flight to Madrid on Iberia was long, but fairly easy and I had an empty seat next to me. It was fun to have everything in Spanish and to be able to understand more than last time. Thanks, Duolingo!

I’m always in awe of European airports. MAD (Madrid) is huge, and has the best signage I’ve ever seen, and also has airport info desks with real live humans to answer your questions if needed.

Baggage claim at MAD

Of course I’ve been worrying about making my bus connection to Pamplona, which left an hour after I landed. It was a long walk, and train ride between terminals, through passport control, and another 10 minute walk to the Inter-City bus station by Terminal 4, but I made it with plenty of time to spare.

Buses in Spain are big, shiny, and very reasonable. It’s also convenient to go straight from the airport instead of going into central Madrid for a train.

Now I’m on the first leg of the bus trip, cruising through the countryside.

Fluffy white clouds en route to Pamplona

Buen Camino!

Categories: Camino de Santiago | Tags: , | 2 Comments

Blessing Shells (and Pilgrims) for the American Pilgrims on the Camino, Northern California Chapter

My remarks and blessing at the annual Shell Ceremony, March 1, 2025:

Being a pilgrim on the Camino means we go on pilgrimage.  Pilgrimage can mean different things to different people:  it can be the traditional religious pilgrimage to Santiago to visit the relics of St. James; it can be a spiritual journey where we challenge ourselves and live in the moment; it can be an adventure we feel called to take on. It can be a physical challenge.  There’s usually some kind of challenge involved.

Being a pilgrim means that we’ve felt a call to go out of our comfort zone and explore something beyond ourselves, and usually to explore inwardly as well.

The author Phil Costaneau writes in “The Art of Pilgrimage” that pilgrimage is about making travel sacred. Those of you who are walking this year, I encourage you to ask yourself, “Why am I walking?” and let that question live in your heart and listen to what comes up for you as you walk. 

The most recent issue of La Concha, the magazine of American Pilgrims on the Camino,  has reflections on “Keeping Time,” by pilgrims who share their experience of being on pilgrimage as a way to mark transitions or other significant events in their lives. That was true for me.

I walked the Camino Frances for the first time in 2013 after I left my position at a church in Menlo Park.  I was turning 55 and I saw an opening of time to walk the Camino.  I wanted to discern what was next.  Our kids were almost done with college.  I was also ready for a grand adventure. 

In June of 2013 Hale and I took a driving vacation in France that ended in SJPP.  It was like being dropped off at college.  We said goodbye at the Puerto de España, on the Camino just outside of St. Jean Pied de Port, and he drove off to Bordeaux and flew home. 

Suddenly, I was traveling alone.  For about a few uphill hours, I felt on my own…because I stopped at Orisson for the night and found a community of pilgrims.  I remain friends with several pilgrims I met at that first dinner. We just met up with Monika in Vienna last October. 

When you step onto the Camino you enter the stream of pilgrims. You’ve entered a community, and, like in life, you also walk your own journey.

The Camino taught me the hard way that we each have our own pace.

My ankle said “enough” in San Juan de Ortega after too many days of walking too far, too fast.  I had to cut my Camino short and go home hobbling. 

But I was fortunate to return in October and make it to Santiago.  I had a new sense of purpose, to walk my own Camino.  I discovered a “flow state” within myself, of being alive in body, mind and spirit. 

As a person of faith, I felt the presence of God along the Camino in many ways:  in my fellow pilgrims, in the beauty of Spain, and the Spanish people; the history, the art, the culture, the food; the feeling that we are walking the path that pilgrims like us have walked for over 1,000 years. 

There is a definite sense of spiritual energy along the Way, I hope you feel it, too.  The Camino invites us to BE ALIVE and BE THANKFUL for life.

I’m excited to be returning to walk a portion of the Camino Frances in May, from Pamplona to Burgos.  This time around I want to give thanks for becoming a grandmother.  I want to give thanks for the lives of my parents who lived long lives and died five years ago. I’ve been studying Spanish and I’m looking forward to speaking Spanish with the wonderful people of Spain hosting us along the Camino. 

I look forward to that rhythm of walking poles and footsteps that becomes a walking prayer.  People have asked me to pray for our country. I will pray for our country, and the world in which our grandchildren and all our children are growing up in.

These days you can find me preparing to walk the Camino.  I’m walking the streets of Alameda, around Lafayette Reservoir, Lake Merritt, and in Joaquin Miller park. 

And I hope to see some of you fellow pilgrims on the Camino.

Blessing of the Shells

We gather today from all across Northern California

To share a meal, share our stories, our hopes and dreams

To build a community of pilgrims

To support our fellow pilgrims as they prepare to walk

The many routes to Santiago.

Now, let us gather all the love from this group,

the love of the spirit of the Camino

And the thread of love that connects all humanity

To bless these shells,

symbols and talismans of the pilgrimage. 

May these shells identify each of you as a pilgrim on the Way

May they protect you and keep you safe

May they always remind you

That you are walking the ancient way of St. James.

Buen Camino and Amen.

Categories: Blessings, Pilgrimage | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

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