I am in the Camino rhythm now. It feels very normal to get up every day and walk between 20 and 40 kilometres, stopping for a chocolate croissant for breakfast and a beer and a sandwich for lunch. We leapfrog with pilgrims along the route and usually see the same people every couple of nights. When we arrive at the Alburgue I shower, do laundry, relax, do yoga, then go for a ‘pilgrim dinner’, which is usually a 3 course meal that includes bread and wine. Finally I collapse into my bunk bed and pray that nobody around me is a ‘roncador’ (snorer)!
I drank from the fountain of…
Wine!!!
We are one
I wasn’t intending to blog today, but it was such a special day I feel like I’m going to burst with positivity. In the morning we passed Alto de Perdon, which is a high point on the path where there are many windmills. The energy company has erected a statue of medieval pilgrims walking. I think it is impossible not to feel connected to something bigger.
Buen Camino
The Camino runs like a well oiled machine! There are Alburgues all along the way where pilgrims sleep and eat for cheap. Every night it is like a meeting of the UN – people from all different countries hang out to eat, drink, and share tales. Last night, for example, there were 6 bunk beds in the room (12 beds total), and we had pilgrims from Cuba, Holland, Italy, Poland, Israel, Spain, USA, and, of course, Canada! It kind of feels like dorms for open minded people who like exercise!
1 down, 34 to go!
My title is referring to days on the Camino (not that I’m counting down)! Today we covered 24.7km and it was one of the hardest sections as we walked from France over the Pyranees mountains into Spain. It started out foggy with the sun breaking through, but at the highest altitude it was sleeting at one point. If not for a well placed pilgrim’s shelter I may have been permanently blue (my lips and fingernails turn blue when I get cold).
I see London, I see France…
I’m in St. Jean Pied-de-Pont, all set to start the Camino de Santiago tomorrow!
“Well behaved women rarely make history”
Says the bumper sticker on my new friend Sherry’s car. Sherry and Siggy live with my mom’s cousin, Mykell, in Antigua, Guatemala. I am so lucky to be able to spend my last night in Guatemala staying with them in their posh 10 bedroom home. It feels like things have come full circle – it was after meeting Mykell at our family reunion 2 years ago that I decided to make Guatemala one of my destinations on this trip! These ladies are movers and shakers and I really feel (and hope) that I’m looking into the future!
If the Internet is not working… Go jump in the river
My time in Spanish school came to an end on Thursday. My last week of school was quite challenging. I was learning things that were completely new to me so my brain was really getting a workout!
Tango el pan bajo el brazo
I learned this title phrase this week in school. Translated it means “I have bread under my arm”, but the ideomatic meaning is “I have many opportunities available to me”. This couldn’t ring more true for me right now. I am truly loving life!































































































