Hello to All
Well we made it. We finished on Friday 17th October as hoped. What a fantastic trip!! Last 2 days were really hard as the legs had decided they had had enough but we all helped each other along and WE DID IT! THANK YOU to all of you who have made donations or have left comments to raise spirits. There were times when things got a bit hard and you have "helped us make it through the night" so to speak...
Here are the highlights of the second half:
Well we made it. We finished on Friday 17th October as hoped. What a fantastic trip!! Last 2 days were really hard as the legs had decided they had had enough but we all helped each other along and WE DID IT! THANK YOU to all of you who have made donations or have left comments to raise spirits. There were times when things got a bit hard and you have "helped us make it through the night" so to speak...
Here are the highlights of the second half:
Monday: Leon - Rabanal del Camino 75km (4h 38'). Quite uneventful ride up to Astorga where we stopped for lunch in a delightful square where there were puppets playing the bells to mark the time on the clock in the town square - memories of Camberwick Green... Then it got tricky again on the long climbs up to Rabanal. Here we stayed at the Albergue Pilar where we were made to feel very welcome. Recommended stop.
Tuesday: Rabanal del Camino - Herrerías 81km (5h 06'). Quite a day today. Dave left a rock at the foot of the Cruz de Ferro and then it was intense downhill offroad over rocks and rubble. Tricky descent and the discs were red hot by the time we got to Acebo for a drink. After that, we decided to go onto the road as the descent was getting too dodgey between the rocks and the walkers. Besides that, the wrists had gone... We head for the stunning Villafranca del Bierzo via Ponferrada where Santi reveals he is leaving us and somebody is actually coming to pick him up... A swift half, a packet of crisps, we say our farewells and the remaining group of 4 head for La Faba though decide to call it a day in Herrerías after a day of gruelling climbs. Only two people at the albergue too - Helene and her companion from Canada - so we had plenty of room.... Beautiful scenery "everywhere I look around"...
Wednesday: Herrerías - Sarria 58km (4h 00'). Oh what a climb! O Cebreiro is all it is set out to be. I rode with Tony via La Faba while the other went ahead via Laguna. Lots of "get off and push" today. The views were amazing but some of the climbs tested resilience shall we say... It was also very hot today. In Sarria we book into the municipal hostal which was fine. We then had a meal and met up with our riding friends from Algeciras and the trio from Vitoria. A live band sets up outside and we end up having a little session out on the street. The albergue shut at 10pm so our return at 1am meant us having to form a human ladder so that Spiderman Tony could climb onto the balcony and creep downstairs to let us in. Ooh, we did laugh but not until the next day so as not to wake anybody up...
Thursday: Sarria - Melide 65km (5h 07'). After many days of great weather where the sun got even too hot at times, it rained all day today. Change of top at Portomarin. Looking forward to some good octopus in Melide. We have bumped into a Spanish guy and his wife 4 times now since our first meeting at the Cruz de Ferro. I've decided he must be a mirage and am in two minds whether to engage in further conversation as this might only serve to certify my insanity. However, he did recommend a visit to La Garnacha in Melide for pulpo and he was not wrong! Great meal! We also stayed at Ramiro II hotel for 17€ per head and have a good rest before our final day. The day's riding was hard going. Impromptu jet wash from a bus cleaner as we approach Melide covered in mud after a day on the slopes. What a nice man!
Friday: Melide - Santiago de Compostela 59km (4h 30'). Well, a hint of sadness that the whole adventure is drawing to a close. Tiredness as the legs seem to need a lot of coaxing... Once we reach the Monte do Gozo, we know for sure we are going to make it. You can make out the top of the cathedral in Santiago behind the trees. We head down triumphant to collect our compostelas from the pilgrim office and finally reach the shell in the middle of the Praza do Obradoiro. WE HAVE ARRIVED! After a caña we take turns to go into the cathedral. You can feel the emotion in there as many walkers are also arriving - I can't imagine how many people there must be on the camino in the height of summer - but unfortunately the pillar you are supposed to lay your hand on is out of bounds at the moment so it's back to the cafeteria to say goodbye to Victor who flies back to Barcelona tonight. Tony will head to Oviedo with Dave and I tomorrow, Saturday, before catching the midnight bus to Madrid. Dave leaves on Sunday back to Glasgow and I stay in Oviedo until Thursday then it's back to Liverpool, back to reality though seen now through a different lens... Oh, the memories are flooding back but they'll come out in the book and the DVD....
Thanks for reading folks. I hope you have found this blog interesting and useful. I say do the trip yourself or something similar. It will push you and good things will happen. We are now all looking for our next challenge... Loire Valley, Tuscany, UK coast to coast, Land's End to John o'Groats.... Who knows?! Who knows!? Si x