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A modern woman's search for...
Todays walk started at 8:30 am and we arrived in Comixa at 6:00 pm. It was a lot of walking again through very lush green ridge country. A steady all day climb from 620m up to the high point of 1250m in elevation. It rained most of the day and was cold enough in the spot that we could see are breath and my body heat kept fogging my glasses.
We stopped in Portos for about an hour for a glass of wine which turned into a bottle of wine. We got to experience some local color. At about 4:00 pm in came six Galacian cowboys in their full regalia...cowboy hats, riding crops, and high boots with spurs. Of course we were in good spirits and wanted to take pictures and theu were in good spirits as well and mugged for us for pictures and a couple of them began singing at the bar. Pat got up and was encouraging them all to pose at the bar and our giggling got them all going. At one point, Pat jokingly asked them where are your horses and one said outside and we giggled some more like sure they are. As we were getting ready to leave, we went outside and discovered six beautiful horses tied up around the front of the bar. We could not believe it! They had on beautiful halter decorations and saddle...a couple of dapple grays. We were out front putting on our rain ponchos and they all came and mounted their horses and headed up the road with wave. We got to experience Gallega cowboys bar hopping on a Sunday afternoon. Again, Pat was in the forefront encouraging the situation.
It was a badly needed break for us during the day. Particularly me. I thought I had effectively dealt with my big blister on my heel by popping it, putting second skin on it, covering it with moleskin and then taping my entire heel. It is really depressing to develop a nasty blister when you are only carrying a light day packe. The entire two months that walked almost everday with a twenty pack I never developed a blister like this. Once one thing is taken care of, another thing occurs. About four hours into today's walk my middle toe that I had banged up pretty good during training for this trip due to wearing to short of boots for hill work, began to lift off my toe. It is like I could not believe it was happening. I am losing my toenail. I stopped and taped it down so it would not continue to catch on my sock and get ripped off before its time.
The stop at the Gallega cowboy bar was to give my feet a well need rest. We had already walked about 7 hours. My feet were feeling very hammered. Then Sue pulled the miracle drug called Voltaran out. It is like a ibuprophen in cream form. You rub it on your feet and within 10 minutes my feet quit aching and felt normal. I was able to walk another 6 km to Palas de Rei. When we got there, I said I cannot walk one more step.
Tonite we stayed at a beautiful casa rural. The owner is this gregarious woman who took great care of us. We had delicious chicken noodle soup, crusty bread, a beef dish tender short ribs without the bone that melted your mouth with crispy fries, a bottle of Galacian red wine, flan with chocolate drizzled on it and a tiny shot glass of an herb appertiv that has chamomile and rosemary in that is from this area called orujo. The owner then arranged for our next place we will stay in Rua tomorrow night. Ordered us to go to bed and get rested and said we must have breakfast before we leave. She could see that we were completely exhausted and being the good host she took care of us.
Tomorrow we have a lot of ground to cover...30 km. Hopefully my feet will be up for it. We have to be in Santiago on Tuesday the 21st to meet up with friends. Don't worry Ron, Sue promises she will make the arrangements for me to be medivacted back to US once the doctors think I will be ready to travel.
Still finding Jimmy everywhere.
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We headed out of Sarria and dropped into this beautiful green lush river valley. Following a fast moving stream on a dirt pathway approx 8 feet wide that would either be lined on either side of the path with slate stone walls approx 4 ft tall and covered with moss and ferns or the path would be lined on either side with chestnut trees. The terrain went up and down through little valleys of farm pasture land criss-crossed with stone fences or lush lightly wooded areas. They raise dairy cows here. In fact we went through an area that is very famous for their cheese. For my Wisconsin friends, the terrain was very similar to walking through the Byrds Creek area up and over to Excelsior over and up to Mt Zion and down into Gays Mills in the Springtime. Very green.
Did I mention cows and rain? It began to rain when leaving Sarria and we walked for several hours in a steady gentle rain. It was raining hard enough that we had to where our ponchos and rain pants. I really needed windshield wipers and defogger for my glasses. The paths went up and down and became very muddy and mixed in with cow shit. Some areas were steep enough that there were streams down the path about 3-4 inches deep with water flowing and we would have to rock hop going up long stretches of hills. In fact one hill had slabs of slate rock in the middle of the path which awkwardly spaced a little more than a long stride and you had to be careful because they were slippery and water ankle deep. Did I mention cow shit and mud? Some places it was challenging to manuver because it was like trying to traipse through a spring thawed barnyard. It brought up childhood memories of getting stuck at age 5 in the barnyard in calf deep mire and not being able to get out without leaving my boots behind in the muck and making it to a fence to sit and contemplate my lonely poopy stuck boots and how I was going to retrieve those without involving my father.
Pat has decided she is over cows and the smell of manure.
It was an amazing walk today. We walked from 8:00 am to 4:00 pm with an hour rest stop for lunch. There was little cafe out in the middle no where with incredible views. We had the best lunch ever. We had a bowl of lentils, crusty bread, titty cheese (cheese shaped like a tit), salami, jamon with melon (paper thin sliced serrano ham with green melon, and of course, a bottle of red wine. As we sat there, the sun came out and we stripped off our rain gear and basked in its warm. We were sitting under a large umbrella. Rain clouds blew in and it began to rain again. Within the hour it had stopped. We experienced three different rain showers throughout the day.
We dropped down into another river valley and crossed a large river and climbed up into the town of Portomarin which has a large cathedral. Sunny when we arrived but then another rain storm blew in within minutes. This area, Galacia, averages rain 1 out of 4 days throughout the year. Between the rain and cow poop, it is very green. Very similar weather like Ireland. In fact this area is Celtic and has their own language of Gallega rather than Spanish. It is like a combination of Spanish and Portugese.
I don't know what I would have done without Pat and Sue who do very well with Spanish and with their month long experience on the Camino. Plus it is really a lot of fun seeing them good naturedly banter and flirt with the various barkeepers along the way. Bars serve breakfasts along with being open for the locals to begin their daily victuals of drinking aquaconvit (sp?) and smoking cigarettes. They are generally old men in berets.
I was initiated today with a big fat blister on my right heel two hours into the walk. Sat down on the side of the path to administer to my feet. People stopped to offer tape, compeed, moleskin and advice. Caring for your feet is a very serious matter on the Camino. Today we walked 22.5 km.
Tomorrow we hike up to Palais de Reis and on to another little town beyond for approx 26 km. Pat and Sue have been very kind and supportive about not carrying our heavy packs each day but shipping them forward. Today my feet were ready to be done. The rest of my body was still willing but your feet just get tired. When we picked up our packs and I placed it on my back my feet went aggghh with the extra weight sinking into my arches and the balls of my feet. So I am very grateful to not have the weight in exchange to have the ability to cover some distances.
I have been running into Jimmy everwhere.
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