Sunday, 14 May 2017

Camino Part IV Cork – Dublin – Burgos - Frómista (24/03/17 – 26/03/17)

 
When we left Frómista in October 2015, I had never dreamt that it would be a year and a half before I got back on the Camino again! This had definitely not been the plan; instead I had been imagining that I would return the following Spring. However, various events soon overtook my plans. I had known the previous year that I would be visiting Northern Zambia as part of a team from my Church for three weeks in July and had factored this visit into my calculations. What I hadn’t been expecting though, was that my friend Ben Jonas (mentioned elsewhere in this blog) would decide to get married in Brasília in February 2016. He kindly invited me along and although I initially thought it was a mad idea to go to South America for 11 days, I then decided to go (when else might I get the chance to go to Brazil?) and had a wonderful and very memorable time. This trip however, used up the remaining annual leave that I had earmarked for walking the Camino. And so, unexpectedly, having never been outside Europe before I found myself on long distance flights to two Continents twice in one year.

From the highs of international travel in 2016, I also experienced the lows of the year, as in June my mum fell and fractured her hip and made a remarkable recovery, only to die unexpectedly in October, just two months after our lovely family holiday with her in Dumfries & Galloway. It was a tough time and the Camino had to be reluctantly put on the backburner until 2017.

So, it was with some excitement that I began to plan my fourth trip on the Camino late in 2016. Thinking about getting back on the road was an antidote to the sorrow and sense of bereavement I felt, and as ever, I knew that walking the Camino would help me work through my internal issues.
As I excitedly began preparing, I found myself looking forward to the stark, silent beauty of early mornings on the Meseta and these lines from my favourite Irish poet caught my eye and summed up for me the inner longings of my heart:

To be first on the road,
up with the ground-mists and
pheasants.
To be older and grateful.

Seamus Heaney

A plan quickly began to take shape. It was soon agreed that my friends David King and Matthew Watson would again be coming on the trip, but this time Matthew’s wife Heather, would also accompany us. Although fit and used to walking dogs every day, Heather has a few problems with her left foot, and so having never walked on the Camino before, she was nervous as to whether she would be able to manage walking over such a prolonged distance. However I promised to bring along a range of Podiatry instruments and dressings to keep her moving along the road!

It was decided that the four of us would walk the 117.3km from Frómista – León over six days. We would then have a day off sightseeing together in León. Matthew and Heather would then travel home and David and I would walk on for a further 74.8km from León – Rabanal del Camino; a grand total of 192.1km.

I was interested to know how I would cope as I had never walked such a distance in one go in my life! I was also wondering how my legs and feet would cope as on previous trips I had the problems with them discussed above. However I was fairly hopeful as I had been impressed with David’s Columbia walking shoes and had, on a whim, bought a pair for myself a few weeks before we were leaving and had found them extremely comfortable. This was despite the fact that they were considerably cheaper than the Merrill walking shoes that I had bought in 2016 and with which I had so many problems, as they had caused blisters in between my toes and on my heels and the moulded heel cups had also cracked.

On Friday 24th March 2017, we set off; David came to my house and we drove together to stay in the Premier Inn at Swords near Dublin Airport. Matthew and Heather travelled up Maynooth to stay with Heather’s sister Helen and her husband James. Matthew, who didn’t want to pay to stay in the Premier Inn, had suggested that we could either travel up to Dublin very early on the Saturday morning or else kip down on an airbed at Helen’s but I pointed out that David and I are getting too old for that kind of carry on and wished to have a proper night’s sleep and a decent breakfast before the flight!

The next morning (after our decent breakfast) the four of us met at Dublin airport. We were flying with Aer Lingus once again Dublin – Bilbao and David and I checked in with the automatic scanners and bag drop without any problems, however just as Matthew and Heather checked in their baggage the conveyor belt stopped. A very large, backlog of increasingly irate passengers soon built up and Matthew, understandably, felt he couldn’t leave his bag until he had seen it go on it’s way. So much for automatic check-ins – there is something to be said for having a real human at a desk!

The rest of the trip passed uneventfully. The flight was crammed to the gunnels with excited parties of Spanish Schoolchildren returning home after trips to Ireland and quite a few Spanish students going home for the Easter break.

Upon arrival at Bilbao we got the Bizkai bus to the bus station and after some tapas in our favourite café near the bus station got the 18.00 ALSA bus to Burgos. The 18.00 doesn’t arrive in Burgos until 21.15, whereas the 19.00 arrives in Burgos at 21.00. This is because the 18.00 takes a much more scenic route through the towns and villages of the mountains, whereas the 19.00 just rips up the motorway. Although it was slower however, we enjoyed looking at the little towns and villages along the route set in mist wreathed wooded valleys and when it got dark I read my Kindle.
Tapas in Bilbao
When we arrived in Burgos I was surprised to see that the Cathedral was in darkness and not illuminated as it normally is; in addition there were literally dozens and dozens of little moving lights above the city centre which we soon realised where Chinese Lanterns which had been released all over the city centre. On the Puente de Santa Maria we watched a young family releasing a lantern to the delight of their small child. It turned out that we had arrived in Burgos during Earth Hour – a worldwide event organised by the World Wild Life Fund for Nature (WWF) where cities were encouraged to turn off their lights 8.30 – 9.30pm to raise awareness of the detrimental effects of light pollution on both humans and animals and to help people learn about the impacts of our energy consumption on climate change. It is sobering to think that 50% of Europe’s population can no longer see the Milky Way due to light pollution – a sight I took for granted as a child. David, being a retired Fire Officer wasn’t impressed however, by the fire risk of releasing hundreds of the lanterns with their tea lights to rise up into the sky and ten drop down all over the city centre! David’s fire risk assessments became a regular feature of our trip as will be described later!
Earth Hour
We found a bar for some drinks and a snack and then made our way round to Hotel Centro Los Braseros on Avenida del Cid Campeador. The hotel was clean and comfortable and the breakfast good and I would have enjoyed my stay there except for a large party of young women who had matching black, shiny jackets with “Laudio Wellness Crew” emblazoned on their backs in English. The Laudio Wellness Crew did not promote my own personal wellness as they spent the night running up and down the corridor outside my room giggling, talking and slamming doors. I felt very unwell from lack of sleep by morning and entertained evil thoughts about them when they entered the dining room for breakfast! Needless to say, David, who sleeps like a log said he never heard a thing, but then his snoring probably acted as a blocking form of white noise!
Matthew & Heather having a bedtime drink
After breakfast we dropped off our bags in the lockers at the bus station and then had a pleasant wander around Burgos showing Heather the sights. We climbed up to view the city from the Castle and then had Hot Chocolate and Churros in the Favor Café, before being astonished by just how loud the cathedral bells are when they start pealing!
El Cid
In front of the Arco de Santa Maria
Before leaving on the trip I had arranged for my friend Ben’s Brazilian wife Liana, who speaks Spanish, to ring the taxi driver from Frómista that we had used previously, Elisa Vallejera and book her to pick us up outside the bus station at 13.00. Elisa was already waiting for us when we got back to the bus station and drove us to Frómista in about 50 minutes for €80, which we felt was a very reasonable price, when divided between the four of us.
We decided to stay in the Estrella del Camino albergue again, but as this didn’t open until 15.30 we were forced to have a mediocre meal in a café in the plaza and then wander around the town for a little while before we were able to finally check in. The dormitory room we had stayed in 2016 was not open as there were less pilgrims than on that occasion, which was probably a good thing as I knew I wouldn’t have to walk so far to the loo along the long rooms in the middle of the night! We were soon joined by a friendly, but very loud (!) group of Australians.
Climbing up to Burgos Castle
Time for a hot chocolate
testing session to ward off the cold!
After settling in I took the opportunity to go back to the Romanesque church of San Martín to sit for a while and enjoy the ornate pillar capitals while taking a moment to be thankful for being able to get back to the Camino once more and praying that God would bless our walk.
Outside the Evolution Museum in Burgos
In the evening the four of us went for a non-descript pizza in a local bar where a very strange modern gothic horror movie was being shown (without sound – probably just as well) on the TV which seemed to involve various young women in different states of distress either staring up into the light beaming down through windows in Romanesque churches, which would then cause them to swoon into the arms of monks or else finding themselves wading helplessly into the quick sand infested tidal waters around Mont San Michel, beckoned in by a large dead tree sticking out of the water. Very strange indeed – though perhaps not as strange as the pizza I consumed; Frómista is definitely not the culinary capital of the Camino in my experience! However, it was good to be back and I was itching to get walking again!
Back to San Martin

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