Skip to main content

Cacabelos

Another hot day (at about 11 I saw a sign saying it was 24 degrees Celsius) and we have walked about 23km to Cacabelos.


We got up around quarter to seven when no one else was awake - maybe we are more used to Caminos when everyone is in more of a rush  to think this strange but honestly we just wanted to be off before it got too hot (here's to hoping that Galicia's micro climate kicks in after O Cerebrio - I don't want the famous rain as we have enough of that at home but a bit cooler would be good!).

We arrived in Ponferrado's outskirts and stopped to take a couple of photos. Seeing us an elderly gentleman stopped and gave us directions into town.

The Templar castle was as beautiful as ever so much so that we broke with tradition and went to a nearby bar with outside seating and had breakfast there - two fried eggs with toast and bacon. Very good!




As we walked we saw a lot of storks today who didn't care about the heat! We though did and so decided to stop at the municipal albergue here in Cacabelos and so walked all through town to get there only to find that it was closed! We've come to a private albergue instead



There was no danger of us breaking the speed lomit today!


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Camino Primitivo

The Camino Primitivo (or the Original Way) is reportedly the very first Camino Way to Santiago in the 9 th century when most of Spain was under the control of the Moors and it runs from near the city of Ovideo in Asturias as it starts in Villavicosa (which also lies on the Camino Norte so many people follow this Way from   Basque city of San Sebastian (Donosti in Basque) or in from the French border at Irun ( this route then hugs the Bay of Biscay passing through Guernica, Bilbao, Santander, Llanes before going under the Picos de Europa and then heads along the coast to Ovideo) before branching off onto the Primitivo which goes across the mountains and through the city of Lugo before joining the Frances at Melide. The route is 320km long. Image taken from https://viaalpina2013.wordpress.com/2013/04/14/camino-del-norte-camino-primitivo/

Symbols of the three main Christian Pilgrimages

The symbol of the Pilgrim to Santiago is the Scallop shell  of which many can be found on the coast of Galicia and it is actually a symbol of the Pilgrimage (and has become a symbol of other Christian Pilgrimages too) partly because you could find the shell easily there and so could go back home and show it off as proof that you had done the Pilgrimage. It has also been included in carvings in some Churches.

Camino Mascot

Those who have walked the Camino will probably have seen one or more of the Camino mascots along the Way but do you know their names? http://m.elcorreogallego.es/xacobeo/ecg/xubi-jubila-pelegrin-mascota-xacobea/idEdicion-2010-06-08/idNoticia-555962/