For once, it didn’t matter that my flight was delayed.ย It was actually a blessing that my 10:20 p.m. flight to Lisbon from Dulles International Airport on Friday, August 31 sat on the tarmac for nearly two hours due to thunderstorms and lightning. What was meant to be a 7:15 hour flight was supposed to deposit me in Lisbon at 10:35 a.m. on Saturday, September 1, meaning I would have to wait around Lisbon eleven hours for my overnight train to Hendaye, France.
Before boarding the flight, I met two ladies traveling to Lisbon, Porto and Barcelona.ย They said they’d send prayers along with me.ย Two other ladies with quite heavy backpacks were embarking on the 140-mile Portuguese route of the Camino. We wished each other Buen Camino! and boarded the plane to wait for take-off.
Onboard, passengers swarmed around sulkily, like a hive of sated yet edgy bees. Passengers were allowed to leave the plane if they took all their carry-on bags. When the luggage was finally loaded in the cargo hold once the storms passed, the flight crew rounded up the wayward passengers.
Finally airborne, I watched the 2018 Fred Rogers movie, Won’t You Be My Neighbor?ย Fred Rogers was creator, composer, producer, head writer, and host of the preschool television series Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood (1968โ2001). He talked about how there is something inside us that hasn’t been lost – childhood. On his show, he addressed children’s feelings, such as “I think I might be a mistake.”ย Or, “I’m not like anyone else.” Besides addressing children’s everyday emotions, he also addressed social issues of the times, such as divorce, war, assassinations and racial tensions. On one notable episode, Rogers soaked his feet alongside African-American Officer Franรงois Clemmons in a kiddie pool on a hot day, a subtle symbolic message of inclusion during a time when racial segregation in the United States was widespread.
As our country is in the same predicament today as it was in the 1960s, I promised myself to pray for the state of the world, and my country, as I walked the Camino.
I tried to sleep but when my efforts failed, I watched the in-flight map. At one point we were over St. John’s and Grand Bank, Newfoundland and Labrador in Canada.ย Later, at 4:27 a.m., the local time in Lisbon was 9:27 and we had 2:37 hours to go.ย The estimated arrival time was 12:04.ย Altitude 35,092 feet.ย Traveled 2,334 miles.ย The airplane icon onscreen hovered about midway over the Atlantic, northwest of the Azores.
Because we didn’t take off until close to midnight, I arrived in Lisbon at 12:06 p.m., narrowing the window of time from 11 to 9 hours before the next step of my journey.
From the airport, I took the metro three stops to Estacao Gare do Oriente in the Vasco da Gama area of the city. The station had a luggage storage area but I was stymied by the lockers; luckily an Italian couple showed me how to use them. It was miserably hot.ย Dressed in the long hiking pants and long-sleeve shirt that I’d worn overnight on the plane, I was sweaty and uncomfortable. At the Vasco da Gama Mall, I sat at a cafe and enjoyed a pastel de nata and a cold coffee. I thought the mall would offer some respite from the heat, but it didn’t seem to be air-conditioned, so I escaped to walk on a promenade along the sea.ย At a place called Sea Palace, I had Dim Sum, but that was just as miserable at it had no air-conditioning either. I sweated during my entire meal. I so wanted to stretch out somewhere and sleep, but that was impossible.ย It was a miserable nine hours waiting for the time to pass.
Finally, I grabbed my pack from the locker at Oriente and and boarded the overnight train to Hendaye at 9:34 p.m.

Estacao do Oriente
On the Trenhotel, I settled into a compartment on train #310, Car 13, Bed 31. I found it odd the arrangement of 1s & 3s in the various numbers, especially as I’ve always considered #13 my lucky number. I stretched out on the bottom bunk across from a chubby Spanish woman wearing a black & white striped blouse; she had barricaded herself into her bed with several large suitcases.ย At one point during the train ride, I tried to close the curtains since the lights from the passing stations kept waking me up, but she snapped at me and refused to allow it.
Above me was an 18-year-old German girl wearing a skimpy knit tank dress; she was traveling alone for the first time. An Austrian girl burst into our compartment in the middle of the night and climbed noisily to the top bunk above the Spanish woman.ย For a long time, the two girls chatted in German over our heads, “Ach so!” flying back and forth between them.ย The Spanish woman’s perpetual sighs wove through their conversation.ย As I lay there, fully dressed in my hiking clothes, sleep proved elusive.
The train trundled and rumbled and clanked, and through the curtains, rectangles of light glided and flickered across the compartment’s walls.ย I drifted in and out of sleep. The Spanish woman left the train in Madrid, taking her sighs with her.
I finally fell into a deep sleep, waking at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday morning. The German girl and I chatted.ย She wanted to study at university to be a history and geography teacher.ย She hadn’t had a great trip because she had problems with her Master Card not working.ย When she called her bank, they said something was wrong with the servers.ย She was running out of money.ย A guy in Barcelona followed her in his car one night; he was masturbating, which greatly upset her.ย She was heading to Paris to stay four days, after which she’d return home to Germany.
I ate a sweet bun I’d bought from the Oriente train station, but I had no coffee. It didn’t matter, I suppose, as I wasn’t all that hungry anyway.
I arrived in Hendaye, France at 11:33 a.m. on Sunday, September 2.ย After about an hour wait, I caught another 1-hour train from Hendaye to Bayonne.ย Out the window, I saw charming red-roof and whitewashed towns against a backdrop of sea.
I think I smelled pretty sour from all the sweating yesterday and no shower for two days.

Bayonne
In Bayonne, I waited with a throng of pilgrims for the next train to St-Jean-Pied-de-Port.ย When it finally arrived, people jammed onboard.ย It was so crowded, we could hardly move.ย Luckily an additional car was arranged and half the people moved to the other car, giving us a bit of breathing room.ย On the train, I had a long conversation with Ingrid from Minnesota.
We arrived in St-Jean-Pied-de-Port at 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, September 2. Pilgrims scattered to their albergues in the old town.ย I trudged up the main street in search of Beilari, and Ingrid went off to her albergue. It turned out that Ingrid and I would stay in Beilari on the night before we began our pilgrimage (our second night in St-Jean) and we’d walk together our first two days over the Pyrenees.ย I would meet her numerous times on the Camino, but eventually she would leave me behind, as most people did, because her pace was faster than mine.
We walked through the city gate, Porte St-Jacques, into the old town.

The city gate, Porte St-Jacques
I was quite tired and disoriented from my long and convoluted journey as I climbed up through the old cobbled streets to find my sweet spot for the night.

streets of St-Jean-Pied-de-Port
After I checked in at Beilari, I wandered a bit around the old town.ย As I wouldn’t begin walking until Tuesday morning, the 4th, I knew I’d be able to explore more fully the next day.

St-Jean-Pied-de-Port
At Beilari, I shared a room with Molly from Michigan, Erika from Sweden, and Ferri from Indonesia. At 7:30, we were invited to apertivo.ย We tossed an invisible ball to each other.ย When we “caught” it, we shared our names, nationalities, and a brief sentence about why we were doing the Camino.ย I said I wanted to learn to have faith that everything would turn out all right.
As Beilari doesn’t make a full meal on Sunday nights, they offered a free meal of vegetable soup and bread. On Monday night, we would enjoy a full meal. Two hearty Irish guys told our group they planned on walking the whole Camino in 26 days!
Molly and Ferri planned to walk all the way to Roncesvalles in one day, whereas I’d made a reservation in Orisson for my first night, meaning I’d get to Roncesvalles in two days.ย They said they were sending their backpacks ahead because of the long walk.ย I considered whether I should do the same because I was seriously afraid of not making it over the Pyrenees with my heavy pack and my bad knee.
It felt so good to get into a comfortable bed. Beilari turned lights out by 10:30, encouraging a peaceful night for all pilgrims.
**August 31-September 2, 2018*
**********************
โON JOURNEYโ INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about the journey itself for a recently visited specific destination. If you donโt have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments.
In this case, I wrote about my experience of the long journey just to get to the start of the Camino Frances in St-Jean-Pied-de-Port, France.
Include the link in the comments below by Tuesday, December 18 at 1:00 p.m. EST.ย When I write my post in response to this challenge on Wednesday, December 19, Iโll include your links in that post.
This will be an ongoing invitation, once on the third Wednesday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. ๐
I hope youโll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!
Oh, Iโve been waiting to read this for a long time! Youโve really taken me on your journey, with all its discomforts and encounters. Iโm awed by your determination to walk with a wonky knee and hope so much the pilgrimage gives you what you ask of it.
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Thanks so much, Meg. It was such a long and arduous journey just to get to the starting point! I’ll be writing about it very slowly, as I continue to reflect on it and organize my huge numbers of photos. I still am finishing up my road trip out west last May. ๐
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You just have to stop living!!!!
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I hope not!! ๐
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Oops. I didnโt mean die but just stop living expansively. And your answer to that will also be โI hope not!!โ
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Haha, I understood your meaning, Meg! And you’re right, I do hope not! ๐
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You should have followed on Facebook Meg! Lots of stories ๐๐ท๐
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Iโve just shed the blogosphere. Donโt tempt me with the facebookosphere! Hope allโs well in your changing world.
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You’ve only semi-shed it, I’m delighted to say. I love finding you here. ๐ And yes. Will email when I get my life back. ๐ธ๐
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What a journey and I totally admire you for achieving that arduous journey. You must be very proud of yourself as I certainly would be if I had completed it!!
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Thank you so much, Suzanne. It didn’t seem quite so overwhelming once I got into the routine of it. I do feel very proud of myself for completing it, but as I look back on it, it’s hard to believe I actually did it. ๐
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You did ๐
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Your detailed account is enthralling. The long day at the beginning of the journey sounds utterly tedious. The train trip sounds really intense. You must have been exhausted when you finally got to your hotel. I really like your writing style and look forward to reading more
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Thank you for your kind words, Suzanne. When I keep a good journal I can be detailed; when I don’t, I just grasp at straws! I was so exhausted by the journey just to get to the start. I felt like a zombie by the time I arrived. It was funny, I really had no idea where I was in Lisbon near the Oriente station, but when my husband and I were on our last day in Lisbon, we took the hop-on, hop-off bus and rode through that Vasco da Gama neighborhood. I said to him, Wow, I’ve come full circle!
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Getting disoriented while travelling happens to me all the time too. At present the memory of it and of travel exhaustion is enough to make me stay home (health and finances do play a part in that though ๐ )
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After our horrible trip back home from Lisbon on November 6-7, I know exactly how you feel. It’s hard to get motivated to travel again, but I’m sure I’ll do it anyway. Sorry about your health struggles right now. I hope you’re better soon.
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Fantastic! I have been looking forward to reading about your trip, and as Meg has said you really have taken us on your journey! I am most impressed by your determination to complete such a tough and exhausting journey – even the journey to St Jean sounds to have been tiring and uncomfortable! Well done you, and I’m looking forward to more
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Thanks so much, Sue. It was a long journey just to the start, and it definitely got better after that. The actual Camino itself was much less taxing than the journey to get there, although that was tough too (in a good way!).
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Good to know things got better, Cathy!
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Thanks, Sue. They most definitely did. ๐
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Woohoo!
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Hopefully you managed to get better sleep as your journey continued. I look forward to hearing about the rest of the adventure.
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I actually did sleep fairly well, once I got into the routine of it all. ๐
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Phew, I’m tired already and you haven’t even started walking. Your second last picture is very pretty.
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That journey was much more tiresome than the actual Camino! Thanks, Carol. ๐
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Ah, what a soldier you are! I would have given up at the end of that first awful journey with the German girls on top and the Spanish lady opposite. I can see your desire to walk the Camino is very strong, so I hope for your sake that the rest of the journey is less fraught and that you meet some pleasant fellow-travellers. It will be interesting to walk with you as your blogs come in. I’ve been in the area many times but never to do the walk, it’s not my thing, but I do admire those who do it for whatever reason. And now I’m wondering about your blisters and how you coped with them.
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Thanks so much, Mari. That journey was not fun, but at least once I got into the groove of walking, it turned out to be a fantastic experience. As for blisters, I only had one small one on my pinky toe and it really didn’t cause me many problems! I was lucky, but I also didn’t push it too hard. I took my time and kept my walks to 16-20km/day (10-12 miles). I think that helped. ๐
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Like Meg Iโve been looking forward to hearing about your pilgrimage. What a start you had, a real gritting teeth journey just to get to the start. I really love how you make me feel I am with you when you round out the details, the grumpy Spanish woman and chatty girls. Great reading. Now onto the walk.
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Thanks so much, Pauline. I’m glad my journey made you grit your teeth; it did mine too! The walk itself, once it got underway, was much better. ๐
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That mustโve been a relief
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I managed to read this from the Facebook link and loved it. Hugs darlin ๐ธ๐
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Thanks, Jo. Hugs to you too. ๐
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Thanks, Cathy, for this interesting first instalment of your “Camino posts”. I’m very much looking forward to reading more.
Happy Thanksgiving,
Pit
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Thanks so much, Pit, for dropping by and reading. It will be a long process writing about the Camino. ๐
By the way, I’ve been inspired by one of your earlier posts – about the solar eclipse and Sioux Falls – in planning a road trip to the Dakotas in the coming year. Thanks for the inspiration. What do you have in store for the coming year?
I hope you had a Happy Thanksgiving. ๐
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You’re welcome, Cathy. I know how long writing about trips can take. I’m only on day 14 of our RailTrailsRoadTrip in May/June. ๐ฆ And nothing at all yet about the Albuquerque balloon fiesta.
We did have a nice Thanksgiving [https://wp.me/p4uPk8-1BD].
I’m glad our trip tp the solar eclipse has inspired you. ๐ We ourselves would still like to go back to the Dakotas. Well, actually we didn’t do SD at all on that trip, and ND was too short. The Theodore Roosevelt NP up there is well worth visiting.
Our plans for next year? I’ll go to Germany in January, for some routine check-ups with my doctors there, and to visit some friends.Mary will stay here, as it would be a tad boring for her while I have frequent appointments. In March she’ll fly to Peru, with her cousin from Denver. I’m not that much into those organized trips. So I’ll stay here and look after our kitties. Together we’ll go to Palo Duro Canyon in July. That’s all we have finalized so far.
We’re still n the planning stages for a wek in Alaska in August, to celebrate our 10th anniversary, and we’d really like to go to Ireland four 4 weeks in May. But as I said, nothing’s final there yet. At the moment, planning is somewhat on the back burner, as we’re in the process of having our old place in Karnes County totally remodelled [https://wp.me/p4uPk8-1Bo]. That takes up a lot of our time, with travelling back and forth between Fredericksburg and Karnes City, an also with either online or instore selection of items such as tiles.
Enjoy your weekend,
Pit
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Oh, I’m so confused, Pit. I thought the place you went in Sioux Falls, South Dakota was where those beautiful waterfalls were. The Theodore Roosevelt National Park is in North Dakota, right? The Germany trip sounds like a necessary trip with friends thrown in for good measure. Mary’s trip sounds interesting; where will she go in Peru? The week in Alaska will be a grand celebration for 10 years! Congrats on that in advance. Ireland is also a place I’ve never been that I’d love to visit. So what will you do with your Karnes Co. place once it’s remodeled?
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Ooooops, and sorry! My mistake! Of course, Sioux Falls with the beautiful waterfalls is in South Dakota! The Theodore Roosevelt NP is in ND, yes. Among others, Mary will go to Machu Picchu and the upper Amazon River. We hope to be able to rent the house out once it’s remodelled.
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Nice! I’m glad I wasn’t mistaken. I put that place in Sioux Falls on my travel wish list after I read your post about it.
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I’m so glad my writing(s) could inspier you. That inspiration, though, definitely is mutual.
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Thanks, Pit. ๐
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๐
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Oh, Cathy, that sounds hellish! Iโd have been wanting to go home before I even got there – though the little town at the end is very pretty. Like everyone else, I am looking forward to reading more.
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Thanks, Anabel. That journey to get to the start was not fun, but I loved the adventure once it was underway. ๐
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Been waiting for this to start Cathy, and it has been well worth the wait. I love your way of writing about your travelling companions, what an annoying woman that Spaniard was! And I can imagine how knackered you would be by the time you collapsed into a proper bed. Lovely pretty town too. So now begins the actual pilgrimage. One step at a time…
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Thanks so much for reading, Jude, and for your encouragement. That Spanish lady was very annoying indeed. And I was totally wiped out by the time I arrived, so I was very happy to have a full day in St-Jean-Pied-de-Port before I embarked on the walk. ๐
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I can see you were inspired, Cathy, the writing is terrific. There are so many telling details here. And your photos! I don’t know how you could take such great photos with so little sleep, but you did. My hat’s off to you just for scheduling and getting through these first few days.
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Thanks so much, Lynn. I felt like a zombie for about two days, but then things evened out and I was on my way! ๐
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enjoying a coffee and at last I’m reading your narratives….also I loved the Estacao do Oriente….catching up! smiles hedy โบ๏ธ
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Thanks for coming along on my journey, Hedy. Oriente is a very cool train station, isn’t it? ๐
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I have somehow missed your posts since you returned. Although I followed along on Instagram, I’ve been looking forward to reading more on your blog and now here you are. ๐
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Thanks, Robin. I haven’t written much on the Camino itself since I returned but I’ll be increasing my posts as the new year progresses. The posts will be more in-depth than Instagram would allow. ๐ We did go over the scary bridge on Thanksgiving and I thought of you! ๐
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