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    • on returning home
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  • Contact

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  • Home
  • about ~ wander.essence ~
    • ~ the places i’ve been ~
    • ~ places i’ve been in the u.s.a. ~
  • Travel Destinations
    • America
      • Boston
      • Delaware
      • District of Columbia
        • Washington
      • Georgia
        • Atlanta
      • Maryland
      • New Jersey
        • Cape May
      • New York
        • Adirondacks
        • Buffalo
        • Niagara Falls
      • Pennsylvania
        • Pittsburgh
      • South Carolina
      • Tennessee
        • Nashville
      • Virginia
    • American Road Trips
      • Canyon & Cactus Road Trip
      • Florida Road Trip
        • Everglades
        • Fort Lauderdale
        • Florida Keys
        • Miami
        • St. Augustine
      • Four Corners Road Trip
        • Arizona
          • Monument Valley
          • Petrified Forest National Park
          • Sunset Crater National Monument
          • Walnut Canyon National Monument
          • Winslow
          • Wupatki National Monument
        • Colorado
          • Colorado National Monument
          • Colorado Towns
          • Great Sand Dunes National Park
          • Grand Junction
        • New Mexico
        • Utah
          • Arches National Park
          • Canyonlands
          • Navajo National Monument
          • Dead Horse Point State Park
          • Hovenweep National Monument
          • Moab
          • Valley of the Gods
          • Natural Bridges National Monument
      • Great Lakes Road Trip
        • Michigan
        • Minnesota
        • Wisconsin
      • Midwestern Triangle
        • Illinois
          • Carbondale
          • Murphysboro
        • Kentucky
          • Covington
          • Lexington
          • Louisville
        • Ohio
          • Cincinnati
      • Road Trip to Nowhere
        • Nebraska
        • North Dakota
        • South Dakota
      • Tex-New Mex Road Trip
        • Texas & New Mexico Road Trip
        • New Mexico
        • Texas
    • International Travel
      • Africa
        • african meanderings {& musings}
        • Egypt
          • Cairo
        • Ethiopia
        • Morocco
      • Asia
        • Cambodia
        • China
          • China Diaries
          • Guangxi Province
        • India
          • Rishikesh
          • Varanasi
        • Japan
          • Kyoto
        • Myanmar
        • Oman
          • a nomad in the land of nizwa
          • Nizwa
        • Singapore
        • South Korea
          • catbird in korea
        • Thailand
        • Turkey
          • Cappadocia
        • Vietnam
      • Central America
        • Costa Rica
        • El Salvador
        • Nicaragua
        • Panama
          • Bocas del Toro
          • Panama City
      • Europe
        • In Search of a Thousand Cafés
        • Croatia
          • Dalmatia
            • Istria
            • Dubrovnik
            • Plitvice Lakes National Park
            • Split
            • Zadar
            • Zagreb
        • Czech Republic
          • Český Krumlov
        • England
        • France
        • Greece
        • Hungary
          • Budapest
          • Esztergom
        • Iceland
        • Italy
          • Bergamo
          • Cinque Terre
          • The Dolomites
          • Florence
          • Rome
          • Tuscany
          • Venice
          • Verona
          • Via Francigena
        • Portugal
        • Spain
          • Camino de Santiago
            • packing list for el camino de santiago 2018
      • North America
        • Canada
          • The Maritimes
            • New Brunswick
            • Nova Scotia
            • Prince Edward Island
          • Ontario
        • Mexico
          • Guanajuato
          • Mexico City
            • Teotihuacán
          • Querétaro
          • San Miguel de Allende
      • South America
        • Colombia
        • Ecuador
          • Cuenca
          • Quito
    • how to make the most of a staycation
      • Coronavirus Coping
  • Imaginings
    • imaginings: the call to place
  • Travel Preparation
    • journeys: anticipation & preparation
  • Travel Creativity
    • on keeping a travel journal
    • on creating art from travels
      • Art Journaling
    • photography inspiration
      • Photography
    • writing prompts: prose
      • Prose
        • Fiction
        • Travel Essay
        • Travelogue
    • writing prompts: poetry
      • Poetry
  • On Journey
    • on journey: taking ourselves from here to there
  • Books & Movies
    • books | international a-z |
    • books & novels | u.s.a. |
    • books | history, spirituality, personal growth & lifestyle |
    • movies | international a-z |
    • movies | u.s.a. |
  • On Returning Home
    • on returning home
  • Annual recap
    • twenty-fifteen
    • twenty-eighteen
    • twenty-nineteen
    • twenty-twenty
    • twenty-twenty-one
    • twenty twenty-two
    • twenty twenty-three
    • twenty twenty-four
    • twenty twenty-five
  • Contact

wander.essence

wander.essence

Home from Morocco & Italy

Home sweet home!May 10, 2019
I'm home from Morocco & Italy. :-)

Italy trip

Traveling to Italy from MoroccoApril 23, 2019
On my way to Italy!

Leaving for Morocco

Casablanca, here I come!April 4, 2019
I'm on my way to Casablanca. :-)

Home from our Midwestern Triangle Road Trip

Driving home from Lexington, KYMarch 6, 2019
Home sweet home from the Midwest. :-)

Leaving for my Midwestern Triangle Road Trip

Driving to IndianaFebruary 24, 2019
Driving to Indiana.

Returning home from Portugal

Home sweet home from Spain & Portugal!November 6, 2018
Home sweet home from Spain & Portugal!

Leaving Spain for Portugal

A rendezvous in BragaOctober 26, 2018
Rendezvous in Braga, Portgual after walking the Camino de Santiago. :-)

Leaving to walk the Camino de Santiago

Heading to Spain for the CaminoAugust 31, 2018
I'm on my way to walk 790 km across northern Spain on the Camino de Santiago.

Home from my Four Corners Road Trip

Home Sweet Home from the Four CornersMay 25, 2018
Home Sweet Home from the Four Corners. :-)

My Four Corners Road Trip!

Hitting the roadMay 1, 2018
I'm hitting the road today for my Four Corners Road Trip: CO, UT, AZ, & NM!

Recent Posts

  • call to place, anticipation & preparation: guatemala & belize March 3, 2026
  • the february cocktail hour: witnessing wedding vows, a visit from our daughter & mike’s birthday March 1, 2026
  • the january cocktail hour: a belated nicaraguan christmas & a trip to costa rica’s central pacific coast February 3, 2026
  • bullet journals as a life repository: bits of mine from 2025 & 2026 January 4, 2026
  • twenty twenty-five: nicaragua {twice}, mexico & seven months in costa rica {with an excursion to panama} December 31, 2025
  • the december cocktail hour: mike’s surgery, a central highlands road trip & christmas in costa rica December 31, 2025
  • top ten books of 2025 December 28, 2025
  • the november cocktail hour: a trip to panama, a costa rican thanksgiving & a move to lake arenal condos December 1, 2025
  • panama: the caribbean archipelago of bocas del toro November 24, 2025
  • a trip to panama city: el cangrejo, casco viejo & the panama canal November 22, 2025
  • the october cocktail hour: a trip to virginia, a NO KINGS protest, two birthday celebrations, & a cattle auction October 31, 2025
  • the september cocktail hour: a nicoya peninsula getaway, a horseback ride to la piedra del indio waterfalls & a fall bingo card September 30, 2025
  • the august cocktail hour: local gatherings, la fortuna adventures, & a “desfile de caballistas”  September 1, 2025

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amarante, portugal: the village of love

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 May 14, 2019

After a lazy morning in our Airbnb apartment, we escaped Porto’s rainy day forecast by driving to the sleepy village of Amarante through mist-enshrouded, vineyard-covered hills and valleys. Though it remained gloomy through the day, the rain ended upon our arrival, giving us a chance to wander the town’s zigzagging lanes and to sample its iconic São Gonçalo cakes.

Amarante is a destination for lonely heart pilgrims hoping to sniff out true love.  It sits on a bend in the Rio Tâmega, which levels a winding watery path through an otherwise hilly landscape.  The willow-lined riverbanks are dominated by a striking church and monastery sitting dramatically at the end of the medieval Ponte de São Gonçalo.

We strolled through this charming hometown of São Gonçalo, a 13th century hermit considered to be Portugal’s St. Valentine, amidst grizzled local men smoking cigarettes outside balconied houses.  We dipped into a bakery for a treat of the phallus-shaped traditional São Gonçalo cakes.  Legend has it that older unmarried women offered these cakes to the man they desired in hopes of finding reciprocal love.

Of course we had to sample these provocative cakes in an effort to blend in with the locals and pilgrims. 🙂

We crossed the Rio Tâmega on the granite Ponte de São Gonçalo, a bridge completed in 1790 to replace the original 13th century bridge, which collapsed in a flood in 1763. We found letters spelling A M A R A N T E decorated in child-like drawings .  Switchback lanes carried us, with breathtaking effort, from the narrow valley floor to a sweeping view over the hills and the arcaded gallery of kings at Igreja de São Gonçalo.

Inside the lofty interior of the Igreja de São Gonçalo, we admired the gilded baroque altar, pulpits, and Gonçalo’s tomb. Here, the dead saint lends hope to pilgrims who are looking for a mate; it is said that if they touch the limestone statue above his tomb, their wish will be granted within a year.

After ambling around the austere cloisters of the church, we made our way down to the cobbled path along the south bank of the Rio Tâmega, admiring the watery reflections of homes and businesses, willow trees, the triple-spanned bridge, and the Casa da Calçada.

By the end of our visit, we grew hungry for lunch.  We stopped in at Bar dos Pauzinhos where I had a wonderful Francesinha, a Portuguese sandwich-bread with wet cured ham, linguiça, and fresh sausage-like chipolata, covered with melted cheese and hot thick tomato and beer sauce.  Every bite was heavenly. 🙂

After lunch, we hopped into our Clubman MINI Cooper and made our way back to Porto as the sun peeked out in the late afternoon.

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Amarante

pastel de nata in Amarante
pastel de nata in Amarante
St. Gonçalo cakes
St. Gonçalo cakes
me eating a St. Gonçalo cake
me eating a St. Gonçalo cake
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Amarante

Casa da Calçada is a 16th century palace rising above the Ponte de São Gonçalo that is now a boutique hotel.

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entrance to Casa da Calçada

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Casa da Calçada

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Amarante

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across the Ponte de São Gonçalo to Igreja de São Gonçalo

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the Rio Tâmega

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AMARANTE

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reflections along the Rio Tâmega

Ponte de São Gonçalo
Ponte de São Gonçalo
Ponte de São Gonçalo
Ponte de São Gonçalo
Casa da Calçada & reflection
Casa da Calçada & reflection

Interior and cloister of Igreja de São Gonçalo

Inside Igreja de São Gonçalo
Inside Igreja de São Gonçalo
Inside Igreja de São Gonçalo
Inside Igreja de São Gonçalo
cloister at Igreja de São Gonçalo
cloister at Igreja de São Gonçalo
cloister at Igreja de São Gonçalo
cloister at Igreja de São Gonçalo
cloister at Igreja de São Gonçalo
cloister at Igreja de São Gonçalo
inside Igreja de São Gonçalo
inside Igreja de São Gonçalo

Amarante south of the Rio Tâmega has winding narrow switchback lanes from which we found marvelous views. Above the Igreja de São Gonçalo’s Italian Renaissance side portal is an arcaded gallery with 17th-century statues of Dom João and other kings who ruled while the monastery was under construction: Sebastião, Henrique and Felipe I.

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arcaded gallery of kings at Igreja de São Gonçalo

The bell tower was added in the 18th century.

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bell tower of Igreja de São Gonçalo

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balcony extraordinaire

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Amarante south of the Rio Tâmega

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Amarante south of the Rio Tâmega

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Amarante south of the Rio Tâmega

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arcaded gallery of kings at Igreja de São Gonçalo

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Picking up our car and heading back to Porto

*Tuesday, October 30, 2018*

Steps: 14,940 (6.33 miles)

**********************

“PROSE” INVITATION: I invite you to write up to a post on your own blog about a recently visited particular destination (not journeys in general). Concentrate on any intention you set for your prose.  In this case, one of my intentions for my trip to Portugal was to pick five random verbs each day and use them in my travel essay: 1) sniff, 2) level, 3) smoke, 4) loan, 5) end. √

It doesn’t matter whether you write fiction or non-fiction for this invitation.  You can either set your own writing intentions, or use one of the prompts I’ve listed on this page: writing prompts: prose. (This page is a work in process.) You can also include photos, of course.

Include the link in the comments below by Monday, May 27 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this invitation on Tuesday, May 28, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired. 🙂

  • Maximcartography of cartographysis wrote a marvelous post intermingling his reading of José Saramago’s Blindness and the cod specialty bacalhau with a visit to Lisbon.
    • Blindness and Bacalhau in Lisbon

Thanks to all of you who wrote prosaic posts following intentions you set for yourself. 🙂

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  • Camino de Santiago
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{camino day 16} villamayor del río to villafranca montes de oca

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 May 12, 2019

I started my day at 6:30 a.m. by accidentally missing a 4.9 km stretch of the Camino. I stayed in a hotel last night, La Encantada in Quintanilla del Monte, that was 1 km off the Camino from the town of Villamayor del Río.  Another pilgrim staying there, Vicky, had a service to take her into town.  Assuming she meant Villamayor del Río, I asked if I could share her ride into town.  Suddenly, we were speeding through the town and left it before I knew what was happening. “Which town are you going to?” I asked, feeling a bit of panic. She said, “Belorado.”  It all happened in about 5 minutes.  I felt disappointed as I meant to walk the whole Camino, but I had no desire to backtrack at that hour of the morning in the dark.  So I found the Hotel Jacobeo in Belorado, ate a chocolate croissant, a hard boiled egg, café con leche and orange juice.  Then I replenished my cash, and was on my way in the dark. My right hip and the muscle along the inside of my knee were hurting, so I stopped to stretch a number of times.

Villamayor del Río to Belorado (4.9 km)

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Belorado

The historic town of Belorado, built in the steep valley of the río Verdeancho, has a population of about 2,100.  The town has castle ruins of Roman origins that point to the town’s defensive past straddling the old border of Castile.  As it was dark when I arrived, I didn’t see the castle ruins, the ancient cave dwellings that were once home to hermits, or the 14th century Church of Santa María.

The landscape was enshrouded in fog for almost the entire walk, so I attended to the haystacks, the wildflowers, and violet berries along the path.

Belorado to Tosantos (4.8 km)

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Belorado to Tosantos

I went through Tosantos (nothing there but its 60 residents), where I saw the chapel of the Virgen de la Peña (Our Lady of the Rock) clinging to a wall of rock.

Tosantos to Villambistia (2.0 km)

sunflowers
sunflowers
café inTosantos
café inTosantos
Casa de los Deseos
Casa de los Deseos
Peregrino Medieval
Peregrino Medieval

After a steep climb, I stopped in Villambistia (Pop. 50) at Casa de los Deseos for a mango juice, café con leche, and a bathroom break. I wasn’t really hungry as I’d had that big breakfast in Belorado, but the fog had gotten so thick, I felt like I was soaked.  I wanted to dry off.  I saw the adorable Québécois couple, Daniel and Rosalina.  She said she’d been miserable with indigestion but was feeling better now. There I met Stella from London who told me of an app called The Camino Companion, which I could never find.  I met Brian the Irishman who gave me grief for using the men’s room.

There was a pretty church, Iglesia San Roque, in Villambistia, but it was closed.

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Iglesia San Roque in Villambistia

I continued on a broad, smooth, rural track through fields of sunflowers, wildflowers and violet berries.

Villambistia to Espinosa del Camino (1.6 km)

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sunflowers

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colorful violet berries

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pretty greens

droopy sunflowers
droopy sunflowers
sunflowers
sunflowers
tiny yellows
tiny yellows
little stars
little stars
spider web
spider web

I walked through the small town of Espinosa del Camino (pop. 40) without stopping. The Albergue la Campana was a charming yellow place with a bicycle set up out front.

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Espinosa del Camino

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Espinosa del Camino

We climbed and climbed until we crested a hill and could see Villafranca de Montes de Oca down below.  There, I met Alex and Meghan from Ontario, Oregon.  Alex had hurt his knee carrying two bags (one for himself and one for Meghan who had gotten hurt going down into Zubiri).

Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca (3.6 km)

Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca
Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca
Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca
Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca
Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca
Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca

Meghan and I stopped to admire the 9th century ruins of Monasterio de San Félix de Oca, with its distinctive arch.  Here, the founder of Burgos, Count Diego Porcelos, was probably interred. Meghan worried about her 21-year-old daughter, who had fallen behind to hang out with an Italian guy.

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Monasterio de San Félix de Oca

The scene became more painterly as we approached the town and the sunlight melted over the hilly farmland and sunflower fields.

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Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca

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sunflower-lined path

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Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca

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sunflowers

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Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca

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field of dreams

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me with sunflowers

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Espinosa del Camino to Villafranca de Montes de Oca

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river Oca

Because of skipping ahead, I was in my hotel by 11 a.m.  What was supposed to be a 17.3 km walk turned into an 11.8 km walk.  I got an easy day without intending to!

My hotel, La Alpargateria, was the first one on the noisy main road in Villafranca de Montes de Oca; it was run by two lively sisters, Sylvia and Kristina. Their father ran the bar next door, El Pajaro, the only place to eat in town. I had a jambon sandwich and cerveza for lunch.

Villafranca de Montes de Oca historically welcomed pilgrims as early as the 9th century. This is one of several Villafrancas along the way that became home to Franks arriving as pilgrims and returning as artisans.  The village is located at the foot of the Montes de Oca, formerly a wild unpopulated area notorious for bandits that preyed on pilgrims.  The bandits often prayed for protection (after all, bandits needed protection too!) from the Saint himself in the safety of the 18th-century Church of Santiago or they’d find shelter in the 14th-century Hospital de San Antonio Abad, which had recently been restored. This handsome building is often referred to as the Queen’s Hospice.

Back in my room, I edited my photos and posted on Instagram and chatted for a while with Mike on Whatsapp.  Darina wrote and said she was having a fabulous time in Navarette with her friends and even went to the sea in San Sebastian.  She said she might be in Burgos on Monday, but I would be gone by then. She sent photos of a beautiful waterfall she went to: Monasterio de Piedra in Aragon. She said the energy of the place, the spirituality, was better 250 km to the east of Navarette: “I’m sooo blessed and happy.” She is such a joyous person.  Joy emanates from her.  I would love to find that kind of joy in my life and emanate it as she does.

I also heard from Claire and Matt and she found she got the job teaching English in Korea.  I felt so happy for their upcoming adventure.

As small as the town was, it had a truck stop at the entrance to town and it was a busy truck corridor.  The trucks barreled through town, paying little heed to the pilgrims on the skimpy sidewalks. If I hadn’t been paying attention when I walked out the door of the supermarket, I would have been flattened!  I couldn’t help but wonder how many pilgrims got killed in this town each year.

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La Alpargateria

Later, sitting under a shaded awning at El Pajaro, I met 27-year-old Anne from France.  She was very cute, with her cropped brown hair and nose ring.  She planned to camp in her sleeping bag that night because there were no rooms in town. She seemed happy to do so, and had done it before. She had been working in Paris doing animation for commercials, but she quit because she didn’t like it. She, like Darina, seemed full of joy.

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El Pajaro Restaurant/Bar in Montes de Oca

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Montes de Oca

Sadly, the Church of Santiago wasn’t open.

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Church of Santiago

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Church of Santiago

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Montes de Oca

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Montes de Oca

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Montes de Oca

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Montes de Oca

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Church of Santiago

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fountain of Church of Santiago

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Church of Santiago

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San Antón Abad

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Church of Santiago

In the evening, I shared a pilgrim’s meal with the two French Canadian guys from Quebec, Richard and Paul.  We had a lot of laughs. They said they’d had dinner with Vibeke, the Danish lady I’d met a couple nights earlier, in Belorado. They talked of their dismay over Trump’s appeal (they hated him), the French language vs. Québécois French, Paul’s past hikes on the Camino with his wife, and how they had a room reserved for the next day in Atapuerca. My pilgrim meal was green beans, trout with French fries, wine and pudding.  It was so much fun; I drank a lot of wine, but for some reason I hardly ever felt anything from Spanish wines.

Tomorrow, I’d have to get an early start to race for a bed at the albergue at Atapuerca, where beds were known to be scarce and no reservations were taken, except for private rooms, which were all booked. The Camino was really crowded and every day people were reserving ahead to be assured of a place to sleep.

I could hear the trucks roaring past my window all night.

**********

*Day 16: Wednesday, September 19, 2018*

*20,686 steps, or 8.77 miles: (Villamayor del Río) Belorado to Villafranca Montes de Oca (supposed to be 17.3 km, actually 12.0 km)*

You can find everything I’ve written so far on the Camino de Santiago here:

  • Camino de Santiago 2018

**************

On Sundays, I post about hikes or walks that I have taken in my travels; I may also post on other unrelated subjects. I will use these posts to participate in Jo’s Monday Walks or any other challenges that catch my fancy.

This post is in response to Jo’s Monday Walk: Back Lane Beauty.

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  • Adirondacks
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on returning home from the adirondacks

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 May 6, 2019

It was always depressing returning home from vacation. Our family trip to the Adirondacks in New York, from August 10-18, 2001, seemed an otherworldly escape. Many afternoons, I sat in a dark green Adirondack chair on the dock at Flower Lake, writing in my journal. We hiked in the mountains, canoed on the lakes and explored charming little towns. We relaxed, played Yahtzee and Chinese Checkers.  We soaked in a Jacuzzi.  It was my perfect dream life and I could have continued there through fall and winter.

In the months after we returned, I worked on creating a photo album of our Adirondacks holiday. I kept a detailed journal that I hoped to eventually use as inspiration for a short story.  It’s now been nearly 18 years since we went on this holiday, and I’ve never yet written a short story set in the Adirondacks. 😦

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photo album from the Adirondacks

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photo album from the Adirondacks

I planned to keep busy in the fall, which would be no problem when my classes started soon after our return home. If I focused only on work – writing, learning French, reading up on France and the Bahamas, planning our trip to France, and staying out of stores – I hoped I would be okay.

One night after our return from the Adirondacks, Mike and I watched Connie Chung’s interview with Congressman Gary Condit on Prime Time. At that time, I believed he was guilty of killing Chandra Levey, an intern at the Federal Bureau of Prisons who had disappeared on May 1, 2001; the married Congressman had been having an affair with her.  In the interview, he gave what seemed evasive, canned answers to every question. Apparently public opinion was with me 10-2 that he killed Chanda Levey.  He seemed so damned smug that a body would never be found and he would never be implicated. I hated to see people literally get away with murder – another O.J. Simpson, I was convinced.  Of course, I, along with the media and everyone else, would be proven wrong in 2009, when an illegal immigrant from El Salvador, Ingmar Guandique, would be arrested for Chandra Levey’s murder in Rock Creek Park.

At the end of August, I went to my first Creative Writing class with Laura Ellen Scott at George Mason University.  Though I’d been an English major at the College of William and Mary in the late 70s, I’d never taken creative writing classes; most of my classes were in literature and literary analysis.

Our first assignment in the class was to do a rewrite of the Edgar Allen Poe short story, “The Cask of Amontillado,” set in an unnamed Italian city at carnival time in an unspecified year. The Poe story was about a man taking fatal revenge on a friend who, he believed, had insulted him. Like several of Poe’s stories, and in keeping with the 19th-century fascination with the subject, the narrative revolved around a person being buried alive – in this case, by immurement, a form of imprisonment, usually for life, in which a person is placed within an enclosed space with no exits. Poe conveyed the story from the murderer’s perspective.

It was our class assignment to write a short story using Poe’s story as inspiration; mine was loosely based on the Gary Condit and Chandra Levey affair; in my story the main character was not a Congressman, but a spelunker.  My rewrite was called, “Slow Dance with Stalagmites.” I finished the first draft on September 6 and then did a lot of revision.  A while after we’d turned in the assignment, the teacher read my story aloud to the class as the best story she’d received.

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photo album from Adirondacks

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canoeing on Lake Saranac

Mike and I went to Cinema Arts to see the Italian film Bread & Tulips. It was so cute. I loved how the middle-aged woman, Rosalba (Licia Maglietta), escaped her less than devoted husband, Mimmo, and two sons and recreated herself in Venice, working in a florist shop and falling for an ex-con Icelandic waiter named Fernando who kept trying to hang himself. Of course, I myself loved to dream of escaping to Europe and living all alone, remaking myself anew. I would try to keep that dream alive when I got depressed.

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Adam, me and Alex

At the pool on the Sunday after we returned, I lay in the sun reading The Poisonwood Bible, by Barbara Kingsolver.  When I got home, I called my Mom, who had been in the hospital since Wednesday because her blood oxygen level was 69 when she went in for a checkup with her doctor. When I called, she’d just been released from the hospital. She’d been having trouble breathing since the hot weather and since she put some fingernail polish on before she went to Richmond with her friend Susan. Her normal blood oxygen level with her emphysema was 90, while normal for other people was 97. The nurses in the hospital were surprised that her doctor hadn’t put her on oxygen immediately upon seeing the 69 level. They kept her in for tests. When they sent her home, she had to stay on oxygen and she would likely have to be on it indefinitely. She was hoping she’d be better in the fall and be able to get off of it. At that time, she had to be on it 24 hours a day. She was hooked up to the machine on a 40-foot cord when she was in the house, and when she went out, she had to cart around the oxygen tank on a rolling cart. That meant Dad had to go with her to the grocery store, because she couldn’t push the shopping cart and pull her oxygen cart at the same time. That didn’t sound good at all.

Mom was upset that a waitress at a restaurant was very rude, presumably because she was carrying oxygen. I told her, “It may not have had anything to do with the oxygen. She may have just been plain rude!”

I told her I was starting class the next day and she said, “In what?” I said, “In writing… You just don’t want to remember what I’m taking, do you?” I didn’t know why she seemed threatened by my writing, unless she was afraid I was going write about her. She had never in my entire life encouraged my creativity, as she had with my sister and brother. It irked me; this was one of many reasons why we had such a strained relationship.

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my Adirondacks journal and photo album

I met my ex-husband Bill in Richmond to pick up our 17-year-old daughter Sarah, where in the car, I reiterated to her that it was up to her to prove to me that she was mature enough to go away to college. I said one visit to the clinic during school could cost her that privilege. She was often going to the school clinic for stomach issues related to anxiety. She needed to learn to deal with her anxieties. So, we started our visit on a sour note.

I took Sarah shopping and broke my promise to myself not to get her any new clothes, by letting her use money from her account to buy herself jeans at Gap and some sweaters at Wet Seal. I felt bad for her because Bill made her pay every cent she’d earned all summer for car repairs. It seemed to me he should have split some of those costs, since he was guilty of putting a lot of wear and tear on that car. I felt sorry for her having to provide almost totally for herself, with virtually no help from her dad and stepmother.

Several weeks later, that September of 2001, we would suffer the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center towers and the Pentagon, an event that would forever change our lives. The story of Gary Condit and Chandra Levey was soon forgotten. Sarah would finish her senior year of high school and go away to college the following fall, dropping out after a year (she graduated much later, after a long slow process, at age 32).  I lost my mother to emphysema several months later, in April 2002, and read the e.e. cummings poem, “if there are any heavens,” at her funeral; I’d discovered and fallen in love with this poem in the Adirondacks.  I continued taking creative writing classes and started my first novel, which I finished, though never published, several years later. Finally, a chain of events occurred after the 9/11 attacks that led to a 7-year separation from my husband in 2007, in which I partially realized my dream of remaking myself in a foreign country, much like Rosalba in Bread & Tulips. My husband and I would get back together in 2014, after I’d lived and worked abroad in South Korea and Oman, and before I’d go to work in China and Japan.

Somehow this family vacation marked an end to innocence.

*************************

“ON RETURNING HOME” INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about returning home from one particular destination or, alternately, from a long journey encompassing many stops.  How do you linger over your wanderings and create something from them?  How have you changed? Did the place live up to its hype, or was it disappointing? Feel free to address any aspect of your journey and how it influences you upon your return. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments.

For some ideas on this, you can check out the original post about this subject: on returning home.

Include the link in the comments below by Sunday, June 2 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Monday, June 3, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation on the first Monday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired. 🙂

I am traveling from April 4 to May 10. If I cannot respond to or add your links due to wi-fi problems or time constraints, please feel free to add your links in both this post and my next scheduled post. If I can’t read them when you post them, I will get to them as soon as I can. Thanks for your understanding! 🙂

Thanks to all of you who wrote returning home posts following intentions you set for yourself. 🙂

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  • Camino de Santiago
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{camino day 15} santo domingo de la calzada to villamayor del río

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 May 5, 2019

I left at 6:45 a.m. start and talked briefly with an Irishman named Brian who had always been fascinated by the Camino.  He did the last 100km in 2013, during which time he was going through marital difficulties.  A Canadian woman held his hand and that was what enticed him back to complete the entire route. In the interim, he and his wife of 28 years went through a divorce; she cheated on him and refused to go to counseling, but the divorce was amicable.  He said one good thing came out of his marriage: his kids.

While we were talking, we missed a fork in the path completely.  A Spanish man standing in the dark along the path yelled out and pointed us in the right direction.  Brian said that on the Camino angels appear out of nowhere to lead you.

There was some gossip along the Camino that Irishmen were hitting on women, spending nights with them and then disappearing; it was quite common apparently.  I have no idea if that was true or not, but it was part of the Camino lore.

It was a day of black-faced sunflowers bowing their forlorn faces to the elusive sun.  The path was flanked by ochre cornfields.

I had a nice chat with a man from Cologne, Germany who worked for Sprint. He said he thought Washington, D.C. was much nicer than New York; he used to live in New Jersey. Sadly, I had to excuse myself from that conversation for a nature call. 😦

I stopped at a cute cafe in Grañón for potato tortilla and café con leche and orange juice. We had to wait in line forever, but I hadn’t had breakfast so I had to wait.  I liked to eat breakfast after getting a few kilometers under my belt. At the café, Shireen from Australia said the same man who directed us at that earlier fork in the path had yelled to direct her as well.  We could only assume it must have been the man’s vocation to direct pilgrims at that confusing spot.

Santo Domingo de la Calzada to Grañón (6.7 km)

small ermita over the río Oja
small ermita over the río Oja
sunrise
sunrise
sunrise over Santo Domingo
sunrise over Santo Domingo
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Santo Domingo de la Calzada to Grañón

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thistles & sunflowers

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sunflowers

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sunflowers

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sunflowers

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sunflowers

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sunflowers

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approaching Grañón

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café in Grañón

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Grañón

After breakfast in Grañón, I stopped for a brief visit to Iglesia S. Juan Bautista (Church of St. John the Baptist), and, after saying my routine prayers, sat for a while trying to figure out how to work the flash on my new Canon.

Iglesia S. Juan Bautista in Grañón (pop. 290)

Iglesia S. Juan Bautista
Iglesia S. Juan Bautista
Iglesia S. Juan Bautista
Iglesia S. Juan Bautista
Iglesia S. Juan Bautista
Iglesia S. Juan Bautista
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Grañón

I left Grañón on a hilly patchwork of farmland.  It was a bit cloudy and cool, a nice relief from the heat as we left La Rioja region behind. Soon, we found a huge metal sign marking the start of the province of Burgos and therefore, of the largest autonomous region in Spain, Castilla y León. It is eleven times the size of the region of Madrid, but with a population of half that of Madrid. The ancient kingdom of Castile is named for its many castles, which sought to protect the kingdom. Fernando I established Castile in 1035, and El Cid turned the tide against the Moors from his base in Burgos in the 1090s.  Castile was united with León two hundred years after it was founded under Fernando III.

This area is home to the Meseta, the flat plateau region that tests the mettle of many pilgrims. We weren’t to the Meseta yet, so we would have some time to prepare. Cereal crops abound here, mainly wheat and oats, with some sheep and goats. We saw fields of sunflowers in both areas today.  We entered the town of Redecilla del Camino, where I stopped for a mango juice. Sadly the Nuestra Señora de la Calle (Our Lady of the Street) church was closed and I had to move on.

Grañón to Redecilla del Camino (3.8 km) (cross into Castilla y León)

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Grañón to Redecilla del Camino

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Grañón to Redecilla del Camino

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Grañón to Redecilla del Camino

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Grañón to Redecilla del Camino

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looking back at Grañón

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Junta de Castilla y León

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Grañón to Redecilla del Camino

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Grañón to Redecilla del Camino

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Grañón to Redecilla del Camino

Redecilla del Camino, with its population of 150, has the 14th century church dedicated to Nuestra Señora de la Calle, or Our Lady of the Street.

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Redecilla del Camino

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Nuestra Señora de la Calle (Our Lady of the Street)

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Nuestra Señora de la Calle (Our Lady of the Street)

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door in Redecilla del Camino

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Nuestra Señora de la Calle (Our Lady of the Street)

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Redecilla del Camino

The sun came out and we continued on, but at least there was a slight breeze.  I was so tired of having the pilgrim stink.  This seemed widespread; it came from sweating all day and then hand washing your clothes such that they never seem to get fully clean.

Redecilla del Camino to Castildelgado (1.7 km)

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sunflowers from Redecilla del Camino to Castildelgado

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sunflower heaven

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sunflowers

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sunflowers

Redecilla del Camino to Castildelgado
Redecilla del Camino to Castildelgado
Redecilla del Camino to Castildelgado
Redecilla del Camino to Castildelgado

We passed two more towns, Castildelgado (pop. 80) and Viloria de la Rioja (pop. 70); neither had much happening.

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approaching Castildelgado

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Castildelgado

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Castildelgado

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Castildelgado

Viloria de la Rioja is a quaint peaceful village that was the birthplace of Saint Dominic, the famous illiterate son of this village who did so much to help the pilgrims along the way.

Castildelgado to Viloria de la Rioja (1.9 km)

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A Santiago 576 km

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buildings of hay from Castildelgado to Viloria de la Rioja

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Castildelgado to Viloria de la Rioja

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approaching Viloria de la Rioja

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Viloria de la Rioja

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Viloria de la Rioja

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Viloria de la Rioja

Viloria de la Rioja to Villamayor del Río (3.4 km)

Viloria de la Rioja to Villamayor del Río
Viloria de la Rioja to Villamayor del Río
Viloria de la Rioja to Villamayor del Río
Viloria de la Rioja to Villamayor del Río
Viloria de la Rioja to Villamayor del Río
Viloria de la Rioja to Villamayor del Río
Viloria de la Rioja to Villamayor del Río
Viloria de la Rioja to Villamayor del Río

I booked a hotel for the night near Villamayor del Rio; I had to walk 1 km off the Camino to get to the very small town of Quintanilla del Monte.  I would have to walk back to the Camino in the morning.  At this point, I had 547.9 km, or 340.3 miles, to go to Santiago.

I checked in at La Aldea Encantada, run by Anna, who could speak some English, and her mother Anna, who could not. I arrived well before my backpack today, and it was frustrating asking the mother to call Jacotrans because I couldn’t communicate what I wanted. Finally the backpack arrived without her intervention. The mother made me a snack of Manchego cheese, bread, and cerveza. She also did my laundry for 6€.

I ate dinner with Vicky, the only other pilgrim staying at this out-of-the-way hotel. She was having a service transport her bags and book all her reservations ahead.  She was an emergency room doctor who had just gone part time.  She shared that her daughter had gone to rehab because she was drinking too much.  The daughter is now finishing her Master’s in Public Health and is interested in Permaculture and feeding people properly to cut back on the epidemic of diabetes and to help them lead healthy lives. I was happy to hear how the daughter had gotten her life together; this gave me hope.

Vicky seemed to have little sense of humor, and it was strange how I felt humorless in her company.  It is so strange how people affect my own behavior; I love people with a sense of humor because I feel like a funny part of me comes out.  I feel depressed and too serious around people that don’t have a sense of humor. She was nice, but difficult to connect with. She told me it would probably be okay to catch a ride into town with her the next morning at 6:30 a.m.

Villamayor del Río to Quintanilla del Monte to my pension, La Encantada (+1 km off the path)

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Quintanilla del Monte

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Quintanilla del Monte

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Quintanilla del Monte

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Quintanilla del Monte

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La Encantada

inside La Encantada
inside La Encantada
inside La Encantada
inside La Encantada
inside La Encantada
inside La Encantada
inside La Encantada
inside La Encantada
inside La Encantada
inside La Encantada

Using a sheet of paper showing all the stops along the Camino, one that I’d been given by the Tourist Information in St-Jean-Pied-de-Port, I spent the evening plotting out the rest of my Camino by distances I wanted to walk each day.  I marked the distances keeping a general rule of 16-20 km (~10-12 miles) each day.  I figured out if I spent two nights in Burgos, I could finish in Santiago by October 20.  Then I would have time to walk to Finisterre if I wanted, although I would probably take a bus because I wanted to go to Muxia too before meeting my husband in Braga.

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plotting out my Camino and my pilgrim credenciale

*Day 15: Tuesday, September 18, 2018*

*28,216 steps, or 11.96 miles: Santo Domingo de la Calzada to Villamayor del Río (18.1 km)*

You can find everything I’ve written so far on the Camino de Santiago here:

  • Camino de Santiago 2018

**************

On Sundays, I post about hikes or walks that I have taken in my travels; I may also post on other unrelated subjects. I will use these posts to participate in Jo’s Monday Walks or any other challenges that catch my fancy.

This post is in response to Jo’s Monday Walk.

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  • America
  • Poetry
  • Travel

poetic journeys: yorktown

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 May 3, 2019

YORKTOWN

I’ve returned to my hometown. Chlorine dries in my throat,
my lips chap and crack, the neighborhood pool sits emptied.

My spent days scatter like parched leaves in the grass
that sprouts wildly between the chain links. I think I can settle

into my old self, ride my bicycle along the alfalfa paths,
sing along with Donovan, Wear your love like heaven.

I try my childhood on for size, sitting on a summer
dock, dangling chicken wings on strings for crabs,

swimming across the creek to the sandy beach,
among stinging nettles sighing with nostalgia.

I linger over the sugar-footed cat buried in the field,
my German shepherd pup broken in the wheelbarrow,

under a blanket. I hear Tut leashed furiously to the clothesline.
I’m the movement and sadness on the swing by the pool,

for hundreds of hours after heartbreak, my coat
pulled tight around me, a knit cap on my head,

tears freezing on my cheeks. Around me, January sprouts
in gnarled trees, the baseball field hard underfoot. At home,

I taste tuna fish and olives, jiggle the Yahtzee dice in my palm,
smell the jumble of lipstick-stained filters in my mother’s ashtrays.

When I walk home from the bus stop, I see her face peer
from the folds of the dining room draperies, then vanish.

It isn’t long before everyone knows that she walked in front
of a neighbor’s Volkswagen bus. She wasn’t hurt, but – still.

I walk stoically through the days and pretend that nothing happened,
because the last thing I want is to be different. There are mornings

when I put on the crinoline dress, lace socks, patent leather shoes, and
stories bloom in my head while the house crumples around my feet.

*November 20, 2001*

flowers in Marlbank
flowers in Marlbank
Marlbank
Marlbank
butterfly in Marlbank
butterfly in Marlbank
Marlbank pool
Marlbank pool
swings at the pool
swings at the pool
York River historic boats
York River historic boats
Yorktown Monument
Yorktown Monument
George P. Coleman Memorial Bridge
George P. Coleman Memorial Bridge
York River and George P. Coleman Memorial Bridge
York River and George P. Coleman Memorial Bridge
historic Yorktown
historic Yorktown
Cornwallis Cave
Cornwallis Cave
Revolutionary War mural in Yorktown
Revolutionary War mural in Yorktown

*************************

“POETRY” Invitation:  I invite you to write a poem of any poetic form on your own blog about a particular travel destination.  Or you can write about travel in general. Concentrate on any intention you set for your poetry.

In this case, I wrote about what it was like to travel back to my hometown in Yorktown, Virginia.

You can either set your own poetic intentions, or use one of the prompts I’ve listed on this page: writing prompts: poetry.  (This page is a work in process).  You can also include photos, of course.

Include the link in the comments below by Thursday, June 6 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Friday, June 7, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation, on the first Friday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired. 🙂

I am traveling from April 4 to May 10. If I cannot respond to or add your links due to wi-fi problems or time constraints, please feel free to add your links in both this post and my next scheduled post. If I can’t read them when you post them, I will get to them as soon as I can. Thanks for your understanding! 🙂

Thanks to all of you who wrote poetic posts following intentions you set for yourself. 🙂

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  • American Road Trips
  • Colorado
  • Four Corners Road Trip

mesa verde overlooks

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 May 2, 2019

After driving from Telluride on the San Juan Skyway Scenic Byway, I arrived at the Mesa Verde National Park Visitor Center close to noon.  The park was created in 1906 to preserve the archeological heritage of the Ancestral Pueblo people, who made their home here for over 700 years, from 550 to 1300, both atop the mesas and in the cliff dwellings below. The park includes over 4,500 archeological sites; only 600 are cliff dwellings, according to a brochure from the National Park Service.

Mesa Verde Visitor Center
Mesa Verde Visitor Center
Mesa Verde Visitor Center
Mesa Verde Visitor Center
Mesa Verde Visitor Center
Mesa Verde Visitor Center
View of the road up to Mancos Overlook
View of the road up to Mancos Overlook

The first Spanish explorers called this area Mesa Verde, or “green table,” for the lush mountain shrublands and pinyon-juniper forests.  Geologically speaking, the area is not actually a mesa; it is a cuesta, which means it is tilted rather than flat.  It dips toward the south at about a 7% grade.  This slight tilt toward the sun created warmer conditions for growing corn and other crops.  The growing season for the Ancestral Puebloans at Mesa Verde was up to 20 days longer than in the surrounding valleys.

I drove up switchbacks to Mancos Overlook, where I had a great panoramic view of the Mancos Valley.  The town of Mancos historically served as the “Gateway to Mesa Verde.”

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Mancos Overlook

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Mancos Overlook

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Mancos Overlook

Further along, I arrived at the cold and blustery Montezuma Valley Overlook, where there is a short trail along The Knife Edge. The elevation is 8,290 feet (2,527 m).

Montezuma Valley, below the overlook, and Mesa Verde were once part of the Ancestral Puebloan homeland.  Archeologists estimate that as many as 35,000 people lived in this region during the 1200s. At the start of the 21st century, Montezuma Valley had a population of only about 24,000 people.

In 1914, as tourists clamored to access Mesa Verde, a narrow dirt road was completed into the park.  The few cars first entering the park, including Studebakers and Fords, made the journey to what is now the Park Headquarters in three hours. “Knife Edge” was an apt description for this precarious access into Mesa Verde.

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Montezuma Valley Overlook

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Montezuma Valley Overlook and The Knife Edge

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Montezuma Valley Overlook and The Knife Edge

Further along, I got out of the car at Fire Lookout, where I walked through a scarred landscape that was slowly rejuvenating. Wildfire has an important ecological influence on Mesa Verde’s vegetation growth, change, and renewal. Historically, over 95% of all recorded wildfires within the park have been started by lightning, with only 5% caused by humans. Seventy percent of the park has been burned by wildfires since the park was established in 1906.

Each summer monsoon season often starts with “dry” lightning. Because the lower atmosphere and ground are so dry at the beginning of some monsoon seasons, little to no rain reaches the ground. However, lightning does. Dry lightning, combined with drought conditions has sparked all of the recent large wildfires throughout the park.

At Fire Lookout, there was an actual fire lookout manned by a ranger.

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Fire Lookout

At Park Point Overlook, I took a short gentle trail to Park Point, the highest point in Mesa Verde National Park at 8,572 feet (2,613 meters) above sea level. I could see north to the valley below and to the Abajo Mountains and Manti-LaSal Mountains, as well as south to the ridges and canyons throughout Mesa Verde: Moccasin Canyon, School Section Canyon, Soda Canyon, and Prather Canyon.  On a clear day, four states are visible, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah.

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Park Point Overlook

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Park Point Overlook

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Park Point Overlook

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Park Point Overlook

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Park Point Overlook

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Park Point Overlook

I made another stop at Geologic Overlook before proceeding to Wetherill Mesa. A sign at the overlook informs visitors about water on Mesa Verde.  Moisture, in the form of rainfall or snowmelt, percolates through porous sandstone layers until it reaches a dense, impermeable layer of shale.  Prevented from percolating farther downward, the water is forced to the rock surface resulting in a seep spring in the canyon walls. These springs provided a ready source of fresh water to inhabitants.

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Geologic Overlook

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Geologic Overlook

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Geologic Overlook

The park road splits at the Far View Area, into fingerling roads to Chapin Mesa and Wetherill Mesa. I took the Wetherill Mesa road because the next morning I would go on a tour of Chapin Mesa.

The twelve-mile road on Wetherill Mesa is only open from May through September.

The first overlook on Wetherill Mesa is Windows to the Past. About nine hundred years ago, the Ancestral Puebloans lived in a cooperative society – trading, communicating, forming friendships, and nurturing their families.  More people lived in this valley in the 12th century than live in the valley now.

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Windows to the Past

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Yucca

From Shiprock View, it was supposedly possible to see Shiprock, located on the Navajo Reservation, but I didn’t see it on this day.  Red Canyon Tower Overlook Tower showed a round tower across Rock Canyon which is on the Ute Mountain Ute Indian Reservation.

I walked the Step House Trail at the end of Wetherill Mesa, which I’ll write about in another post.

Far View Lodge is the incredibly nice lodge on the park property.  This is where I stayed the night, checking into room 109 at around 4:30.  I made a dinner reservation for 8:15 and then bought two Mesa Verde mugs and a pair of copper earrings at the Far View Terrace shop.

Far View Lodge
Far View Lodge
view from my room at Far View Lodge
view from my room at Far View Lodge

Since I had plenty of time before dinner, I drove to the Chapin Mesa Archeological Museum, with its amazing dioramas.

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Early Habitation in North America (10,000-15,000 years ago)

America’s first inhabitants were hunters and gatherers.  Archeologists found 19 fluted spear points among the bones of 30 bison at this site near Folsom, New Mexico.  This big game hunt took place about 10,000 years ago.

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The Modified Basketmaker Period (1300 years ago)

Between A.D. 550 and 750, the Pueblo people began living in the area now known as Mesa Verde National Park.  Archeologists use the term “Modified Basketmaker,” to describe the culture of these people. These descendants of the earlier Basketmakers were more dependent on agriculture, abandoning their nomadic lifestyle.

The people began building permanent semi-subterranean houses, known as pithouses, in the alcoves as well as on the mesa top during this period.

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The Developmental Pueblo Period (1200 years ago)

The period from A.D. 750 to 1100 witnessed the development of the true pueblo, or village, architecture similar to styles existing in the Southwest today.  During this “Developmental Pueblo Period” pottery-making flourished, new techniques of farming emerged, and trade became significant.

Pueblo people built this village about A.D. 850, when architecture was in an experimental stage. Water was obtained from springs and seeps at the heads of canyons and draws.  Reservoirs were built to catch run-off from rain and snow. Fields of squash, beans and corn dotted the region. Although baskets remained common, pottery was the dominant craft.

Leaving the museum, I walked down as far as I could to the Spruce Tree House overlook, which was sadly closed because of rock falls.

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Spruce Tree House overlook

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Spruce Tree House overlook

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Spruce Tree House overlook

I drove the Mesa Top Loop on Chapin Mesa but I didn’t stop everywhere because I knew some stops would be on my Aramak tour the following morning.  I also wanted to get back to my room so I could enjoy a beer on my balcony before dinner.

I stopped at the Navajo Canyon and Sun Point Views, as well as the Square Tower House, for glimpses into the canyons.  As much as I peered out at the canyons, I could never find the actual Square Tower House.

At Sun Point View, I could see both the mesa tops and the alcove dwellings. Although the Puebloans used the cliff alcoves throughout the entire time they lived in Mesa Verde, the cliff dwellings themselves were not built until the final 75-100 years of occupation. For over 600 years, these people lived primarily on the mesa tops.

Overlook
Overlook
Overlook
Overlook
Overlook
Overlook
Overlook
Overlook
Overlook
Overlook

I stopped briefly at Fire Temple, New Fire House, and Sun Temple.  Sun Temple has a D-shaped symmetry, with twin kivas, following a preconceived design that must have required a community-wide effort to build. The structure was never completed; there is no evidence of a roof or roof timbers. Apparently construction stopped when the Anasazi people began to leave the area. Though the structure appears ceremonial, its exact function remains a mystery.

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Sun Temple

I was glad I stopped at the Cliff Palace View at nearly 7:00 p.m. as the light was perfect for photos. I wouldn’t find this to be the case when I took the tour the next morning. Cliff Palace is the largest cliff dwelling in North America.  It is the crown jewel of Mesa Verde and an architectural masterpiece.

From the clifftop overlooks, the collection of rooms, plazas, and towers fits perfectly into the sweeping sandstone overhang that has largely protected it, abandoned and silent, since the 13th century. The construction of Cliff Palace was a major effort, taking place between 1190-1280. Its alcove is about 215 feet wide by 90 feet deep and 60 feet high.  It includes about 150 rooms, 75 constructed open areas, 21 kivas and 2 “kiva-like” structures. It was inhabited by an estimated 100-120 people.

It was too early in the season to take the Cliff Palace tour.  The tours would be offered the weekend after I left. I was able to take the Balcony House Tour, however, as I wrote about here.

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Cliff Palace View

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Cliff Palace View

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Cliff Palace View

The Far View Sites came before the cliff dwellings, when Ancestral Puebloans farmed the area; the community supported dozens of families. Starting around 800 A.D., they lived here for several centuries, farming the deep mesa-top soils, building their homes, and raising their families. It was one of the most densely populated regions of Mesa Verde. In the mid-1100s, there may have been at least 35 occupied villages and surrounding farm and garden plots within a half-mile-square-area.

Far View Sites
Far View Sites
Far View Sites
Far View Sites
Far View Sites
Far View Sites
Far View Sites
Far View Sites
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Far View Sites

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Far View Sites

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Far View Sites

I returned to the Far View Lodge and bought a Coors Light, took it to my room, and sipped it on the balcony while I scanned the day’s photos on my camera and watched the sinking sun.

At my 8:15 dinner reservation, I was seated at a window table in the Metate Rooom where I could enjoy the final dip of the sun below the horizon.  My meal of Ancient Grain “Risotto” – asparagus, roasted mushrooms, wilted chard, oven dried tomatoes, and herb Parmesan breadcrumbs – was accompanied by fresh bread and tomato basil soup.  All delicious!

And I got my sticker and cancellation for my first day at Mesa Verde in my National Park Passport.

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National Park Passport & cancellation stamp for 5/20/18

*Sunday, May 20, 2018*

*Steps: 14,873 (6.3 miles)

*********************

“PHOTOGRAPHY” INVITATION:  I invite you to create a photography intention and then create a blog post for a place you have visited. Alternately, you can post a thematic post about a place, photos of whatever you discovered that set your heart afire. You can also do a thematic post of something you have found throughout all your travels: churches, doors, people reading, people hiking, mountains, patterns, all black & white, whatever!

You probably have your own ideas about this, but in case you’d like some ideas, you can visit my page: photography inspiration.

I challenge you to post no more than 20-25 photos and to write less than 1,500 words about any travel-related photography intention you set for yourself. Include the link in the comments below by Wednesday, May 15 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Thursday, May 16, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation, every first and third (& 5th, if there is one) Thursday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired!

I am traveling from April 4 to May 10. If I cannot respond to or add your links due to wi-fi problems or time constraints, please feel free to add your links in both this post and my next scheduled post. If I can’t read them when you post them, I will get to them as soon as I can. Thanks for your understanding! 🙂

Thanks to all of you who shared posts on the “photography” invitation. 🙂

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  • Azofra
  • Camino de Santiago
  • Hikes & Walks

{camino day 14} azofra to santo domingo de la calzada & ruminations {week two}

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 April 28, 2019

I was up by 6:00 a.m. eating a breakfast of a banana, bread, pâté, and orange juice I’d bought the previous night at a market in Azofra. I left by 6:45 in the dark with a headlamp.  My 71-year-old Japanese roommate Keiko, from Sapporo, wanted to follow me as she didn’t feel comfortable walking in the dark alone. I feared I was getting us lost as there seemed a lack of waymarkers.  Keiko was concerned until we finally saw the markers and knew we were on the right path.  I kept stopping for photos, as I was prone to do, especially as the sun came up and cast a soft light over the landscape. It was so lovely and cool walking before sunrise in the early morning hours.

We walked 8.1 km through rolling farmland to Cirueña. The path was lined with grapevines, cattails, wildflowers and spiky weeds.  I kept stopping for photos and told Keiko to feel free to go ahead. At some point along the way, she left me behind. I felt relieved because although she was a kind and gentle soul, I didn’t like walking at someone else’s pace.  Besides communication with her was very difficult as I didn’t know Japanese and she knew only a smattering of English. She was anxious to get to a hospital at Santo Domingo de la Calzada to see about the rash she’d contracted a week before.

Azofra to Cirueña (with Opción for detour) (8.1 km)

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Keiko

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me on the way from Azofra to Cirueña

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vineyards Azofra to Cirueña

Spanish weeds
Spanish weeds
looking back at Azofra
looking back at Azofra
wildflowers and weeds
wildflowers and weeds
copse of trees
copse of trees
cattails
cattails
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bicyclists from Azofra to Cirueña

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wildflowers

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farmland

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haystacks

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long shadow

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Azofra to Cirueña

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vineyards on the way from Azofra to Cirueña

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Vineyards

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catching up with Ray from Australia

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Azofra to Cirueña

I converged with Aussies Tony and Ray as we entered the soulless modern town of Cirueña.  I stood within an iron carved-out sculpture of a pilgrim, and Tony took my picture.  I returned the favor for him.  The three of us stopped at the Rioja Alta Golf Club restaurant to get café on leche and a chocolate croissant; we sat outside on the patio overlooking the golf course.  I plugged my phone into an outlet inside the bar to charge.  When it was time to leave, Tony pulled the phone out so I wouldn’t forget it, and he accidentally left the converter in the socket.  I didn’t notice until I arrived at my albergue ahead of my bag.

Cirueña seemed like a ghost town, with a maze of housing blocks and barely a soul in sight.

Cirueña (Opción) to Cirueña (where the detour rejoined the Camino) (1.3 km)

me entering Cirueña
me entering Cirueña
shell in Cirueña
shell in Cirueña

After Cirueña, the path continued through rolling farmland and a field of greens with water sprinklers tossing arcs of water over the path and passing pilgrims.  It was refreshing to get a bit of a soak. It was slightly cooler today; as it was a short walk, 15km, or 9.25 miles, we arrived in Santo Domingo de la Calzada, a town of 6,600 people, by 11:30.

Cirueña to Santo Domingo de la Calzada (5.8 km)

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Camino marker leaving Cirueña

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Cirueña to Santo Domingo de la Calzada

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Cirueña to Santo Domingo de la Calzada

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Cirueña to Santo Domingo de la Calzada

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Cirueña to Santo Domingo de la Calzada

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Cirueña to Santo Domingo de la Calzada

Santo Domingo de la Calzada has always been linked to the Pilgrimage of St. James.  It takes its name from Saint Dominic, born as Domingo García in 1019 in the humble town of Viloria de Rioja.  When the San Millán and Valvanera monasteries rebuffed the illiterate young man’s desire to become a monk, he became a hermit in the forests where the town now stands. From his home, he saw how difficult it was for the pilgrims and he began to help them by building a bridge to cross the Oja River, a hospital where pilgrims could seek refuge (now the Parador de Santo Domingo), roads connecting Nájera and Redecilla del Camino (Burgos), and a little church, which sadly no longer exists, but eventually evolved into the Cathedral.  His followers maintained the village which later took his name and they continued his work, creating a confraternity which works with pilgrims today.

The albergue, Casa de la Cofradía del Santo, was huge and well-organized.  It held 220 beds at 7 euros/night, although wi-fi was nonexistent. On the bottom bunk adjacent to mine, I met Vibeke, a lively and hilarious lady from Denmark.  I told her, as I told every Danish person I met, that I was a big fan of Danish TV series: Borgen, Rita, and Dicte.

We had a good laugh joking about our BUFFs, and how some women look so stylish in them but we couldn’t seem to pull off the look. I was attracted to them because they were a colorful and lightweight addition to my Camino wardrobe, but I could only wear them in the cool mornings around my neck.  I modeled mine as a headband on my rather large head; the look on Vibeke’s face confirmed that it was not a good look on me.  Vibeke went on to tell how she was wearing one as a headband and was walking along, shaking her head, thinking she looked like Julia Roberts. Then she caught a glimpse of herself in a shop window and shrieked with horror! She was hilarious and added such a light touch to my Camino.

Vibeke’s feet were hurting her horribly and she had stayed an extra night so she could go to the local hospital.  She had tried to keep up with an Irishman she’d met early on and had pushed herself too hard.  However, she would leave me in the dust the next day, and I’d never see her again.

Knowing the buff wasn’t a good look on me didn’t stop me from buying another one with a cool pattern at a sporting goods store in town. I also bought a t-shirt and some laundry soap, spending 49.40€.

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Casa de la Cofradía del Santo

bunks at Casa de la Cofradía del Santo
bunks at Casa de la Cofradía del Santo
courtyard at Casa de la Cofradía del Santo
courtyard at Casa de la Cofradía del Santo
pilgrim laundry at Casa de la Cofradía del Santo
pilgrim laundry at Casa de la Cofradía del Santo
view over the wall from Casa de la Cofradía del Santo
view over the wall from Casa de la Cofradía del Santo

After my backpack was finally delivered, I showered and did laundry and went to visit the Cathedral of Santo Domingo and the Museum for 3€.

Construction on the Cathedral of Santo Domingo began in 1158.  An independent tower was added to the Cathedral in the 18th century. The interior houses the tomb of Santo Domingo, the chapel of La Magdalena and a fine altarpiece.

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Cathedral of Santo Domingo

Interior of the Cathedral of Santo Domingo and museum

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interior of Cathedral of Santo Domingo

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The Virgin

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interior of Cathedral of Santo Domingo

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interior of Cathedral of Santo Domingo

The Renaissance altarpiece at the Cathedral was built by Damián Forment from 1537-1540 from walnut and pine.  The lower part of the piece is made from alabaster.  It is devoted to El Salvador and the Assumption; their sculptures are in the middle of the altarpiece. The altarpiece includes mythology that is now forbidden in Christian art such as sirens, centaurs, newts, etc. Later, another artist added Grotesques and Moorish designs, based on images and designs found on embroidered Arabic cloths.

altarpiece of Cathedral of Santo Domingo
altarpiece of Cathedral of Santo Domingo
altarpiece of Cathedral of Santo Domingo
altarpiece of Cathedral of Santo Domingo

The Cathedral interior includes Santo Domingo’s Mausoleum.  Santo Domingo is seen on his deathbed crossing his hands on his chest with six angels around him. It was restored in 2009. The tombstone is supported by an alabaster table. The saint’s life and miracles are represented in twelve different scenes.

tombs
tombs
interior of Cathedral of Santo Domingo
interior of Cathedral of Santo Domingo
interior of Cathedral of Santo Domingo
interior of Cathedral of Santo Domingo
choir
choir
ceiling
ceiling
tomb in Cathedral of Santo Domingo
tomb in Cathedral of Santo Domingo
Christ on the cross at Cathedral of Santo Domingo
Christ on the cross at Cathedral of Santo Domingo
Painting in the museum
Painting in the museum
Painting in the museum
Painting in the museum
Santo Domingo
Santo Domingo

The Cathedral Museum exhibits a permanent display centered around three Flemish triptych paintings: “The Annunciation,” by Joos Van Cleve, painted between 1515 and 1520; “The Adoration of the Maji,” an anonymous work created at the end of the 15th century; and “Mass of Saint Gregory the Great” painted in 1530 by Adiran Isenbrant.

The Museum displays many other statues, relief carvings, altarpieces, and paintings.

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painting in museum

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relief carving in museum

triptych in museum
triptych in museum
relief carving in museum
relief carving in museum
altarpiece in museum
altarpiece in museum
figure in museum
figure in museum
Virgin Mary
Virgin Mary

I wandered around the streets of Santo Domingo de la Calzada.

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Streets of Santo Domingo de la Calzada

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Cathedral of Santo Domingo

After that, I met with Ray and Tony at the Parador de Santo Domingo, once a 14th century pilgrim hospital built by Saint Dominic. They treated me to a wine, and I told them I’d treat them the next time we met.  Somehow, I never had the opportunity to treat them in return.

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Parador de Santo Domingo

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bar at the Parador de Santo Domingo

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Parador de Santo Domingo

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Parador de Santo Domingo

Parador de Santo Domingo
Parador de Santo Domingo
Parador de Santo Domingo
Parador de Santo Domingo
Parador de Santo Domingo
Parador de Santo Domingo

I shared a pilgrim meal with Vibeke, where we laughed so much it was hard to eat. I ate a delicious vegetable stew with an egg on top, fried eggs & chorizo, and apple pie.  And of course, wine, always wine.

There were so many people at the albergue, and there was loud pounding music in the town.  A German couple occupied the bottom bunks on either side of a large window; they had closed the window so it was quite stuffy in the room. It was annoying. I really disliked people who appointed themselves keepers of the windows. There was also a huge school group of about 40 high school kids. A thunderstorm erupted in the early evening, so my clothes didn’t dry. I had to hang them all around my bed as I slept. I had no idea how I would sleep in that stuffy room with all the hustle and bustle around me.

Amazingly at 10:00 p.m., the music went silent and the lights went out, and all was quiet until morning.

Ruminations {week two}

By the second week of my Camino, I felt like I’d established a reliable rhythm to my days. I started leaving before sunrise with a headlamp and usually called it a day no later than 1:00 or 2:00 in the afternoon. I reveled in sunrises and rested during the hottest parts of the days. I fell in love with early morning light, lavender and white wildflowers, starry weeds, building-like haystacks, the vineyards of La Rioja, olive groves, and the towns of Villamayor de Monjardín and Torres del Río.

I was blessed with a moment of presence as a modern-day shepherd led his flock of bleating sheep, with bells around their necks chiming a soothing tune, across a bridge. I loved soaking my feet in a cold pool at a municipal albergue in Azofra with fellow pilgrims.

I continued to love stopping in churches, kneeling, and offering prayers for family, friends, fellow pilgrims, my country and the world. On the home front, I felt encouraged as my loved one moved in temporarily with his brother and his roommate and got a new job, which he seemed to like.

I loved the iron pilgrim shell I bought from an ironsmith; the artist gifted me a fig, which, in the heat, was like nectar from heaven. I enjoyed drinking wine out of a fountain in Irache.

The challenges of my second week included the uncomfortable afternoon heat, the pungent and ubiquitous pilgrim stink, and arguments with fellow pilgrims who insisted on closing doors and windows in albergue rooms, making for stuffy afternoons and evenings. I wasted a day in the city of Logroño, where I lost several fellow pilgrim friends I’d never see again.

I was put off by a Trump-supporting pilgrim from Perth, Australia, who showed her true colors by rudely shooing off a Chinese man who tried to join our group in Parque Granjera.

As I walked and shared my struggles with other pilgrims, they shared intimately with me, about: sons who had died of opioid overdoses; sons with whom they are estranged due to drug-addiction and mental illness; schizophrenic brothers; ex-husbands suffering from alcohol abuse and addiction; and daughters exploring the mystical and healing properties of mushrooms while on Shamanic journeys in Peru.

My second week, I connected with pilgrims with whom I shared a spirit of fellowship and laughter: Darina from Slovakia, Ingrid from Minnestota, Pat from Seattle, Anna from Denmark, Kees and Jannie from Holland, Paul and Richard from Quebec, Keiko from Sapporo, Japan, and Vibeke from Denmark, who had me in stitches over BUFFs. I loved being serenaded by Anna, who played guitar and sang “Moonshadow” in Torres del Río. I enjoyed meeting Tony and Ray from Australia, especially gentle Tony who always asked pilgrims about their lives and why they were doing the Camino.

I continued to be obsessed with collecting sellos (stamps) in my pilgrim credenciale.  I loved the pinchos and wine in Logroño and albondigas in Villamayor de Monjardín, as well as the potato tortillas and café con leche that continued to be my “second” breakfasts.  I loved the pilgrim meals where people shared their reasons for doing the Camino and where fellowship evolved among pilgrims. It felt like life in microcosm, parallel yet removed from my actual daily life.

**********

*Day 14: Monday, September 17, 2018*

*27,070 steps, or 11.47 miles: Azofra to Santo Domingo de la Calzada (14.9 km)*

You can find everything I’ve written so far on the Camino de Santiago here:

  • Camino de Santiago 2018

**********************

On Sundays, I post about hikes or walks that I have taken in my travels; I may also post on other unrelated subjects. I will use these posts to participate in Jo’s Monday Walks or any other challenges that catch my fancy.

This post is in response to Jo’s Monday Walk.

 

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  • Anticipation
  • Books
  • Cinque Terre

anticipation & preparation: central italy

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 April 26, 2019

We will be spending two+ weeks in central Italy in late April and early May. This trip will be added on to my trip to Morocco, since much money can be saved by taking only one flight across the pond.

From Morocco, I’ll go directly to Rome and spend two days there on my own before Mike arrives. Since Mike went to Rome on his first honeymoon, he has no interest in returning.  Once I meet him at the airport, we’ll rent a car and drive north to the Cinque Terre, hopefully stopping in Pisa.  Then we will work our way south, through Florence, Tuscany, and Umbria, until we reach Rome again.  From there we’ll fly home.

To prepare for our trip, I started by looking through several guidebooks:

  1. Rick Steves Best of Italy
  2. Essential Italy 2019: Fodor’s Travel
  3. Lonely Planet Italy
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put down the map and get lost

We plotted out our trip on a paper map, using Google Maps to determine driving times and distances.  Here’s our itinerary:

  1. Tue, April 23: Fly from Casablanca to Rome.
    1. ATOS Bed and Breakfast in Rome.
  2. Wed, April 24: Rome on my own.

    1. The Beehive in Rome.
  3. Thur, April 25: Rome on my own.

    1. The Beehive in Rome.
  4. Fri, April 26: La Spezia, Liguria
    1. Mike flies in.
    2. Drive to our Airbnb “The Piano Apartment” in La Spezia, Liguria, stopping in Pisa (4:00 p.m. check-in).
    3. Explore Portovenere.
  5. Sat, April 27: “The Piano Apartment” in La Spezia, Liguria
    1. Explore Cinque Terre
  6. Sun, April 28: “The Piano Apartment” in La Spezia, Liguria
    1. Explore Cinque Terre & take more walks through the national park.
  7. Mon, April 29: Florence (*many museums closed)
    1. Explore Lucca on the way to Florence.
    2. Check into “Terrace with a View” in Florence (3:00-7:00 p.m.).
  8. Tue, April 30: Florence
    1. “Terrace with a View”
  9. Wed, May 1: Florence
    1. “Terrace with a View”
  10. Thur, May 2: San Gimignano
    1. Airbnb “Appartamento Adalberto nel Castello di Fulignano”
    2. From here, we’ll explore the town and outlying areas, including Siena and the Chianti Region.
  11. Fri, May 3: San Gimignano
    1. Airbnb “Appartamento Adalberto nel Castello di Fulignano”
  12. Sat, May 4: San Gimignano
    1. Airbnb “Appartamento Adalberto nel Castello di Fulignano”
  13. Sun, May 5: Montepulciano
    1. Drive through the Tuscan countryside, with stops in Asciano, Abbazia di Oliveto Maggiore, Buonconvento, Montalcino, S. Antimo, Quirico d’Orcia, Pienza and finally to Montepulciano.
    2. La Terrazza Di Montepulciano (1:00 p.m. check-in)
  14. Mon, May 6: Perugia, Umbria
    1. Drive to Perugia with stops along the way.
    2. Airbnb “Villa with Swimming Pool in Perugia”
  15. Tue, May 7: Perugia, Umbria
    1. Airbnb “Villa with Swimming Pool in Perugia”
    2. Explore Assisi. Possible other towns: Spoleto, Todi, Gubbio, Lake Trasimeno, Spello, Norcia, and Narni.  See Top Places to Go in Umbria.
  16. Wed, May 8: Orvieto, Umbria
    1. Hotel Duomo
    2. Explore Orvieto and Civita
  17. Thur, May 9: Rome:
    1. Drive to Fiumicino with possible stop in Cerveteri.
    2. Fiumicino Airport B&B Deluxe
  18. Fri, May 10: Fly home 9:45 a.m. (Italian time) to 1:45 p.m. EST.
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preparation for Italy

I joined a closed Facebook group, Traveling to Italy, to read about other traveler experiences. I also follow a number of Instagram accounts related to Italy for photography and destination inspiration.

There are a wealth of novels set in Italy, some of which I read years ago.  If there is a link and a star rating, I have already read the book.  If not, I may be currently reading it. Otherwise, I may read it at some future time, when I return to explore other parts of Italy:

  1. Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert *****
  2. The House at the Edge of Night by Catherine Banner *****
  3. A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway *****
  4. The Miracles of Santo Fico by D.L. Smith ****
  5. The Fall of a Sparrow by Robert Hellenga *****
  6. The Sixteen Pleasures by Robert Hellenga
  7. The Italian Lover by Robert Hellenga
  8. The Confessions of Frances Godwin by Robert Hellenga
  9. Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter
  10. An Italian Affair by Laura Fraser
  11. Cucina: A Novel of Rapture by Lily Prior
  12. Born Twice by Giuseppe Ponliggia
  13. The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann
  14. My Brilliant Friend (The Neopolitan Novels, #1) by Elena Ferrante
  15. The Light in the Ruins by Chris Bohjalian
  16. The Homecoming Party by Carmine Abate
  17. From the Land of the Moon by Milena Agus
  18. The Story of a New Name (The Neopolitan Novels, #2) by Elena Ferrante
  19. Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay (The Neopolitan Novels, #3) by Elena Ferrante
  20. The Story of the Lost Child (The Neopolitan Novels, #4) by Elena Ferrante
  21. The Days of Abandonment by Elena Ferrante
  22. The Lost Daughter by Elena Ferrante
  23. The Shoemaker’s Wife by Adriana Trigiani
  24. The Italian Teacher by Tom Rachman
  25. Christ Stopped at Eboli: The Story of a Year by Carlo Levi
  26. The Agony and the Ecstasy by Irving Stone
  27. The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco
  28. The Enchanted April Elizabeth von Arnim
  29. A Room with a View by E.M Forster
  30. Vila Triste by Lucretia Grindle
  31. The Lady in the Palazzo: At Home in Umbria by Marlena de Blasi
  32. Lost Hearts in Italy by Andrea Lee
  33. Extra Virgin (Italy Series, #1) by Annie Hawes
  34. The Villa in Italy (A Vintage Mystery) by Elizabeth Edmonson
  35. Living in a Foreign Language: A Memoir of Food, Wine, and Love in Italy by Michael Tucker
  36. Return to Glow: A Pilgrimage of Transformation in Italy by Chandi Wyant
  37. A Kiss from Maddalena by Christopher Castellani
  38. All This Talk of Love: A Novel by Christopher Castellani
  39. Been Here a Thousand Years by Mariolina Venezia, Marina Harss (Translator)
  40. The Shape of Water (Commissario Montalbano #1) by Andrea Camilleri
  41. A Chill in the Air by Iris Origo
  42. Rome
    1. Four Seasons in Rome by Anthony Doerr
  43. Tuscany
    1. Under the Tuscan Sun by Frances Mayes ****
    2. The Tuscan Child by Rhys Bowen ****
    3. Bella Tuscany by Frances Mayes
    4. Every Day in Tuscany by Frances Mayes
    5. See You in the Piazza by Frances Mayes
    6. Vanilla Beans & Brodo: Real Life in the Hills of Tuscany by Isabella Dusi
    7. A Thousand Days in Tuscany: A Bittersweet Adventure (Italian Memoirs) by Marlena de Blasi
    8. Home to Italy by Peter Pezzelli
    9. That Month in Tuscany by Inglath Cooper

To see books set in international destinations, please visit books | international a-z .

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books set in Italy

Of course, there are also many movies set in Italy. I’ve given star ratings to the ones I’ve watched.  One of my favorites is Bread & Tulips, set in Venice, but sadly we won’t be going there this time.

  1. A Room With a View (1985) *****
  2. The English Patient (1996) *****
  3. Life is Beautiful (1997) *****
  4. Besieged (1998) ****
  5. The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999) **
  6. Bread & Tulips (2000) *****
  7. Malèna (2000) *****
  8. Italian for Beginners (2000) **
  9. The Son’s Room (2001) *****
  10. Agatha and the Storm (2004) ****
  11. Under the Tuscan Sun (2003) ****
  12. Letters to Juliet (2010) ****
  13. The Tourist (2010) **
  14. A Bigger Splash (2015) **
  15. Bicycle Thieves (1948)
  16. Roman Holiday (1953)
  17. Three Coins in the Fountain (1954)
  18. La dolce vita (1960)
  19. Come September (1961)
  20. The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965)
  21. Cinema Paradiso (1988)
  22. Il Postino: The Postman (1994)
  23. Stealing Beauty (1996)
  24. Tea with Mussolini (1999)
  25. The Best of Youth (2003)
  26. A Good Woman (2004)
  27. Angels & Demons (2009)
  28. I am Love (2009)
  29. To Rome with Love (2012)
  30. The Great Beauty (2013)
  31. The Trip to Italy (2014)
  32. Call Me by Your Name (2017)
  33. Napoli velata (2018)

I had every intention of studying some Italian before I left, but the days got away from me, and I was never able to learn much except for a few greetings: Ciao! Buongiorno! Arrivederci!  A presto. Buonanotte.  🙂

JOURNAL AND INTENTIONS:  How can I push myself to create something new from my wanderings?

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Italy Intentions

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preparing for Italy

I also made a Spotify playlist of Italian music to accompany us on our trip: Notes from Italy. It includes Italian singers, duos and groups such as Laura Pausini, Eros Ramazzotti, Tiziano Ferro, Nek, Zero Assoluto, Umberto Tozzi, and others.

************************

“ANTICIPATION & PREPARATION” INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about anticipation & preparation for a particular destination (not journeys in general). If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments. Include the link in the comments below by Thursday, May 23 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Friday, May 24, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation, on the 4th Friday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂  If you’d like to read more about the topic, see: journeys: anticipation & preparation.

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read posts from our wandering community. I promise, you’ll be inspired!

I am traveling from April 4 to May 10. If I cannot respond to or add your links due to wi-fi problems or time constraints, please feel free to add your links in both this post and my next scheduled post. If I can’t read them when you post them, I will get to them as soon as I can. Thanks for your understanding! 🙂

Thanks to all of you who wrote posts about anticipation and preparation. 🙂

 

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  • challenge: a call to place
  • Cinque Terre
  • destinations

call to place: central italy

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 April 25, 2019

Italy has been calling my name for years, yet I’ve been resisting the call.  Movies first called me, especially my favorites: Bread & Tulips (Venice), Under the Tuscan Sun, A Room with a View, Beseiged, The Son’s Room, and The English Patient.  Then it was the books: Eat, Pray, Love and The House at the Edge of Night. Yet, with all the enticements, I still resisted.  The time never seemed right.

My husband traveled to Italy with his then-girlfriend, Kerri, in 1984.  They married in 1985, after she’d been diagnosed with breast cancer; the disease led to her early death in January of 1987.  I met Mike in the fall of 1987. A portion of our early relationship consisted of me listening to him reminiscence and grieve over the loss of his wife.  She seemed saintly to me, and part of the reason I fell in love with him was because of how he expressed his feelings. I hadn’t met many men who talked of their emotions, and so I was entranced by his sharing.

However, the more I listened, the more insecure I became. How could I compete with a saint?  I certainly was not a saint; I had never been one and was unlikely to ever become one.  Though we married in 1988, our relationship was fraught with grieving on both sides, me grieving over the dissolution of my first marriage in divorce, and him grieving over Kerri. Our first few years of marriage were a struggle as we tried to come to terms with our losses while at the same time beginning a new life together.

When it came time to plan our first trip to Europe in 1999, I decidedly was not ready to go to Italy. We went to England. Neither was I ready to go in 2003 or 2006, when we went to France. Then came our separation from 2007-2014.  During that time, I traveled to Egypt, Singapore, Thailand, South Korea, China, Turkey, Cambodia, Vietnam, Japan, India, Oman, Jordan, Nepal, Ethiopia, and Greece. Then we reconciled in 2014, just before I went to China to teach; while there, Mike came to visit me, and I traveled all over China and to Myanmar. We’ve traveled many places since we reunited. Yet, here we are 30+ years after our marriage, and we still haven’t gone to Italy, together or separately.

Now, I’m finally ready to go.  My husband’s first trip seems like a lifetime ago. I’m no longer threatened by his first marriage, or his first trip to Italy. If we survived our separation, we can survive his memories of Italy, which he’s sure to have. I no longer feel threatened by them.

Lately, I’ve been growing weary of long plane flights across the Atlantic to go to one destination.  It’s expensive and, in recent years, a hassle, as flights are often delayed, connections missed, and luggage lost.  As Mike is still working, he can’t take time off for extended holidays.  So I’ve decided this time to combine two destinations, Morocco (where I’ll go on a G Adventures tour with my friend Susan) and Italy (where Mike will join me).

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Hill town of Tuscany from Mike’s 1984 trip

I’m enticed by Italian art and architecture, from the ancient to the classical, the ecclesiastical architecture and mosaics of the Byzantine period. The Renaissance entices, with Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo. There is the Duomo in Florence, the Piazza dei Miracoli in Pisa, the Colosseum in Rome.

Scan 1

Florence from Mike’s 1984 trip

Over the years, I’ve seen and been inspired by art from the Renaissance.  In early March, I encountered Giorgione’s La Vecchia (The Old Woman), in the Cincinnati Art Museum. “Although he had a short career and created relatively few works, Giorgione is regarded as the founder of the Venetian Renaissance for his innovative approach to landscape and portrait painting in the years around 1500,” according to the museum’s website.

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Giorgione’s La Vecchia (The Old Woman) at the Cincinnati Art Museum

The landscapes of Tuscany are especially enticing.  I’ve observed two dimensional views for years, in paintings and in photographs, but I can’t wait to immerse myself in the beauty of undulating hills with sun-kissed cypress trees and vineyards surrounding medieval and Renaissance villages. I have seen countless pictures on Instagram, always a source of inspiration.

Italian food is easily found on nearly every street corner in the U.S., but I’m sure it’s not as good as the original, which uses fresh seasonal ingredients. I’m enticed by the idea of sitting outdoors at a long table under an arbor, drinking wine, laughing and enjoying the experience of Italian meals.  Breakfasts of caffè, cornetto brushed with orange-rind glaze and filled with cioccolato (chocolate), crostata (breakfast tarts), and doughnuts. Lunches of risotto balls, focaccia, panini and tramezzini. Antipasti of buffalo mozzarella, fried olives, and prosciutto e melone.  Primo (first course) of pasta, gnocchi, risotto, polenta, and the Tuscan favorite of pappardelle alle cinghiale (ribbon pasta with wild boar sauce). Secondo (Second course) of steaks, Roman artichokes stuffed with mint and garlic, to chicken casseroles with salsify.  Finally, Frutti e dolci (Fruit and dessert): formaggi (cheeses) and dolci (sweets), biscotti dipped in wine, pear and ricotta cake.  And of course there are the wines: Chianti, pino grigio, pino nero, merlot, and chardonnay. Sparkling wines such as prosecco, Chianti Classico and Sangiovese in Tuscany, and Italian varietals such as Brunellos and Vermentino.

Of course, I want to see the iconic sights: The Colosseum and the Roman forum, Palatino, the Capitoline Museums, the Pantheon, St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican Museums, The Spanish Steps and the Trevi Fountain in Rome.

I want to see the five historic picturesque fishing villages and cliff-terraces of the Cinque Terre, towns like Riomaggiore and Vernazza on the Ligurian coastline.

I want to experience Italy’s dolce vita in Florence and Tuscany.  In Florence: the Duomo, the Uffizi, Campanile, and the various basilicas and plazas. In Tuscany: the Leaning Tower of Pisa; the Renaissance streets of Lucca; the Gothic treasures of Siena, as well as the head of St. Catherine at Basilica San Dominico; the vineyards of Chianti; the 14 towers of San Gimignano; the picturesque valley of Val d’Orcia; and the medieval town of Montepulciano.  I hope to take a bicycle ride through the picturesque landscapes.

Finally, I anticipate the olive groves, vineyards, and wheat fields scattered with wildflowers and punctuated with cypress trees and castle-topped medieval towns of Umbria.

I look forward to escaping the hum-drum existence of our lives, to experience something exotic and far removed.

I always hope to be awakened spiritually inside the glorious Catholic churches which are the centerpieces of Italian towns and cities.

Here’s another inspirational video: A tale of Tuscan romance on location by Anthropologie:

 

********************

“THE CALL TO PLACE” INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about what enticed you to choose a particular destination. If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments.  If your destination is a place you love and keep returning to, feel free to write about that.  If you want to see the original post about the subject, you can check it out here: imaginings: the call to place.

Include the link in the comments below by Wednesday, May 22 at 1:00 p.m. EST.

My next “call to place” post is scheduled to post on Thursday, May 23.  If you’d like, you can use the hashtag #wanderessence.

This will be an ongoing invitation, on the fourth Thursday of each month. Feel free to jump in at any time.  🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired!

I am traveling from April 4 to May 10. If I cannot respond to or add your links due to wi-fi problems or time constraints, please feel free to add your links in both this post and my next scheduled post. If I can’t read them when you post them, I will get to them as soon as I can. Thanks for your understanding! 🙂

Thanks to all of you who wrote posts about “the call to place.” 🙂

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  • Adirondacks
  • American Road Trips
  • Memoir

a family vacation in the adirondacks

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 April 23, 2019

Our family spent a week in the Adirondacks in August of 2001.  A week on Flower Lake in McKenzie Cottage with its pine-paneled walls and low ceilings, its brown-and-black striped Herculon couch and green plaid wallpaper, its wooden duck pegboard to hang our jackets. A week enjoying McKenzie’s window boxes abloom with geraniums, pink-and-white-striped petunias, and New Guinea impatiens pouring from buckets.

I relaxed in a dark green Adirondack chair on a hickory brown deck, the rails of which were rough-hewn Adirondack logs and willow vines.  I watched Alex, Adam and Mike canoe on Flower Lake, amidst motoring pontoon boats and jet skis going at top speed.  It was noisy, not at all idyllic as I imagined, except for a few suspended moments. I hated the jet skis, just as I knew I’d hate them in the Bahamas, just as I’d hated them in the Bahamas nine years before.

The boys went out in paddle boats, looking dwarfed and tiny in those bright orange life jackets. Puffy whipped cream clouds billowed down the lake and a motorboat roared by pulling a kneeling boy on a ski board. The leaves on a small tree in the yard rustled in the breeze, like snow static on an old black and white TV.

At dinner at Casa del Sol, painted banana dolphins, peeled and unpeeled, jumped over a turquoise ocean on the wall. A vase of sunflowers brightened an arched window. We sat at a mauve-tiled table under turquoise ceiling beams. The waitress, wearing a chili pepper apron, said it was miserable last week when temps were in the 90s as none of the places up here had air-conditioning. Outdoorsy people were in abundance, people with dreadlocks and beards. Spanish guitar music serenaded us as we drank tumblers of margaritas rimmed with gritty salt. On the wall was a festive painting of a carnival Ferris wheel and a low white moon, fireworks and people playing tubas.

On Sunday morning, we hiked two hours up Baker Mountain, on a trail covered in pine needles and cones. The birch trees gleamed in dappled sunlight, like pale angels among the dark pines, with their scraggly, broken lower branches. These trees had a hard life up there, naked to the elements.

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Adam, me and Alex on our Baker Mountain hike

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Mike, Adam and Alex on Baker Mountain

At the summit, we had a view of Flower Lake, probably Upper and Lower Saranac, Ampersand Mountain beyond Oseetah Lake. McKenzie Mountain stands behind Haystack Mountain. As we walked down the mountain, Alex sang a song he learned at boy scout camp:

DaMoose, Da Moose,
Swimmin’ in the water
Eating his supper
Where did he go?
He went to sleep. He went to sleep.
Shhh!

Dead Moose, Dead Moose,
Floatin’ in the water
Not eating his supper
Where DID he go?
He decomposed. He decomposed.

Nice song! We sang along with Alex as we walked down.

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view of Flower Lake, probably Upper and Lower Saranac, from Baker Mountain

Back at the cottage, I laid on a double-wide raft with Adam, then Alex. We liked riding the wake from the passing boats. Later, I sat on the deck and read Poetry Reader’s Handbook. I especially loved a poem by e.e. Cummings: “if there are any heavens.”  I wished my own children would feel that way about me. It is so utterly respectful, a beautiful tribute to a mother.  I could truly identify with “Song of the Barren Orange Tree” by Federico Garcia Lorca. I knew so well that torment and frustration of not being fruitful, not having found my purpose in life.

After making a dinner of soft and hard tacos in our hole of a kitchen, we drove to Lake Placid. We cruised in our blue van past Saranac Lake Village offices with a plywood painted train in the windows, past the Lake Flour Bakery, past Guide Boat Realty, and Mountain Mist Custard under a gray lumpy sky drizzling on our windshield. We passed a pond with a floating dock, through a forest of spiked gray tree trunks with mutilated limbs, remnants of some past forest fire. We drove by a florist hollering “Cut flowers!” and Adirondack Delights, with colorful Adirondack chairs out front on a patch of grass.

Lake Placid was a bustling little lakeside town only a shadow of its former heyday as host of the 1980 Winter Olympics. Giving flavor to the town were the Bluesberry Bakery, Nicola’s Over Main Mediterranean Restaurant, With Pipe & Book, Northern Exposure: The Restaurant, Olympic Center, Bowl Wrinkles, High Peaks Cyclery, Cobbler’s Shop, The Thirsty Moose, Cactus Pete’s, Lake Placid Toboggan Chute, A Touch of Glass (glassblowers), Lake Placid Pub and Brewery, and Mirror Lake Inn. The sun hung, a pink-coral orb in the dusk.

The drive reminded me of drives in the Pacific Northwest except with more kitsch. I missed deciduous trees when I was up north. Cars drove past with kayaks and canoes on top. People walking on the street wore hiking boots or Tevas or other sturdy outdoor sandals.

In Imagination Station, I wandered around absorbed by books on Zen, the meaning of dreams, astrology, yoga, freeing creativity, gemstones, Celtic knot earrings and $55 leather journals. Alex and Adam shot wooden guns with rubber band ammo at a target. I was also tempted by incense, meditative music, T-shirts with Adirondack motifs of canoes and wild forests, jewelry, Adirondack pens, and magnetic poetry.

Adam got a hoot out of boxer shorts in a shop window that said “Nice Bass,” with a picture of bass across the ass. Another one said “Bear Bum” with a big black bear. We had ice cream at Ben and Jerry’s – chocolate chunk brownie on a sugar cone, surrounded by guys with dreadlocks and piercings.

At the Adirondack Museum, we were tempted to touch the gleaming polished Adirondack guideboats despite the “Do Not Touch” signs. I loved imagining life in the early 1900s.

After looking at all the boats, I started brewing an idea for a story about a woman who works in a canoe/hiking outfitter in Saranac Lake and feels her biological clock ticking. She wants to have a child. I don’t know if she should be married or not. Eventually she decides on artificial insemination using a bird carver’s sperm.

In the second exhibit building: “Knowing the Natural World: Theodore Roosevelt and the Adirondacks 1871-1901” was a one-year exhibit highlighting Teddy Roosevelt’s ride to the presidency and the role the Adirondacks played in our 26th president’s lifelong love of natural history and the outdoor life. I was fascinated by one part of the exhibit: “Theodore Roosevelt & Pop Culture Legacy.” I decided my main character would have loved Teddy Roosevelt and collected Roosevelt pop art and memorabilia and Teddy Bears. “In a 1902 hunting trip in Mississippi, TR refused to shoot a captured black bear. Morris Mitchom and his wife had an idea to make a small toy they called “Teddy’s Bear.”

We met the bird carver, a bald man in his late 30s with wire rim glasses who was whittling away at a chickadee. A kid walked by and asked him wasn’t it boring doing that. He said, “Boredom is the degree to which you are not working to your potential.” He’d been carving birds since he was 12, from basswood and sometimes White Pine. Mike asked if he did the otter with thousands of fine hairs. He said he woodburned those hairs on, a very tedious process. When I commented that it must take a lot of patience, he said it took more than that – stubborn perseverance, tenacity, dogged determination. He admitted he lacked patience but was very tenacious.

In another part of the exhibit, we pulled open exhibit drawers of nature specimens – a bear skull, bear paw, yellow bellied sapsucker, a gray fox skull, hummingbird eggs. I studied a diorama of different birds from the region – hummingbirds and blue jays.

On Tuesday morning, at Aroma Round in Lake Placid, I had a Café Mocha and a Piña Colada Muffin sitting on plush Empire and Victorian couches in a rounded room brimming with ferns, tropical plants, and window boxes of impatiens and vinca.

We drove through a gorge, next to a boulder-filled stream, cliffs on either side, forests of pine and smiling white birch, the dreaded purple loosestrife in the open areas near the road.  The sky was a too-brilliant blue, with clouds like frothy whipped cream tossed around like cottonball confetti. The air was crisp and dry. We crossed the Ausable River. Mike said “it’s kind of nifty.”

We hiked 2-hours round trip on the Owen and Copperas Ponds trail, fraught with exposed roots and rocks. Trees grew out of boulders and roots exposed themselves, blooming, erupting, bursting out of the earth. All around us was verdant growth: ferns, Eastern Red Cedars, quaking aspen saplings, a grove of hemlocks, a chipmunk, a Shagbark Hickory, whose bark was grey and peeling off in long shaggy strips. Primeval mottled mosses covered rocks and tree trunks.

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Alex on the Owen & Copperas Ponds Walk

Sitting in a clearing, perched on rocks, a chilly breeze ruffled our hair and raised goosebumps. From the clearing, sunlight gleamed on Copperas Pond and Moss Cliff.  The cliff face of Sunrise Notch was dotted with evergreens. Across the pond, people were swimming and diving off rock ledges. It seemed a little nippy to be swimming, although a few minutes earlier we were sweaty and hot as we climbed. Slightly to our right were Little Whiteface Mountain and Whiteface Mountain.

We had taken the gondola up Little Whiteface earlier, where we had a 50-mile view of mountains and lakes.

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taking the gondola up to Little Whiteface

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view from the top of Whiteface

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Adam, Alex and me at Little Whiteface

All three of my boys waded in the Ausable River, cooling off, while I sat on a rock watching over them. Insects – flies or gnats – crawled on my back. My back felt creepy crawly and even more so because I couldn’t see what was back there.

On Wednesday, we went to Adirondack Lakes Trails & Outfitters (ALTO) to get our canoes. They drove us to a spot along First Pond, where we launched, me in one boat with Adam, Mike and Alex in another. I had a hard time getting going because I’ve never paddled in the stern (rear) before. I’ve always been in the bow, where I didn’t have to steer. Somehow when I paddle, I veer to the right, so I kept having to use the paddle as a rudder to correct us to the left. All the ruddering made us lose momentum, so it felt like I paddled twice as far as Mike. It was maddening. If it weren’t for that it would have been lovely, the sapphire blue sky, clear and cool, the mountains in the distance around us, the lily pads and marshlands, the stiff breeze blowing across the lake.

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Alex and Adam in the canoes

Early on, we pulled in behind a huge boulder and waded around on the sandy bottom while eating snacks of Ranch and Parmesan pretzels and Ruffles potato chips. We paddled through Second Pond, down the Saranac River to the Lower Lock. We weren’t entirely sure what to do at the lock, but the operator guided us. He opened the gates to the lock; we went in and held on to ropes dangling from the side. He then lowered the water, calmly and quietly (no turbulence at all) by about six feet. Then he opened the gates and we went out on the lower water surface. We pulled off to the left immediately after the lock, into the boathouse, where all three boys got out to use the privy and I sat in the canoe swatting at the biting flies and applying the useless OFF/Sunscreen lotion. We then paddled out to Oseetah Lake, a good-sized lake, behind some islands dotted with private homes, then down a river further into Lake Flower, finally! It was truly beautiful and I could have stayed out on the water all day – if I hadn’t had to paddle every minute to either progress or keep from losing ground. Sometimes it felt like all our efforts were wasted as we made very slow progress against the wind. Near the marina, beside tennis courts, we carried the canoes up the hill to ALTO with our life jackets and paddles.

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canoeing on Oseetah Lake

Back at the cottage, Mike and Adam floated belly-down on the blue double-wide raft, holding on the boat raft by a rope, and yapping away. Mike pulled the ubiquitous lake-choking Milfoil, a tenacious exotic weed, out of the water and dangled it in mid-air, as he’d done all week. It was like bathing in linguine. Milfoil Mike we should have called him. Alex was in the cottage on the Herculon couch playing Gameboy.

We’d been blessed with postcard-perfect days all week. I was also happy and grateful, at the end of each day, that we were still alive. Every day in the newspaper I read of someone dying an accidental death, and I thought how death can just come out of the blue, when you least expect it, when you think you’re safe. I hoped that both my little boys and Sarah would grow up to have long, productive and happy lives. Of course, I hoped the same for Mike and I too.

For dinner, we went to A.P. Smith’s in the Hotel Saranac of Paul Smith’s College. The restaurant was decked out for hunting and fishing. Adirondack scenes circled the plate rims: fishermen, black bears, rustic cabins, mountains and woods. Large old-fashioned snowshoes and a double saw hung on the walls and the curtains had Adirondack scenes similar to the plates. Alex said a little girl behind him kept making “annoying” duck noises. Our waiter, Tique, had a hard time pronouncing “Steak Poivre” and seemed nervous as if it were his first day on the job. The restaurant trains future restaurateurs who are students of nearby Paul Smith’s College.

Back at McKenzie, I called my 17-year-old daughter Sarah, who had opted to stay behind, and found her to be sad because her boyfriend Donald would be in manager training for 8 weeks from 2-11 each day and she’d be in school from 6:45-2, so she wouldn’t be able to talk to him every day as she did before.

On Thursday, we drove to Essex on Lake Champlain. At Natural Goods and Finery, I inhaled the soaps and bath and body goods and was tempted by the jewelry. I ended up buying myself an antique necklace for $196 that I would have Mike give me for my birthday.

We went on a tourboat cruise of Lake Placid, 16 miles around the perimeter of the lake. The summer homes along the shore were called camps. When the U.S. flag was hoisted, it meant the camp was occupied for the summer. Most of the camps were boat accessible only, but they did have phone service and electricity.

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a camp on Lake Placid

We boated past Whiteface, the fifth largest mountain in New York. The lake is in an H shape, with the water between the islands like the rungs of a ladder. Most of the lake is 45 feet deep except next to Pulpit Rocks, where it is 250 feet to the bottom.

Lake Placid freezes in the winter 4-5 feet thick. Cars and trucks drive across the lake to take supplies to camps and to check on roofs, etc. Snowmobilers also drive across and cross-country skiers slide across. Ice fishing is prohibited because the Lake Trout are voracious eaters in winter and could be entirely wiped out in 3-4 seasons.

At Pulpit Rocks in 1963, some scuba divers tried to find a connection between Mirror Lake and Lake Placid. They found a woman’s body preserved by the freezing temperatures with a rope around her neck and a rock tied to it. It was Mabel Smith Douglas, an educator; her death was first ruled a suicide. Later, people thought it was suspicious and promoted the idea of foul play and murder.

While eating ice cream from Mountain Mist Custard in our raincoats during a torrential rainfall, we dripped ice cream all over the van. Later, we played Chinese checkers and Mike won, as usual, even though it looked like I might win at first. I didn’t know how he always won.

It rained all night long, metallic flower petals clicking on the roof, threads and shreds of drizzle, rain, downpour, and a thick breeze blew over us through the screen and blew thick over us as we slept, tossing and turning, listening for the night to finish its incessant falling. The sleep was deep and dream-filled, though I don’t remember the dreams. I did when I first woke, but they dissipated into the drizzling night.

Because of rain all Friday, we drove to Lake Placid, where I hovered over items in the Adirondack Arts and Craft Store. Birchbark or spruce bookcases, heavy quilts with bears, fleecy blankets with moose silhouettes, metal picture frames with bears or pine trees attached to one side, miniature Adirondack twig chairs, mirrors framed in birchbark, a canoe coffee table with a glass top over the opening, sofas with hunting and fishing scenes, canoe or fishing basket, or fishing lure Christmas ornaments, soft leather journals filled with parchment, a jewelry box with butterflies and flowers on it, red and green Adirondack rockers, Mission style bookcases and dressers and even picture frames, handmade paper, leather bags, sweaters and fleece jackets, a glass coffee table held up by a wood carved bear sitting on his behind, arms in the air.

We played a final game of Yahtzee on our last night. Mike won, as usual, I came in second, and Adam lost.

The vacation was nice, but so often I feel like I’m boring and Mike’s boring, so we’re all boring because we don’t talk much and don’t seem to have hilarious times together.

As we drove out, the mountains clutched gray clouds like mink stoles around them. We stopped at the taxidermy shop to take photos of the boys next to a big stuffed black bear and a wolf. Driving through the gorges alongside the Ausable River reminded me so much of the drive from Coeur d’Alene to Boise, Idaho. Many of the birch trees in the forest appeared to be either broken off at the top or simply leafless. I wondered what accounted for their bare, broken condition. We rolled past fields of goldenrod and white flowers with a backdrop of gray-green peaks, bubbles of clouds congregating near the peaks.

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Alex with a stuffed bear

*August 10-18, 2001*

**********************

“PROSE” INVITATION: I invite you to write up to a post on your own blog about a recently visited particular destination (not journeys in general). Concentrate on any intention you set for your prose.  In this case, I kept a travel journal where I attempted to use my five senses and to record details of our family trip.  This essay is from that journal.

It doesn’t matter whether you write fiction or non-fiction for this invitation.  You can either set your own writing intentions, or use one of the prompts I’ve listed on this page: writing prompts: prose. (This page is a work in process.) You can also include photos, of course.

Include the link in the comments below by Monday, May 13 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this invitation on Tuesday, May 14, I’ll include your links in that post.

This will be an ongoing invitation. Feel free to jump in at any time. 🙂

I hope you’ll join in our community. I look forward to reading your posts!

the ~ wander.essence ~ community

I invite you all to settle in and read a few posts from our wandering community.  I promise, you’ll be inspired. 🙂

Thanks to all of you who wrote prosaic posts following intentions you set for yourself. 🙂

I am traveling from April 4 to May 10. If I cannot respond to or add your links due to wi-fi problems or time constraints, please feel free to add your links in both this post and my next scheduled post. If I can’t read them when you post them, I will get to them as soon as I can. Thanks for your understanding! 🙂

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