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    • on returning home
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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
      • 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

  • 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
  • the july cocktail hour: a trip to ometepe, nicaragua; a beach getaway to tamarindo; & homebody activities August 3, 2025
  • the june cocktail hour: our first month in costa rica June 30, 2025
  • a pura vida year in costa rica June 12, 2025
  • the may cocktail hour: final wrap up, a wedding & leaving for costa rica June 2, 2025

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a day in finisterre & return to santiago

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 February 26, 2019

I woke up in Hotel Langosteira after a restless night of post-nasal dripping, clearing my throat, and coughing. This cycle was on endless repeat, and the night was full of torment. I was happy when the sun finally rose and I could get up to eat the bread-heavy breakfast served by the hotel.

I had nothing pressing to do all day except to walk 3.5 km each way to the lighthouse that marked the “end of the world.”  I hoped standing upright would give me some relief from the endless coughing, and that the fresh air would do me some good.

I set out under blue skies at 10:30 a.m.  It was a gradual uphill climb on a paved road to the lighthouse, called “Monte Facho,” sitting atop a 600-meter promontory overlooking the Atlantic Ocean.  I stopped along the way to admire the closed church of Santa María de Fisterra, which supposedly contained the Chapel of Santo Cristo, and the views of the ocean and the town behind me. When I finally arrived, I was put off by the tour buses and souvenir shops; it was more commercialized and touristy than the beautiful windswept promontory at Muxía.  It was no wonder Muxía stood in for Finisterre in the movie, The Way.

Cape Finisterre, called Cabo Fisterra in Galician, was believed to be the end of the known world in Roman times. For pilgrims who want to walk the whole of Spain, it is another 4-5 day walk from Santiago .  I had taken the bus to Muxía and then to Finisterre, taking the lazy man’s route.

I encountered both pilgrims and tourists walking all over the promontory. I clambered around on the rocks, admired the views, and sat to contemplate my Camino.  I didn’t actually contemplate much, as I was too exhausted to think of anything.

Historically, pilgrims have burned their clothes at the end of the Camino in a symbolic and traditional act of purification in starting a new life. I didn’t see anyone doing this and in fact I saw signs prohibiting such a ritual.

If pilgrims finish their Camino in Fisterra, they can get the “fisterrana,” an official document that shows they finished here. The first Christian pilgrims arrived in Fisterra in the Middle Ages.  There were some hospitals for pilgrims who finished here.

By noon, I was ready to head back down the road. I stopped in one of the tourist shops to buy a scarf, a Finisterre magnet, and a coffee cup covered in sellos (stamps).  Then I made my way downhill, an easier trek than coming up.

Back in town, , I ran into Kate, a dear friend I’d met on my 24th day of walking, in Carrión de los Condes, and had met several times after that. Kate lived in London but was originally from South Africa. She and I had hit it off talking about Oman; she had visited while living and working in Dubai and I’d been there teaching English for nearly two years in 2011-2013. We had lost track of each other after Sahagun, and I thought she had probably finished well ahead of me, as most people did.  We added each other on Facebook. I was so happy to see her, and she seemed genuinely happy to see me too. She had rented a car with some friends to see Finisterre and was heading back to Santiago that afternoon.  I told her I’d be there the next day. We parted, hoping to meet up in Santiago.

I headed to the vegetarian restaurant I’d missed the day before.  There, I enjoyed a vegetable curry.  I ran into Brian and Tyler, who I’d met on the way to Muxía; they were waiting for the 3:00 bus to Santiago.  Brian had given me some Mucinex on the way to Muxía, and he gave me three more while at the cafe.  I sure hoped they’d help me make it through the next couple of nights.

I headed back to my hotel for a siesta from 2:00-4:00, but I didn’t actually sleep.  Later, I went to wander around the town and bought two more scarves 🙂 . Then I found a restaurant near the marina was open, where I ate a light dinner of steamed mussels.

*****

Hotel Langosteira

fishy placement
fishy placement
sardine can
sardine can
barracuda??
barracuda??

The Pilgrim’s Community in Finisterre was a colorful spot I passed on the way to my hotel.

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Pilgrim’s Community

The Romanesque 12th century parish church of Santa María de las Arenas was closed when I walked by. Inside are statues of Santo Cristo de Fisterra (Christ) or Golden beard Christ, San Roque or Santiago Apostle.

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Santa María de Fisterra

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road to the lighthouse

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views from the path

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the road up and up

The lighthouse, called “Monte Facho,” sits atop a 600-meter promontory overlooking the Atlantic Ocean.  It was built in 1853, 138 meters above the sea. It protects one of the most dangerous coasts. The tower is made of quarried stone with an octagonal base and a cornice.

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first view of lighthouse

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rusty pilgrim

In early times, the lighthouse worked with oil lamps.  Later it worked with incandescent lamps. It flashes every 5 seconds with a range of 31 nautical miles. The annex building is the Siren, called The Cow in Fisterra. This began to sound in 1889 on foggy days because ships couldn’t see the light of the lamp.  The Cow emits two sounds every one minute with a range of 25 miles.

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Monte Facho

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Monte Facho

Cape Finisterre, called Cabo Fisterra in Galician, was believed to be the end of the known world in Roman times.  The name Finisterre derives from the Latin finis terrae, meaning “end of the earth.”

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Finisterre

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Finisterre

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Finisterre

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Finisterre

 

Finisterre
Finisterre
Finisterre
Finisterre
Finisterre
Finisterre
Finisterre
Finisterre
Finisterre
Finisterre
May Peace Prevail on Earth
May Peace Prevail on Earth
Cabo de Fisterra
Cabo de Fisterra
signpost
signpost

It was fun to see boats scurrying across the Atlantic while I walked back down to the town.

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the path back down to town

A pilgrim statue stood about midway between the town and the lighthouse.

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pilgrim statue

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the view from the path

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the view from the path

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mural on old building

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red roofs

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Santa María de Fisterra

Back in Finisterre, I ate lunch, wandered and shopped, and had a dinner of steamed mussels.

anchor in Finisterre
anchor in Finisterre
laundry in Finisterre
laundry in Finisterre
steamed clams
steamed clams

~ Return to Santiago ~

The following morning, on my 63rd birthday, I woke up early to catch the bus back to Santiago. The timetable given to me by Tourist Information the day before said the bus would leave Finisterre at 8:20, but the timetable plastered on a wooden board at the bus stop was different. I got there early and simply waited till it came, which was close to 8:45. We arrived back in Santiago at 11:00.

On the bus ride, we enjoyed views of the sea, the rocky coastline, mudflats and, inland, the hill towns of Galicia. In Santiago, I checked in back at PR Libredon, where I’d stayed my first two nights in Santiago.  They welcomed me back with a birthday greeting, a gift basket, and a reduced rate on my room!   I loved that place, with its perfect location right next to the Cathedral and its welcoming receptionists.

I asked the people at the hotel if I could leave some junk behind. I took everything out of my big backpack and my day pack and sorted through my stuff.  My hiking boots were pretty well wrecked by that time, so I decided to leave them behind, along with the red day pack I’d bought in Carrión de los Condes.  I left some other ratty looking clothes in the red pack.

Kate sent me a Facebook message asking if I’d like to meet her and her partner Huma, who had joined her at the end of her Camino, at the Parador de Santiago de Compostela for a birthday drink. After I rested a bit, I wandered briefly around Praza do Obradoiro in front of the Cathedral and through Igrexa de San Fructuoso.

Then I went to meet Kate.  We sat on the terrace of the Parador and enjoyed the setting sun.  We talked about whether the Camino lived up to its hype or whether we found it fell short.  Kate said she didn’t enjoy long days of walking alone.  I did enjoy walking alone, but I too wondered if it really met my expectations.  Arriving at the end in Santiago, we agreed, had felt a bit anticlimactic.

Since then, I’ve had time to contemplate all that I experienced, and I have now come to regard it as one of the most amazing experiences of my life, right up there with all the times I’ve lived and worked abroad, but with a spiritual dimension that enriched it beyond anything I’d expected.

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view from the bus window

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on the way back to Santiago

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Santiago Cathedral

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Santiago Cathedral

The Igrexa de San Fructuoso was designed in the 18th century and is dominated by a magnificent half-orange dome. In a niche above the front is an image of Our Lady of “Las Angustias.” On top of the upper cornice there are images of the four cardinal virtues: Prudence, Justice, Strength and Temperance.

fountain in front of Santiago Cathedral
fountain in front of Santiago Cathedral
Igrexa de San Fructuoso
Igrexa de San Fructuoso
Igrexa de San Fructuoso
Igrexa de San Fructuoso
Igrexa de San Fructuoso
Igrexa de San Fructuoso

The Parador de Santiago, known as the Hostal dos Reis Católicos, is set on the beautiful Obradoiro Square near the cathedral.  The hotel was built as a royal hospital in 1499 to accommodate pilgrims traveling to Santiago.

me with Kate
me with Kate
Kate & her partner
Kate & her partner

As Kate and Huma had plans for dinner, I went alone to find a good tapas bar and ended up at Bar Coruña, where I enjoyed a beer and a great variety of tapas.  It was a wonderful way to celebrate my birthday, even in solitude, but I was excited to meet up with Mike the next day in Braga, Portugal.

birthday tapas in Santiago
birthday tapas in Santiago
birthday tapas
birthday tapas

I was happy to discard my Keen Targhee hiking boots, which seemed about to fall apart after my 799km walk, and the red day pack stuffed with some well-worn clothes.

my trusty Keen Targhee boots
my trusty Keen Targhee boots
my red daypack
my red daypack

*Wednesday, October 24, 2018 (Finisterre) & Thursday, October 25, 2018 (Santiago)*

*16,885 steps, or  7.16 miles (Finisterre) / 7,072 steps, or 3.0 miles (Santiago)*

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

  • Camino de Santiago 2018

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

“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 Camino was to note the changing scenery on the Camino and any sacred spaces.

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, March 11 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this invitation on Tuesday, March 12, 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. 🙂

  • Jude, of Travel Words, wrote a revealing post in which an innocent gathering of friends reveals a wider problem of a society dealing with issues of race.
    • No Problem

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

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  • Camino de Santiago
  • Hikes & Walks
  • International Travel

{camino: day 6} pamplona to muruzábal

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 February 24, 2019

After being awakened by crashing thunder claps and the rush of pouring rain, I left Pamplona in the dark at 7:10 a.m. under drenching skies.  Intermingled with a group of 20 Koreans who had stayed at my albergue last night, we trudged through the city in our ponchos, past the citadel park and the university, until we reached the outskirts. I popped into a row of porta-potties for a bit of welcome relief.  It was 3.2km to reach the medieval Puente crossing the río Sadar.

On the outskirts, we walked on a bidegorri, or “red path” in Basque, surfaced in red for bicyclists. Just outside of the city, as we approached Cizur Menor, it suddenly stopped raining and the skies turned blue for the rest of the day.  This would turn out to be one of my favorite days on the Camino, first, because of the magnificent scenery, and second, because I would meet Darina, who would become one of my closest friends throughout my walk.

We passed through rolling farmland, the path lined with anise, blackberries, thistles and prickly weeds.  A small village perched charmingly on a hillock and rectangular hay bales squatted in neat stacks in the fields.  One of the pilgrims passing the haystacks said, “Where’s the Irish?”  He was referring to the movie, The Way, in which Martin Sheen and his companions met Jack the Irishman at similar hay bales.

After Cizur Menor, I continued another 6.1 km to Zariquiegui where I stopped in at the little Church of St. Andrew, or San Andrés, with its Romanesque doorway.  I got a sello for my credenciale and said a prayer for our family and asked for blessings for my pilgrimage. At a little café in town, I met Ingrid and Pat from Seattle.  After the town, there was little shade but at least a nice breeze. The path to Alto del Perdon was a constant uphill climb but not overly demanding.

The highlight of the day was reaching Alto del Perdon, where wind turbines twirled on the ridge line and rusted sheet metal pilgrims headed westward in a line.  The sculpture has the inscription: “Donde se cruza el camino del viento con el de las estrellas.” In English: “Where the wind path meets the path of the stars.”

The site was windy and crowded with pilgrims resting after the long uphill climb. I rested at the top for a while, chatting with other pilgrims and taking pictures.

The steep descent from the top was rough, over loose round stones in relentless afternoon heat.  I made my way down gingerly with newlyweds Claire and Matt, slipping on the rocks now and then.  Pat and Ingrid eventually caught up with us as we walked between tall box trees and holm oak wood.  We were all getting low on water and Ingrid found it funny when I said I felt like my eyes were shriveling up in my head.

We bypassed Uterga and walked through vineyards and almond trees along a ridge parallel to a quiet country road.

The complete stage was to Puente la Reina (another 2.2 km); Claire, Matt and Pat continued to the end of the stage, but Ingrid and I stopped at the fabulous El Jardin de Muruzábal, run by the welcoming couple, Alicia and Carlos. It was a lovely albergue set on a green lawn dotted with white chairs.

After Darina from Slovakia mentioned she was going to rent a bicycle from Alicia and ride 2.4 km each way to Santa María de Eunate, I followed suit.  It was great to have the option to visit this special church by means of transport other than on foot.  I sailed downhill through hay and corn fields to the Romanesque church. Darina was already there, reading a brochure and enjoying her contemplative time, so I left her alone and spent some time in the church in prayer, and then walked around the grounds.

Santa María de Eunate is a 12th century Romanesque church linked with the Knights Templar who historically defended pilgrims on the way to Santiago. Its octagonal form is modeled on the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.  The church has an external cloister with delicate and more substantial pillars around the outside.

Riding back to town, a cool breeze made the corn stalks rustle, whisper and dance, sending messages to open hearts passing by. My hair was whipping about in the wind. When I reached the steep hill back into town, I got off the bike and walked it uphill. I stopped to admire the church in the center of town, San Esteban.

The entire excursion was an amazing experience, and I was grateful to Darina for her infectious energy and enthusiasm; she inspired me to do something I might not have considered doing otherwise.

The pilgrim dinner was served outside on the porch of the albergue; salad with olives and eggs, baked ziti with cheese, pork (which I didn’t eat), potato tortilla, and ice cream sandwiches. A lot of wine flowed, as was always the case at pilgrim dinners. I found out Darina was an English and history teacher of middle-schoolers in Slovakia. She announced to her boss that she was taking a gap year to do the Camino; in the winter, she planned to go to New Zealand and Australia. She said her boss wasn’t happy about it, but she was determined to go.

I met a young man from Budapest who had been working in the fraud department at Ernst and Young and was now taking a gap year. He had no idea what to do with his life but he knew that it wasn’t working an office job. He was fascinated when I told him my oldest son was doing a butchery apprenticeship; he liked the idea of some kind of apprenticeship. Another young man I met at dinner was being ordained as an Episcopal priest.

Thomas from Germany didn’t know any English but he had a great sense of humor and a constant smile on his face.  He did a round of greetings in different languages, with dramatic gestures. “Hola, señora!” “Olá!” “Hej!” “Bonjour!” “Hallo!” “Ciao!” He cracked me up!

What a wonderful group of people and a convivial and joyous atmosphere. I was filled with incredible gratitude for the gifts of this day.

******

Leaving Pamplona in the rain

rainy morning on outskirts of Pamplona
rainy morning on outskirts of Pamplona
bridge leading out of Pamplona
bridge leading out of Pamplona
surging creek on outskirts of Pamplona
surging creek on outskirts of Pamplona

To Cizur Menor 1.8 km

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approaching Cizur Menor

Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui (6.1 km)

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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prickly weeds on the path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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view of Galara

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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view of Astrain

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sunflowers on the path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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blackberry heaven

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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path from Cizur Menor to Zariquiegui

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Church of San Andrés in Zariquiegui

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Church of San Andrés in Zariquiegui

Zariquiegui to Alto del Perdon (altitude 790 meters) (2.4 km)

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Zariquiegui to Alto del Perdon

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Zariquiegui to Alto del Perdon

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pot of cairns at pilgrim wayside stop

pilgrim roadside stop
pilgrim roadside stop
pilgrim roadside stop
pilgrim roadside stop
pilgrim shell
pilgrim shell
climbing upward to Alto del Perdon
climbing upward to Alto del Perdon
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climbing upward to Alto del Perdon

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view from the top

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wind turbines at Alto del Perdon

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medieval pilgrim sculpture at Alto del Perdon

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medieval pilgrim sculpture at Alto del Perdon

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medieval pilgrim sculpture at Alto del Perdon

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medieval pilgrim sculpture at Alto del Perdon

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view from Alto del Perdon

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directional post at Alto del Perdon

Alto del Perdon to Uterga (3.8 km)

Alto del Perdon to Uterga
Alto del Perdon to Uterga
Alto del Perdon to Uterga
Alto del Perdon to Uterga
Alto del Perdon to Uterga
Alto del Perdon to Uterga
Alto del Perdon to Uterga
Alto del Perdon to Uterga
Uterga
Uterga

Uterga to Muruzábal (2.5 km)

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Uterga to Muruzábal

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Uterga to Muruzábal

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Ingrid on the path to Muruzábal

Muruzábal to Santa María de Eunate (2.4 km each way)

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Santa María de Eunate

Santa María de Eunate
Santa María de Eunate
inside Santa María de Eunate
inside Santa María de Eunate
Santa María de Eunate
Santa María de Eunate
cobblestones at Santa María de Eunate
cobblestones at Santa María de Eunate
Santa María de Eunate
Santa María de Eunate
Santa María de Eunate
Santa María de Eunate
riding my bicycle back to Muruzábal
riding my bicycle back to Muruzábal
riding my bicycle back to Muruzábal
riding my bicycle back to Muruzábal

Bicycle ride back to Muruzábal

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bicycling back to Muruzábal

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blackberries on the way back

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San Esteban in Muruzábal

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San Esteban in Muruzábal

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El Jardín de Muruzábal

*Day 6: Sunday, September 9, 2018*

*34,826 steps, or 14.76 miles: Pamplona to Muruzábal (20.2 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: Chocolate Time in Loulé.

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  • American books
  • American Road Trips
  • Anticipation

anticipation & preparation: louisville & lexington, kentucky

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 February 22, 2019

To prepare for my ten-day “Midwestern Triangle” road trip to southern Illinois, Cincinnati, OH (which I wrote about here), and Louisville & Lexington, Kentucky, I started by looking through several guidebooks:

  1. Kentucky: Moon Handbooks by Theresa Dowell Blackinton
  2. Off the Beaten Path Kentucky: a guide to unique places by Zoe Ayn Strecker, Revised and Updated by Jackie Sheckler Finch

I found some novels set in Kentucky:

  1. The Patron Saint of Liars by Ann Patchett ***
  2. Shiloh and Other Stories by Bobbie Ann Mason ****
  3. Whiskey & Ribbons by Leesa Cross-Smith ***
  4. Prodigal Summer by Barbara Kingsolver – currently reading
  5. In Country by Bobbie Ann Mason
  6. Baptisms and Dogs: Stories by Brian L. Tucker
  7. The Bourbon Thief by Tiffany Reisz
  8. The Sisters by Nancy Jensen
  9. River of Earth by James Still
  10. Kinfolks: The Wilgus Stories by Gurney Norman
  11. Hunter’s Horn by Harriet Simpson Arnow
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books set in Kentucky

To see books set in the U.S.A., please visit books | u.s.a. |

I also found some movies set in Kentucky:

  1. The Story of Sea Biscuit (1949)
  2. Raintree County (1957)
  3. Harland County, U.S.A. (1976)
  4. Coal Miner’s Daughter (1980)
  5. Stripes (1981)
  6. In Country (1989)
  7. Fire Down Below (1997)
  8. The Insider (1999)
  9. Seabiscuit (2003)
  10. Elizabethtown (2005)
  11. Dreamer (2005)
  12. Secretariat (2010)
  13. Tammy (2014)
  14. Kingsman: The Secret Service (2014)
  15. Kingsman: The Golden Circle (2017)
  16. American Animals (2018)

I also made a music playlist on Spotify for my road trip: midwestern triangle road trip. It includes bluegrass music (Kentucky’s claim to fame); as well as songs such as “Look at Miss Ohio” by Gillian Welch; “Ohio,” by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young; and “Illinois” by Dan Fogelberg. 🙂

Itinerary: Below is my itinerary for the entire trip.  I previously wrote about the areas in southern Illinois, Indiana and Cincinnati, OH, shown in blue text.

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Kentucky & Ohio destinations

Day 1 – Sunday, Feb 24:  Drive to Lincoln City, Indiana (10 hours) – Spend night in Lincoln City

DAY 2 – Monday, Feb 25: In Lincoln City, Indiana, visit:

  1. Lincoln Boyhood Home National Memorial, Lincoln City
  2. George Rogers Clark National Historic Park, Vincennes, IN (1 hour 20 min)
  3. Salem, Illinois (1 hour 30 minutes) – Richard Pollard’s Yard Art – just north of town on highway 37
  4. Drive to Murphysboro, Illinois (1 hour 25 minutes)

DAY 3 – Tuesday, Feb 26: Murphysboro, Illinois

  1. Hang out and explore Carbondale and surrounding area.

DAY 4: Wednesday, February 27: Murphysboro, IL

  1. Hang out and explore Carbondale and surrounding area.

DAY 5: Thursday, February 28: Murphysboro, IL to Louisville, KY (3 hours 40 minutes)

  1. Stop on the way at Garden of the Gods in Shawnee National Forest, IL (1 hour 50 minutes)
  2. See Kentucky Show! at the Frazier Museum
  3. Visit Churchill Downs

DAY 6: Friday, March 1: Louisville, KY

  1. Visit the Muhammad Ali Center
  2. Visit Evan Williams Bourbon Experience
  3. Visit the Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft
  4. Take an Old Louisville Tour
  5. Take a ride on the Belle of Louisville

DAY 7: Saturday, March 2: Cincinnati, OH (1 hour 40 minutes)

  1. Take walk #1: Ohio River: Bridges, Parks and Three Cities (including Covington, KY)  (4.2 miles)
    1. Ohio River
    2. Covington, KY
    3. Roebling Suspension Bridge
    4. National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
  2. Take walk #3: Over-the-Rhine and Pendleton: Urban Italianate Architecture Haven (2.4 miles)
    1. Findlay Market
    2. Enjoy whole area on the National Register of Historic Places

DAY 8: Sunday, March 3: Cincinnati, OH

  1. Pick up Mike from his friend’s house in Centerville, OH (1 hour each way)
  2. Take walk #2: Downtown: Resurgent Economic and Transit Hub (3 miles)
    1. Booksellers on Fountain Square
    2. Carew Tower
    3. Contemporary Arts Center
    4. Taft Museum of Art
  3. Take other walks as we desire; explore whatever we haven’t yet seen.

DAY 9: Monday, March 4: Cincinnati, OH

  1. Take more walks around Cincinnati. 
  2. Consider the “Nati in a Nutshell” Tour by Urban Adventures
  3. Explore Covington, KY.  See walks #17-21 in Walking Cincinnati.

DAY 10: Tuesday, March 5: Lexington, KY (1 hour 30 minutes)

  1. Explore some of the covered bridges in Kentucky on the way to Lexington.
  2. Visit one of the horse farms:
    1. Claiborne Farm (Secretariat’s grave) – 11:00 a.m. tour
  3. Stop into a museum: Either:
    1. Ashland – The Henry Clay Estate
    2. Headley-Whitney Museum – Shell Grotto
    3. Wade Hall Quilt Collection – University of Kentucky
  4. Take a stroll around downtown Lexington

DAY 11: Wednesday, March 6: Drive home with Mike from Lexington, KY (8 hours 5 minutes)

JOURNAL AND INTENTIONS:

Here are my intentions for this trip:

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My Kentucky intentions

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barns and livestock

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

“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, March 21 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Friday, March 22, 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!

  • Pauline, of Living in Paradise…, wrote about preparing for her upcoming trip to New Zealand.  After lining up house sitters and getting Jack’s passport resolved, she discovered some artistic shadows in a Brisbane museum.
    • Anticipation and Preparation.

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

 

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  • American Road Trips
  • Colorado
  • Colorado Towns

colorado towns: silverton

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 February 21, 2019

After leaving Durango, I drove around the San Juan Skyway Scenic Byway, making my first stop in the town of Silverton.  I arrived about 10:45 and walked around the cute town.  It was still sunny, but I could see dark clouds and rain over the route I’d just driven.  I put my leftover momos and garlic naan, from dinner the previous night at the Himalayan Kitchen, on the dashboard to warm in the sun.  This town would be my favorite of the three on the San Juan Skyway, the others being Ouray and Telluride.

When the first buildings of Silverton appeared in 1874, the hamlet lay 125 miles from the nearest post office. Though railroad service commenced in 1862, snowdrifts often blocked the tracks for weeks on end. To compound the isolation, Silverton’s climate and topography made farming almost impossible.  Residents had to wait for food shipped from elsewhere. But the area’s rich mineral deposits — not just gold and silver but also iron, lead, zinc and copper — assured the town’s prosperity for years to come.

The nineteenth century miner had a hardscrabble life. Twelve hours a day, six days a week, he spent underground, drilling holes into solid rock, filling them with explosives, blasting the stone into rubble, and hefting the pieces into ore cars. Even when tools improved, there were many miseries and perils: tight dimly lit spaces, dust that suffused his lungs (and often killed him), and ever-present threats of cave-ins.  He made only $3-$4/hour, likely more than he’d make anywhere else, but it was a perilous occupation.

At one time Silverton was served by four railroads, which were vitally important to the development of mines, hauling out ore and bringing in coal and supplies. They made mining lower grade ore profitable. They provided lifelines to the people living in the communities.

Ironically, Silverton’s remoteness proved to be an asset, for it preserved the town’s scenery and Victorian character, spurring its development as a tourist destination in the mid-20th century.

When men started bringing their wives and children to Silverton in 1874, the residents had some incentive to keep at least some of the town respectable. From the beginning, an imaginary line ran down Greene Street, dividing the town between the law-abiding, church-going residents and the gamblers, prostitutes, variety theaters, dance halls and saloons. From its earliest history, Blair Street developed as the red light district. In 1883, a Grand Jury brought 117 indictments against “lewd women.”  Although fines were levied, prostitution and gambling were generally accepted as long as they didn’t migrate into the respectable part of town.  Fines were generally used as revenues to support the growing community.

I first walked down Greene Street, the “respectable” side of town.

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old car inside a Silverton shop

Adelaide’s Antiques was built in 1901 and was primarily used as a hardware store until 1982.

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Adelaide’s Antiques

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shop on Greene Street

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The Rum Bar on Greene Street

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colorful Greene Street

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Greene Street

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mural on Greene Street

The Storyteller Indian Store was originally the Posey & Wingate Building of 1880, making it the oldest commercial brick building in western Colorado. It has served as a hardware and clothing store, beer hall and First National Bank of Silverton from 1883-1934.

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Storyteller Indian Store

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Storyteller Indian Store

The Funnel Cake Factory was built in 1875 as Alhambra Saloon.

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Greene Street

Rocky Mountain Gifts was built in 1884 as St. Julien Restaurant and served as a saloon for many years. Next door, Fetch’s, built in 1883, mostly served as a saloon with gambling on the basement and main floors.

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Greene Street

The Grand Imperial Hotel/Ortega’s Old Town Indian Store was built in 1882 as Grand Hotel. The main floor housed a variety of businesses including saloons, clothing stores, and newspaper offices. The second floor was once used as a courthouse.

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Grand Imperial Hotel

Prior to World War II, Romero’s served as Silverton Barbershop.  After WWII, Silverton Veterans of Foreign Wars moved in and established a club.

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Greene Street

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Greene Street

After walking up and down Greene Street and popping into its cute shops, I ventured over to the notorious Blair Street.

In its heyday, Silverton’s Blair Street was lined with bordellos and saloons.  The streets were raucous and bawdy with the hardworking miners who were happy to escape the darkness of the mines.  Nowadays, the street is fairly quiet except when the train from Durango comes in.

The oldest portion of Natalia’s/The Scarlet House composite structure was built in 1883, and known as the infamous 557, one of the first dens of iniquity on Blair Street. Enlarged in 1886 to add the right-hand segment, the building was most widely known as Mattie’s Place, or the Welcome Station.  The ground floor has been a saloon, movie theater, and restaurant.

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Natalia’s 1912 Restaurant

The Shady Lady Saloon was likely built in the late 1890s.  Its premises were occupied by “Mamie Murphy” and “Kate Starr,” but the best-remembered madam was “Jew Fanny,” considered a good friend by Silvertonians from all walks of life.

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Shady Lady Saloon

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Artistic Blacksmithing

The Old Town Square contains some of the oldest buildings in San Juan County.

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Old Town Square

The front portion of Professor Shutterbug’s contained the oldest bordello on Blair Street.

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Professor Shutterbug’s Old Thyme Portraits

The other cabins in the Old Town Square include the original San Juan County Courthouse from Howardsville and miner’s cabins from Eureka.

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Indian at Old Town Square

The Bent Elbow Hotel, Restaurant and Saloon was erected in 1907 and was originally known as the Florence Saloon, operated until 1918.

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Bent Elbow

One of the newer buildings on Blair Street, the Old Arcade was built in 1929, and has been used at various times as a pool hall, a saloon, and a gambling house.

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Old Arcade Trading Co.

The Villa Dallavalle Inn was one of the first substantial buildings on Blair Street, built in 1901 by John and Domenica Dallavalle. It housed a saloon and boardinghouse for years.

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Villa Dallavalle Inn

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Hungry Moose Bar & Grill

The Old Town Jail is not the oldest jail in the community, but this wooden version was the first substantial prison built by the town of Silverton in 1883.

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Silverton Jail

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Villa Dallavalle Inn

I made my way back to Greene Street, where I walked to the end and back to my car.

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Greene Street

The Town Hall was built in 1909 using native stone. It was restored in 1976 with the assistance of a grant from the National Park Service.

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Town Hall

At the end of Greene Street is a Museum, County Jail, Mining Heritage Center. The Courthouse was built in 1907. Newly renovated, it is still in use.

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Museum at Courthouse Square

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boarding house at Courthouse Square

Back in my car, I ate my leftover momos and garlic naan, which had warmed up nicely on the dashboard, and headed north on the San Juan Skyway toward my next destination, Ouray.

*Saturday, May 19, 2018*

Information above is from various signs along the road and a pamphlet of a Downtown Silverton Walking Tour.

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

“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 20-30 photos and to write less than 500-800 words about any travel-related photography intention you set for yourself. Include the link in the comments below by Wednesday, March 6 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Thursday, March 7, 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!

  • Carol, of The Eternal Traveler, posted some great photos of the Black Creek Pioneer Village in the suburbs of Toronto, Canada.
    • Welcome to 1867!
  • Meg, of wordsandimages, went out into the town of Stanthorpe armed with intentions to find “signs, green, shop displays, vibrant colours, people, … houses, and … a richness of street art.”
    • Photoshoot Stanthorpe

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

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  • Camino de Santiago
  • Finisterre
  • International Travel

on journey: muxía to finisterre

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 February 20, 2019

I had been told by the woman at Tourist Information in Muxía that the bus for Cee left at 10:45.  She was wrong, as I found out when I arrived at the appointed time in front of the “Don Quijote” café.  I waited and waited, standing at the curb in the cold morning air. Finally, I went inside the café to inquire about it.  It turned out the bus wouldn’t arrive until 11:35.  It wasn’t a long ride, as we arrived in Cee at 12:10.

While waiting for the 12:40 bus to Finisterre at Cee’s bus station, a Hungarian woman who spoke little English pointed to a shop and indicated that I should watch her bag for her while she went inside.  I nodded that I would watch it, although I’d felt it was a command rather than a request. I wanted to use the bathroom in the bus station before the next bus came, but I was held hostage to this bag.  She seemed to stay in the shop forever.  I didn’t care for being saddled with this responsibility. When the woman finally came out of the shop, she was accompanied by another woman. The two of them had an extended conversation in Hungarian, while I made my escape to the ladies’ room. I wondered how it could be that this Hungarian woman, stopping briefly at this Spanish bus station, knew another Hungarian woman in a shop.  They appeared to know each other quite well.

I arrived in Finisterre at 1:00.  Cape Finisterre (Galician: Cabo Fisterra) is a rock-bound peninsula on the west coast of Galicia. In Roman times, it was believed to be the end of the known world.  The name Finisterre derives from the Latin finis terrae, meaning “end of the earth.”  It is sometimes said to be the westernmost point of the Iberian Peninsula. However, Cabo da Roca in Portugal is about 16.5 km (10.3 miles) further west and thus the westernmost point of continental Europe.  Even in Spain, Cabo Touriñán is farther west.  The Cape of Finisterre was distinguished in 2007 with the European Heritage Label.

Many pilgrims walk 4-5 more days from Santiago to reach Finisterre.  I had planned from the beginning to take the bus rather than walk.

The bus deposited us next to Le Monument à Fistérra.  I had no idea where my hotel, Hotel Langosteira, was located, so I wandered around thinking I might just happen upon it. I didn’t, so I stopped at one of the harbor-side open-air cafes, Puerto, to eat lunch and use the free wi-fi. I enjoyed a mozzarella and tomato salad and a cerveza limón, and found the general direction of the hotel on my GPS.  It was quite a long trudge up a steep hill, at the furthest possible end of town from the harbor.

At the hotel, I took a 2-hour nap as I was exhausted and still quite sick.  After, I walked down by the marina to take pictures. I hoped to eat at a cute vegetarian restaurant but was informed they closed at 5:30.  I went to the supermarket and bought Doritos as I was told the restaurants on the marina didn’t open until 8:30.  I went back to my room, ate the Doritos and rested again.  As I still felt quite miserable, I was too lazy to go back into the town (and walk back up the steep hill again), so I never ate anything else for dinner.

It was a long and intolerable night.  Post-nasal drip was a constant irritant, leaving me coughing and clearing my throat all night. The night dragged on, as I had no books with me and the TV didn’t seem to work. I hadn’t seen a single familiar face in town. My cold seemed to be getting worse, not better.

I had reserved two nights in Finisterre; the next day I planned to walk 3.5km each way to the lighthouse that marked the “end of the world.” I hoped I’d feel up to that by the morning.

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Finisterre statue

Finisterre has a population of about 5,000, mostly seafaring people. The fishing port is the chief place of employment. Mainly sailors fish, catching hake, mackerel, octopus, pout, turbot, spider crab and lobster.

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marina in Finisterre

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anchor in Finisterre

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Casa do Concello

Hotel Langosteira
Hotel Langosteira
my room at Hotel Langosteira
my room at Hotel Langosteira

After a long nap, I made my way back down to the marina.

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marina in Finisterre

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marina in Finisterre

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marina in Finisterre

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marina in Finisterre

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marina in Finisterre

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marina in Finisterre

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marina in Finisterre

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marina in Finisterre

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marina in Finisterre

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marina in Finisterre

marina at Finisterre
marina at Finisterre
streets of Finisterre
streets of Finisterre

*Tuesday, October 23, 2018*

*Steps: 8,388, or 3.44 miles

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

“ON JOURNEY” INVITATION: I invite you to write a post on your own blog about the journey itself for a recently visited specific destination. You could write about the journey you hope to take in the year ahead.  If you don’t have a blog, I invite you to write in the comments.

Include the link in the comments below by Tuesday, March 19 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Wednesday, March 20, I’ll include your links in that post.

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

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!

  • Jude, of Travel Words, wrote a tale about a stressful journey on a train from Tunis to Casablanca.
    • On Journey

Many thanks to all of you who wrote posts about the journey. I’m inspired by all of you! 🙂

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  • American Road Trips
  • Four Corners Road Trip
  • Hikes & Walks

a stroll around moab

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 February 17, 2019

In Moab, Utah, we stayed three nights in an Airbnb room in an adobe house owned by Linda and Kim.  One morning, after breakfast outdoors on the patio, Linda took us for a stroll around her beautiful property, including her amazing gardens.

We wandered amidst unexpected greenery in an otherwise arid landscape.  A horse sculpture’s yellow mane glowed in the sunlight.  The chain fruit cholla, also known as the jumping cholla for its cacti spines that easily detach and cling tenaciously to unsuspecting wanderers, stood poised, waiting for us to wander too close.

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horse sculpture in the garden

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jumping cholla

The adobe house itself was defined by its southwestern decor, its cowboy and Native American theme: Navajo rugs with desert landscape themes, a cowboy hat and boot made of rusty twisted fence wire, a dream catcher, dancing bronze Indians, colorful medicine men, lampshades with Indian motifs, a giant verdigris lizard doorstop, a bronze night light with a lizard cutout.

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Lazy B’s

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jumping cholla

Wandering through the garden, we found Mormon tea, used as a beverage, a “spring” tonic, and medicine, often taken for sexually transmitted diseases, as well as colds or kidney disorders. Ghost honeysuckle basked under a ramada (similar to a pergola) – pale green flat clover-like leaves with pale yellow-green flowers.  The garden was tossed about with sagebrush, tumbleweed, chocolate (which smells like chocolate but looks like a yellow coneflower), prickly pear cactus, yucca, desert globemallow, Maximilian sunflowers, and Apache plume with bees buzzing around it.  We found small trees: peach, apple, and cherry trees, cottonwoods, with their bright glowing green leaves on white barked trunks, birch and aspen trees, and willows which Kim insisted make a huge mess.  Linda marveled that goldfinches and orioles visited frequently.

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Ghost honeysuckle

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cacti

Kim’s electric train choo-chooed around on a platform he built on raised railroad ties.  We met Bernard the rabbit.  Later a smaller bunny hopped past; Kim called it Bernadette or Bernard Junior.

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garden at Lazy B’s

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Kim’s electric train

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Desert globemallow

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Lazy B’s garden

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garden and train tracks

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prickly pear cactus

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ghost honeysuckle

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yucca

After spending the day at Canyonlands National Park, we returned to Moab, where, after enjoying quesdillas at Quesadilla Mobilla, we strolled around the small town.  At Lema’s Kokopelli Gallery, we bought a cool rusty owl for our screened porch, and some Navajo earrings for me.  At the amazing Hogan Trading Company, we bought a small water lily-shaped water fountain for our porch.

At Yeti’s Frozen Blast, we bought cones, mine a brown sugar cinnamon ice cream, Mike’s a blueberry basil gelato. We wandered the town, licking our cones, while three busloads of middle school students from Salt Lake City swarmed around us.  As in CocoRosie’s song, “Lemonade,” we “ate ice cream in a desert dream.”

The next day, we would head south.

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Yeti’s

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Jailhouse Cafe

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TomTill Gallery

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Miguel’s Baja Grill

*Thursday, May 10, 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: Punta del Moral.

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  • Braga
  • International Travel
  • Portugal

braga, portugal: rendezvous

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 February 12, 2019

The day had come for our rendezvous. I had just finished walking 799km on the Camino de Santiago, with bus trip interludes to Muxía and Finisterre, finally returning to Santiago de Compostela. It was the day after my 63rd birthday and I was due to meet my husband in Braga.

Enamored of Portugal as I was from my first visit there in 2013 (Portugal), my enthusiasm had infected my husband.  I had been feeling a fierce nostalgia for the sea, craving the castles and gardens of Sintra, longing for azulejo-covered buildings, dreaming of the red rooftops of Lisbon, tasting pastel de nata and fresh seafood.

Mike flew overnight from Washington, D.C. and drove a MINI Clubman from Lisbon to Braga, while I took a taxi to the bus station in Santiago, then the 10:00 ALSA bus to Porto, stopping 20 minutes in Vigo, Spain, and arriving at 11:30 Portugal time.  With the time change and the stop, it took me about two hours, while Mike’s drive was over four hours on top of his overnight flight.

The enduring light of the Spanish countryside followed the ALSA bus as we left behind hilly whitewashed villages in Spain and rode into the lush scenery of Portugal.  The bus pulled in to a bus depot in Vigo, and I was relieved, never knowing when trapped on buses in foreign lands when bathroom stops would be forthcoming.

When we passengers boarded the bus again, I noticed a welcome solace settle over me. I didn’t have to walk if I didn’t want to (although I could, and would!), I would have my husband to lean on, and I could wear my regular street clothes for the first time in 55 days. Oh, how much I pined for clothes other than the hiking clothes I’d been wearing on the Camino!

Looking out the windows of the bus, I felt riveted by the changing countryside and watched through the windows with wonder – the hilltop towns, the red roofs, the green hills.

Next stop was Braga, Portugal’s third largest city, founded first by the Celts and then conquered in 136 BC by the Romans, who christened it Bracara Augusta. Later the Moors moved in (715 AD) and later still, Fernando I, king of Castilla y Leon, reconquered the city in 1040.

Braga is famous for having the first cathedral in the country; it is an elegant town with ancient narrow lanes, an upscale old center with lively cafes and trim boutiques, restaurants and low-key bars.  Home to the Universidade do Minho, it was designated the European Youth Capital in 2012. Today’s conservative town has about 192,000 residents.

I was the only one on the bus to get off; everyone else was bound for Porto. I taxied to Domus 26 Guesthouse with a confused driver, where I was warmly welcomed by the owner, Conceiçao.  The room wasn’t ready, and hunger had hit me hard, so she directed me to brac Restaurante, where I enjoyed an amazing buffet lunch of cold salads, hot soup, hot dishes, and dessert, all for 9€.

Feeling full, I joined tourists and residents on the cobblestone streets, whiling away the time until I could check into my room.  I meandered past azulejo-tiled buildings, the Sé Cathedral, the chapel of Nossa Senhora da Torre and St. Paul’s Church.  I followed a couple of lovebirds down the street.

Finally, after checking in to our spacious pink and white room, I waited for Mike to arrive with himself, the car, and the suitcase I’d packed before I left for the Camino. I relaxed on the bed, covering myself with a blanket, hoping for a nap but too excited to sleep. I hopped up numerous times to stand on the balcony, watching for his arrival. He called to say he was driving around in circles, the GPS not giving him proper directions to the guesthouse.  I went out to the street and walked up and down, telling him to look for me on the street near the cathedral.  He thought another church he’d found was the cathedral, and he kept driving around that.  Finally, after a good long time with me pacing around on the street, he arrived, after I told him to put “brac Restaurante” into the GPS.

We showered and he relaxed a bit after his long journey.  I was tickled to change into new clothes from the suitcase he’d brought. We ventured out to the town past colorful tiled buildings, hanging laundry, mannequins in mod clothes on balconies, a man with a stuffed fish hanging in front of his face, a bicycle with a basket of flowers on the handlebars at Casa Centenaria, a jacaranda tree bursting with birdsong, café tables under umbrellas, the Cathedral and the BRAGA sign, where we both posed for pictures. We met Francisco Sanches, with his round frilly collar, beside a church with his name on it. We stopped into Igreja de Santa Cruz, and then walked into the old town to find dinner.

On our way, Mike stopped to marvel over a huge tree in the courtyard of a hotel, how it must be over 100 years old.  A Portuguese woman standing nearby volunteered to walk into the hotel and ask how old it was. They supposedly “told” her it was over 100.  Then she looked like she was going to cry, said she hated to ask, but could we give her some money for dinner? I felt bad for Mike because he so often believes in the goodness of people and was caught up in marveling over this tree with this strange woman.  In the end, she was faking it just to hit us up for money.  I wasn’t shocked as I don’t trust people easily and I had felt something like that coming.  We ended up giving her 10€, but I could tell Mike felt he’d been duped.

We enjoyed a very fancy multi-coursed meal at Cozinha de Sé, a Michelin Guide restaurant billed as rustic-modern style with traditional Portuguese dishes.  I enjoyed Arroz de Tamboril, or rice monkfish.

*Friday, October 26, 2018*

Steps: 9,188 (3.89 miles)

******

See below for photos and historical facts and figures, if you’re interested. 🙂

Taking the 10:00 ALSA bus from Santiago to Porto, we stopped 20 minutes in Vigo, Spain, and arrived in Braga at 11:30 Portugal time.

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bus station in Vigo, Spain

Domus 26 Guesthouse was a lovely guesthouse with a spacious room and fabulous breakfast.

Domus 26 Guesthouse
Domus 26 Guesthouse
our room at Domus 26 Guesthouse
our room at Domus 26 Guesthouse
our room at Domus 26 Guesthouse
our room at Domus 26 Guesthouse

I enjoyed an expansive and delicious buffet at brac.

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salad table at buffet lunch at brac

The Sé Cathedral is the oldest in Portugal, devoted to St. Mary of Braga.  Its façade is the result of a Baroque renovation in 1723.

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Sé Cathedral

So many façades throughout Portugal are covered in azulejos.

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azulejo-covered buildings

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street in Braga

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colorful Braga

St. Paul’s Square is the nave of an open air oratory.  The chapel of Nossa Senhora da Torre was built in thanksgiving to the Virgin for having saved the city from the earthquake of 1755.

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Nossa Senhora da Torre

St. Paul’s Church, with its austere façade, was founded in 1560 and handed over to the Jesuits by Archbishop D. Frei Bartolomeu dos Mártires (Friar Bartholomew of the martyrs).

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St. Paul’s Church

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Portuguese lovebirds

azulejo-covered buildings
azulejo-covered buildings
Largo do Paço
Largo do Paço
azulejos
azulejos
relief near the Sé
relief near the Sé

I love the weathered buildings in Portugal, such as the Junta de Freguesia (Parish Council).

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Junta de Freguesia

We were greeted by a statue of Francisco Sanches, who was born in Galicia, Spain, but was baptized in Braga in 1551. His father was Spanish and his mother Portuguese. He studied in Braga until he was 12, when he moved with his parents to Bordeaux to escape the surveillance of the Portuguese Inquisition. After 1575, he ended up as a professor of philosophy and medicine at the University of Toulouse.

balcony characters
balcony characters
a man with a fish head
a man with a fish head
Francisco Sanches
Francisco Sanches
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We posed for pictures in the letters of the BRAGA sign in front of the Igreja do Hospital de S. Marcos.  This site is dedicated to St. Mark and has traces of a late Baroque structure.  It also has classical motifs in its façade.

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BRAGA sign in front of the Igreja do Hospital de S. Marcos

Igreja de Santa Cruz is an example of the work of a devoted brotherhood and expresses the passion of Christ. It was build around the first quarter of the 17th century.

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Igreja de Santa Cruz

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inside Igreja de Santa Cruz

inside Igreja de Santa Cruz
inside Igreja de Santa Cruz
inside Igreja de Santa Cruz
inside Igreja de Santa Cruz
inside Igreja de Santa Cruz
inside Igreja de Santa Cruz
inside Igreja de Santa Cruz
inside Igreja de Santa Cruz
inside Igreja de Santa Cruz
inside Igreja de Santa Cruz

Cozinha da SÉ is a Michelin-starred restaurant where we enjoyed a multi-course meal at  the end of our rendezvous day. 🙂

me at Cozinha da SÉ
me at Cozinha da SÉ
Mike at Cozinha da SÉ
Mike at Cozinha da SÉ

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

“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) crave, taste, pine, cover, tickle. √

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, February 25 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this invitation on Tuesday, February 26, 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. 🙂

  • Pauline, from Living in Paradise…, wrote about the destructive nature of the strangler vine.
    • The unexpected drama in the Rainforest…
  • Jude, of Travel Words, shared a story of a time she was ousted from a friend’s home in South Africa and came to appreciate the kindness of strangers.
    • The Kindness of Strangers

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

 

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  • Camino de Santiago
  • Hikes & Walks
  • International Travel

{camino: day 5} a rest day in pamplona

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 February 10, 2019

I slept well despite having a top bunk, and I didn’t get going to explore Pamplona until 10:00.  I was thrilled to toss aside my hiking boots for a day and to wear the lightweight sandals I’d worn traipsing all over Japan. I walked up along the city wall and stopped at a shady bench to write in my journal and admire the views.  It would turn out I’d spend the entire day alone.

Pamplona is a university city with an expanding population of about 200,000 and long-standing ties to the Camino de Santiago.

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view over Pamplona from atop the city walls

I continued my walk along the wall, and then wandered aimlessly through the colorful city streets.

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Pamplona’s colorful streets

Church of San Fermín de Aldapa
Church of San Fermín de Aldapa
Street art/graffiti
Street art/graffiti
wrought iron door
wrought iron door
streets of Pamplona
streets of Pamplona
streets of Pamplona
streets of Pamplona
streets of Pamplona
streets of Pamplona

I stopped at a small tapas bar called Dom Luis and sat at the bar enjoying tapas – smoked salmon and avocado on toast with a refreshing white wine. It was so delicious, I ordered another: a phyllo bundle filled with potatoes and mushrooms and topped with a runny-yolked egg.  Yum! It was quite hot today, about 85°F, so I was happy to sit inside, although the bar was open to the streets.

Immediately after I sat down, a huge parade cavorted past the bar, with oversized medieval characters dancing and turning to rousing band music. It was a wild spectacle, with whole Spanish families flowing happily along, some dressed to the hilt, some in costume, and others in lightweight summer clothes.

Apparently, this festival is the Privilege of the Union, which commemorates the unification of the three parts of the city (La Navarrería, San Cernín and San Nicolás) into one in a treaty signed in 1423 by King Carlos III.  Before this unification, Camino pilgrims had been enticed to settle in Pamplona under special status, leading to hostilities between the pilgrim settlers and native inhabitants. With the Privilege of the Union, special status was extended to all parts of the disgruntled factions of the city, beginning an era of cooperation.

Each of the three boroughs at that time lost their individual walls and individual governments and opted to be governed by a single council and enclosed within the same city walls.

Dom Luis
Dom Luis
smoked salmon and avocado tapas
smoked salmon and avocado tapas
characters in the parade
characters in the parade
medieval characters
medieval characters
oversized medieval characters
oversized medieval characters
another tapas bar
another tapas bar

Feeling quite relaxed after the wine, I continued to wander around the town, around Plaza del Castillo, Pamplona’s main square with covered arcades and shops, and past the 12th century Iglesia de San Nicolas.  I ran into several pilgrims, people I’d connected and spent time with since St. Jean, as they were exchanging numbers and making dinner plans. They seemed all caught up with one another, and I felt like an interloper. No invitation to join was forthcoming, so I continued on my way.  I have never been one to linger where I don’t feel welcome, and I’ve also never been one to chase after people.  I’d always rather bow out gracefully and let people have their space.

Plaza del Castillo
Plaza del Castillo
Plaza del Castillo
Plaza del Castillo

Continuing to wander, I came across legendary streets of cuesta de Santa Domingo and calle Estafeta where they have the  running of the bulls during the San Fermín festival annually from July 6-14. This festival was made famous with the 1926 publication of Ernest Hemingway’s novel The Sun Also Rises.

I found the Hemingway Paseo, the bull ring, Plaza de Toros, and the famous monument to bull running. Pamplona’s bull ring was rebuilt in 1923. It seats 19,529 and is the third largest in the world, after the bull rings of Mexico and Madrid.

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Plaza de Toros

statue of Hemingway on Paseo Ernest Hemingway
statue of Hemingway on Paseo Ernest Hemingway
statue of the running of the bulls
statue of the running of the bulls
statue of the running of the bulls
statue of the running of the bulls
statue of the running of the bulls
statue of the running of the bulls
statue of the running of the bulls
statue of the running of the bulls
statue of the running of the bulls
statue of the running of the bulls

The monument to bull running is impressively evocative and vivid with its violent and frightening details.

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statue of the running of the bulls

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statue of the running of the bulls

After leaving the bull running area, I got caught in another parade of huge-headed figures marching and dancing in the streets, men on fake horses flogging people with sponges attached to sticks, whole Spanish families eating tapas and drinking wine and beer, bands playing lively tunes, men in matching uniforms clearing the streets. What a lively place to be, and quite by accident!

characters in the festival parade
characters in the festival parade
characters in the festival parade
characters in the festival parade
characters in the festival parade
characters in the festival parade
characters in the festival parade
characters in the festival parade

The streets reverberated with loud music, to which the characters were dancing.  Locals clapped, laughed and took pictures while having the time of their lives.

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festival characters

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royalty on parade

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a mean-looking character

After the crowds passed, I continued wandering around the city.

streets of Pamplona
streets of Pamplona
The Cathedral of Santa María
The Cathedral of Santa María
Pamplona
Pamplona
festive buildings
festive buildings
graffiti
graffiti
square in Pamplona
square in Pamplona

I walked past the Iglesia de San Saturnino, named after the patron saint of Pamplona.  Saturnin was the first evangelist of the city. Originally Romanesque in style, it is now more Gothic in appearance.

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Iglesia de San Saturnino

The Citadel is the walled fortification built between 1571 and 1645 under the orders of King Felipe II of Spain, with a layout designed by an Italian military engineer. A sophisticated defensive system was devised, a rectangular pentagon, or star shape, with five bastions at the corners. The layout was supposed to make it impregnable. It is regarded as the finest example of military architecture from the Spanish Renaissance.

In the 20th century, it was converted to a park and is often used for shows and art displays.

Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel
Citadel

It was quite hot walking around in the sun at the Citadel, so I sat for a while on a bench to orient myself.  While looking at my guidebook pages, I saw that I would be passing the Citadel tomorrow morning on my way out of Pamplona.  I was always happy to figure out my route out of a town the day before I started my walk the next morning.

I continued on through the leafy Parque de la Taconera, with its beautiful flower beds and café and past a statue back toward my albergue.  After relaxing a bit, I made my way up to the city walls, where I stopped at a café for a drink and some people-watching.

heading back to the city walls
heading back to the city walls
the city walls
the city walls
atop the city walls
atop the city walls
walking around the perimeter of the city
walking around the perimeter of the city

I stopped into the Church of San Lorenzo, where I sat in silence for a while, offering up prayers of gratitude and supplication, asking for peace, self-fulfillment, and joy for myself and all my family and friends.

img_4768

Church of San Lorenzo

inside the Church of San Lorenzo
inside the Church of San Lorenzo
inside the Church of San Lorenzo
inside the Church of San Lorenzo
inside the Church of San Lorenzo
inside the Church of San Lorenzo

It seemed I was walking around in circles and several times felt totally disoriented. The town was splashed everywhere with graffiti.  The town hall, or Casa Consistorial, dominated a small square with its baroque façade.

graffiti
graffiti
City Hall Pamplona
City Hall Pamplona

Since the Gothic 15th century Cathedral of Santa María la Real had been closed when I dropped by earlier, I made my way back to it.  It was open, but no one was manning the desk, thus I was unable to get a stamp for my credenciale. I wandered around the Cathedral, stopping to admire the alabaster mausoleum of Carlos III El Noble and his wife Leonor of Navarre, with their idealized expressions, in the main nave.  The monarchs of Spain used to be crowned here, and at one time it was the seat of the parliament of Navarre.

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Cathedral of Santa María

inside the Cathedral of Santa María
inside the Cathedral of Santa María
inside the Cathedral of Santa María
inside the Cathedral of Santa María
inside the Cathedral of Santa María
inside the Cathedral of Santa María

I went in search of a quiet street and dipped into the adorable Café de Pablo, where I enjoyed a tinto verrano (red wine with lemonade) and tapas – goat cheese, caramelized onions and green peppers on toast – and a jambon sandwich.

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a quiet side street of colorful buildings

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tapas: goat cheese, caramelized onions and green peppers on toast

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Pamplona streets

I didn’t really get much “rest” during my first “rest day” on the Camino, as I walked over six miles. Early in the evening, it started raining with a vengeance, and it was predicted to be pouring in the morning, when I would walk to Muruzábal.

*Day 5: Saturday, September 8, 2018*

*14,734 steps, or 6.24 miles: wandering around Pamplona*

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: Remember Culatra?

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  • American Road Trips
  • Colorado
  • Colorado Towns

colorado towns: durango

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 February 7, 2019

After leaving the Four Corners Monument late in the day, I drove into Colorado, past the sign “Welcome to Colorful Colorado,”  over the San Juan River and between the Ute Mountains.   Dawes sang:

Most people don’t talk enough about the love in their hearts
But she doesn’t know most people feel that same way

~”Most People”

Out my window, tan grasses danced, buttes jutted into blue sky to the west and south, green mountains undulated to the north. Past Aztec Creek, a white cross by the highway spelled “Willie” in red.  Flowers brightened Willie’s cross.  Canyons wound through a strange rounded land.  Solid tan buttes, breathtaking, loomed ahead at Navajo Springs. I sped by Tawaoc, Cross Creek, the sprawling Ute Mountain Casino.  This place is home to the Ute Mountain Tribe.

Before reaching Cortez, the Thunderbird Trading Company beckoned.  A sign enticed with “Stay Retro at the Retro Inn,” but I was headed to Durango.  The landscape greened past the Antique Corral.  Nature, in the form of aggressive weeds and vines, swallowed derelict hotels and liquor stores, but G-Whil Liquors buzzed with business.

I was beckoned to stay in Cortez by the El Capri Hotel, the Motel Tomahawk, Mi Mexico Restaurant, Fiesta Twin Cinemas, Cowboy Town, and the Retro Inn.  I drove right past them all.

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Retro Inn in Cortez

Later, after I’d spend two days driving the San Juan Skyway Scenic Byway — a loop that circles through the San Juan Mountains through Silverton, Ouray and Telluride — I’d be driving this route again on my way to Mesa Verde National Park.  But on this day, I bypassed the sign for Mesa Verde, the Mancos Valley, Historic Mancos, the Echo Basin Resort.  Lead-bottomed white clouds hovered in a scarlet ocher sky in the early evening light.

Fifteen miles before Durango, in a tree along the roadside, an upside-down yellow metal bicycle and a white skeleton dangled from a tree.  The white bark of aspens and cottonwoods glowed in the evening light and a weathered barn hunkered down in the valley.

In Durango, where it suddenly grew chilly, I checked into the Adventure Inn, changed quickly into warmer clothes, and went downtown in search of The Living Tree for dinner, recommended by the receptionist.  It was closed. Instead I ate momos and garlic naan, washed down with a cold beer, at Himalayan Kitchen: Nepalese, Tibetan and Indian cuisine.  Walking up and down Durango’s charming Main Avenue, lined with charming shops, restaurants and bars, I noted that homes advertised in real estate windows were outrageously expensive.  What a cost to live in such a beautiful place.

At breakfast the next morning, the owner of the Adventure Inn showed videos he’d taken last August in the hotel parking lot.  The first one showed a deer walking around.  The second showed a bear cub.  The third showed a large brown bear, strutting around the parking lot as if he owned the joint, at 6:45 a.m., fifteen minutes before breakfast is regularly served at the hotel.

I left the hotel at 8:20 because I had a long drive ahead of me, and I wanted to walk around Durango in the sunlight before it got crowded. On my way downtown, I passed the Caboose Motel, the Spanish Trails Inn, Gandolf’s Smoke Shop, Your Flesh Tattoo, and the flowing Animas River.

On Main Avenue, I found a wall mural of native Jack Dempsey, who reigned as world heavyweight boxer from 1919 to 1926, on the brick wall of the El Rancho Tavern.  Another mural of Main St., Durango circa 1890, showed a main street crowded with horses, buggies, teepees and a wall sign for 15¢ Star Tobacco.  The brick side of the Olde Tymer’s Cafe sported an old hand-painted sign for S.G. Wall Druggists.  Shops hinted at Durango’s sporting and healthy lifestyle: Spaaah Shop, Grassburger, The Living Tree.  The cowboy mentality with a twist of humor was thrown in: the Lone Spur Cafe, The Diamond Belle Saloon, a cowboy sculpture, The Original Durango Dawg House, Derailed Pour House.  Home decor shops were named Tippy & Canoe, l i v e l y (a boutique), and Eureka! Historic hotels lined the main street: The General Palmer Hotel, billed as Durango’s premier Victorian lodging, and the Strater Hotel, with “the world’s largest collection of Victorian antique walnut furniture,” stood proudly on street corners.

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Caboose Motel

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El Rancho Tavern

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Olde Tymer’s Cafe

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Himalayan Kitchen

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Main Street in Durango

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Spaaah Shop

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Eureka!

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Brown’s Shoe Co.

 

Durango
Durango
Silverton
Silverton

The Strater Hotel has “the world’s largest collection of Victorian antique walnut furniture.”

img_1978

Strater Hotel

 

Derailed Pour House
Derailed Pour House
Diamond Belle Saloon
Diamond Belle Saloon
cowboy sculpture
cowboy sculpture
Lone Spur Cafe
Lone Spur Cafe
The Original Durango Dawg House
The Original Durango Dawg House
Living Tree
Living Tree
Grassburger
Grassburger
l i v e l y (a boutique)
l i v e l y (a boutique)
The General Palmer Hotel
The General Palmer Hotel
Toh-Atin
Toh-Atin

The Toh-Atin Gallery, established in 1957, is recognized as a quality dealer in Native American and Southwest Art.

img_2008.jpg

Toh-Atin

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Main St., Durango circa 1890

It was a beautiful morning and I was bowled over by Durango’s charm. But the road was calling, and I had to heed the call. Passing the Siesta Motel (Free Rooms: Just Kidding), I knew I wouldn’t enjoy a siesta until later that evening, when I reached Telluride.

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Siesta Motel

Durango was formed in 1881 during the local gold rush when the Denver and Rio Grande Railway connected the town to Denver by rail. In July of 1882, a 45-mile track connected Durango with Silverton, which allowed ore to be hauled with greater speed and less cost.  After the Silver Panic of 1893, the Great Depression of the 1930s and World War II, many railroads went bankrupt, but Durango and Silverton weathered the Depression and stayed strong.  In the 1950s, Hollywood discovered the town and its western charm, and the area and the steam train became the setting for numerous movies.

Durango continues to thrive today with its craft breweries and distilleries, farms and dude ranches, and its adventure outfitters, offering horseback riding, biking, water sports, ziplining, skiiing, snowboarding, snowmobiling, dogsledding, sleigh rides, hiking, rock climbing, jeep tours and fishing.  The Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad and the town’s proximity to the San Juan Skyway make it a convenient and beautiful all-around destination.

I wished I’d had more time here, and I hoped I could go back to explore one day.

*Friday — Saturday, May 18 & 19, 2018*

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

“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 500-1,000 words about any travel-related photography intention you set for yourself. Include the link in the comments below by Wednesday, February 20 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Thursday, February 21, 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!

  • Sue, of WordsVisual, posted some painterly photos of fields in Provence, and elsewhere.
    • Distant fields of Poppies and Broom, and some others
  • Jude, of Living on the Edge, posted some wonderful photos of the town and harbor of St. Ives, with some colorful boat details.
    • Winter in St Ives

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

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  • France
  • International Travel
  • Languedoc-Roussillon

on returning home from france in 2003

wanderessence1025's avatar wanderessence1025 February 4, 2019

Two weeks in the south of France and Paris. Two weeks exploring the onion-domed Russian Cathedral; Chagall, Monet and Renior paintings; and Van Gogh’s hospital room. Two weeks driving a rented Citroen past vineyards with their ancient, gnarled vines, standing like maimed soldiers in rows fading to pinpoints on the horizon. Two weeks shading our eyes from bursts of red poppies and yellow broom glowing in fields.  Two weeks walking under canopies of plane trees, with their speckled but smooth bark, their amputated branches. Two weeks of palm trees, fig trees and yellow-flowering syringa trees. Two weeks mesmerized by the silhouettes of Florentine cypress trees under a full moon as we drove to Sante Affrique. Two weeks admiring the Pont du Gard and the Abbey de Fontfroide, with stairs worn smooth by centuries of monks’ feet. Two weeks baking in the ochre cliffs of Roussillon, collecting ochre dust on our shoes.  Two weeks climbing a path scented in boxwood to the fortress ruins of Montsegur, where in 1244, the Cathars, a religious sect that renounced worldly goods, were burned en masse in a bonfire at the foot of the pog when they refused to renounce their faith. Two weeks emerging from an underground movie theater on the Champs Elysses, weeping after watching The Hours. Two weeks wandering through Paris: the Latin Quarter, Notre Dame, the Eiffel Tower, the Museé d’Orsay, the Louvre, and the Basilique du Sacré Coeur at Montmartre.

Two weeks eating baguettes, canard confit, foie gras, olives, plump and perfectly red strawberries, croissants, pain du chocolat, galettes, glacé and dessert crêpes. Two weeks drinking pastis, the licorice-flavored drink favored by Hemingway. Two weeks stopping in shops named for the food items sold: fromagerie, boulangerie, charcuterie, boucherie.

Two weeks meandering through markets where vendors offered sun-kissed table linens, cloves of garlic tied in twine, honey (miel de lavande), jellies (confiture de framboise, confiture de rhubarbe), accordions of colorful postcards, old fun junk (brocante), chalkboards framed in whitewashed barn wood, handmade paper, and cheeses of every variety: boursin, brie, cantal, camembert, roquefort, emmental, gruyere.

Two weeks to fumble with a French phrase book and practice our pathetic French and to listen to Paris Combo’s “Living-room,” Bob Marley’s “Buffalo soldier in the heart of America,” Norah Jones singing “Come Away with Me,” and Florent Pagney’s “Ma Liberté de Pense.”

Two weeks to wear blue & cream flowered board pants, apple green capris, flowered sleeveless tops, and jaunty French scarves. Two weeks to stay in bed & breakfasts and pigeon lofts and hotels with lace-curtained windows opening onto balconies.  Two weeks making buck-toothed chipmunk faces into a half mirror in the tiny triangular elevator with silver folding accordion doors in our Paris hotel, and laughing in loose silliness at ourselves.

Two weeks to possess beauty by buying postcards, brochures, a yellow glazed pottery bowl, a square apple green plate, a chintz-patterned box, bars of colorful soap, a tablecloth, scarves, honey, jellies and place mats.

Two weeks to dream of speaking perfect French, looking stylishly Parisian, drinking wine at sidewalk cafés and writing in journals that would eventually become novels.

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cliffs of Rousillon

020_18a

Mike in Rousillon

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south of France

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field of poppies & broom

vineyards in the south of France
vineyards in the south of France
me in France 2003
me in France 2003

While traveling, I captured our journey in a handwritten journal, which I kept in great detail. I even made a few lousy sketches in said journal: sketches of a swimming pool, architectural elements at the Abbey de Fontfroide, and coffee pots at Domaine de Rasigous and at Aurifat. I was obviously fascinated by the many ways people make coffee or keep it warm.  Though I tried to do word-paintings, I felt they fell short, as I didn’t use any psychological descriptions to embody a value or mood of importance.  I felt the need to improve on my skills of observation.

I was too lazy to put care into my writing.  Rather than taking time to sit and observe and reflect, I relied on my camera to capture the beauty I saw, but of course photos never capture the essence of a place. I still failed to use all my senses in descriptions.  Taking so many pictures tends to make one lazy about noticing details.

Because it was 2003, just before the digital print age, I ordered two computer disks made from a few negatives, and the rest of the 18 rolls of film I took, I developed and put carefully into three photo albums.  I started with such great intentions, but by the second of the three albums, I never got around to writing notes.

Cordes-sur-Ciel and my journal
Cordes-sur-Ciel and my journal
South of France
South of France
Montsegur
Montsegur
Eiffel Tower
Eiffel Tower
Bruniquel
Bruniquel
journal & photo album
journal & photo album
journal & photo album
journal & photo album

After all was said and done, I finished a second draft of my novel, including scenes from the Cistercian Abbey of Fontfroide and and Montsegur, the novel titled The Scattering Dreams of Stars that is still unpublished and sitting in a file on my computer.

And I dreamed of going to France again, this time to Paris again and to the north, which we did in 2006.

*May 8-23, 2003*

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

“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, March 3 at 1:00 p.m. EST.  When I write my post in response to this challenge on Monday, March 4, 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!

  • Anabel, of The Glasgow Gallivanter, wrote a post about returning home from her Hebridean Hop.
    • Hebridean Hop 22: returning home

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

 

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