Friday, 12 August 2011

Tomorrow I go to Madrid!!

Baby Owen is getting bigger
I leave for Madrid tonight on an overnight bus from San Sebastian.  I will finally be reunited with Aiden and Mark after close to 2 months of being seperated.  I cant wait to see them and I´m excited for WYD.  There are lots of pilgrims here in San Sebastian.  Big groups from Chile and Sweden. 
In the mean time, here are some photos from my travels over the past month. 
The parents of my friend Thomas.  They took really good care of me when I was in Hamburg.


Enjoying herring with Ray. Dutch style.

In Hamburg.

Berlin train station

Halocaust Memorial in Berlin

Prague, a beautiful city.

Me in Prague.


Alix, a good friend of mine who I havent seen in 4 years.

We biked around Geneva, even to the front of the UN.

A mosaic in Lyon depicting the life of St. James.

Hiking with Alix, overlooking Grenoble.

Toulouse, France

Marseille, France

Carcassone

Where I am right now, San Sebastian, Spain.  This is the surfers´ beach.

a quick chat with home base. 

Tuesday, 5 July 2011

Portugal and Seville photos

Although the camino is over for us, we are still doing more travelling throughout the summer until World Youth Day in August.
After Leighton left Lisbon last week to go home, I stuck around for a couple extra days to spend some time with my friend, Mima, and her boyfriend, Andre.  Right now, Aiden and I are in Seville, Spain.
I still haven´t figured out how to upload photos on blogger so that they will still be in order, so until I do they were continue to be in a mixed order.
Cabo da roca, Portugal.  The most westerly point in Europe. 


The view from the roof of our hostel.  It´s great here, there are 2 rooftop terraces and it´s a great spot to get a little breeze in the evening.

Plaza Espana in Seville.

Plaza Major at night in Seville, Spain. Looks like something from another planet.
Visiting Mima in Portugal and enjoying a pasteis de belem
Mima made pancakes from scratch!

Mima´s boyfriend, Andre, taking a turn at flipping pancakes on the pan. 

Camino quotes

Here are a few things that people have said over the camino...


"Anything is possible on the camino."
-Luciano, Italy
There are so many things that can happen during one month on the camino, including finding help at the moment you need it the most.  Around the second week, I was suffering from some pain in my right hip. It was so deep, I had to no idea what to do to help make it better. Should I walk differently? Should I be doing a certain stretch? Eventually, it became so uncomfortable that I was taking ibprofen throughout the day and had to rest it in the evenings.
Then one evening at one of the albergues, an Italian man (not Luciano) noticed that I was walking around holding and ice pack to my hip.  He knew exactly what was wrong, pointed to the woman he was travelling with and said ¨physiotherapist¨.  It was music to my ears! It was the first time I ever had treatment from a physio and it was amazing.  She squeezed my hip, bent my leg back and forth, did something else, and when she asked me to stand up and see if there was any pain, there wasn´t! I couldn´t believe it.  After walking for days in such pain that it could be gone within minutes.  For the rest of the camino, I had no more problems.
Anything is possible on the camino, even finding a physiotherapist in an albergue in the middle of Spain. 
  
"The Camino makes the old people feel young and the young people feel old."
-Someone told this to Leighton on the Portuguese route and he told us
As you can see in my last story, I had a few physical injuries.  Nothing major of course, but, boy, did I feel old.  In the mornings I would walk around with a mild limp because of foot and muscle soreness.  I had body aches.  I tried to avoid stopping when possible because I knew if I did, it would take a while for my body to get going again.
The older people on the other hand, they were wizzing by us.  They would walk more kilometres than us, start earlier than us, many would finish before us.  You couldn´t tell their age by seeing how agile and fit they were on the camino.
In the evenings, you would see all the young pilgrims nursing out blisters and limping around the albergues, while the older pilgrims walked around just fine.
It was really great to see to retirees all doing so well on the camino and I hope that I will be as healthy as they are when I am their age.

"Doing the camino is a priviledge."
-Aiden, my brother

Aiden said this early on in the camino, probably during our first week.  During the final leg of the camino I really understood what he meant.  Not everyone gets a chance to do something like this.  Not everyone has to flexibility to leave home for a month and experience a country in the same way we did.
The experience of the camino was really a true priviledge.  I am so happy I was able to do it and even happier that it was something that I shared with my brothers - Aiden, Mark and Leighton.

Saturday, 25 June 2011

Photos of the last days of Camino

In Lisbon, one last photo of the 3 siblings before Leighton went back to Vancouver.  
My amazing friend Mima who took great care of us while in Portugal.  

Finisterre (the end of the world), a place where some pilgrims continue to after they reach Santiago.  We choose not to walk there, so we rented a car and drove here instead.

enjoying the sunset

Post camino nap on the beach.  It´s incredible to think that just days before this photo we were all still walking through farmland. 

The cathedral at Santiago de Compostella at night.

Kuya Mark giving a brotherly hug to Leighton.  He was also practising his hug to St. James.  There is a statue  in the Cathedral of St. James that the pilgrims can hug and offers prayers of thanks for a safe arrival.

walking through Santiago
Reunited after doing 2 different caminos

Receiving our compostellas.  They include your name in Latin.  Crystal = Crystallem

Leighton with his pilgrim credentials and compostella.

My first view of the cathedral.

Aiden and I sneaking up on Leighton just moments after he arrives at the cathedral.

a good nap spot.

It was cherry season in Spain. A very generous man broke off branches from the cherry trees in his yard and handed them out to the passing pilgrims.  I hope it was his yard.....

Some people thought that we were malo peregrinos (bad pilgrims) because they thought we had broken these branches off someone´s tree.  

Just a tiny shot of the amount of laundry that gets hand washed by all the pilgrims at each of the albergues.  I had to stick my head between 2 lines of strangers´ underwear and socks to take this photo. 

Let me tell you, it´s not always hot in Spain.  Sometimes a sweater, a jacket and a scarf are required to take a siesta.  This albergue is located in the mountains and, in my opinion, was the coldest stop on  our camino. 

Wine is cheap and plentiful.

Tuesday, 21 June 2011

Safe arrival in Santiago de Compostella

We have officially finished the Camino!  We arrived in Santiago de Compostella on Saturday afternoon and Leighton arrived later that evening.  Finally all four of us are together.  Although we are a little exhausted and have muscle and foot soreness we are all in good spirits and happy to have successfully finished our camino. 

Mark is featured on a Filipino travelling website. Click here to read the article. 

Photos and more stories are still to come. 

Sunday, 19 June 2011

Food foto #3


Pulpo (octopus) - pretty good, boiled, surprisingly soft.