Tag: Castrojeriz

  • Camino de Santiago – Days 20-25: The Meseta

    Day 20: Castrojeriz → Boadilla del Camino (19.42 km)

    I started the morning strong, climbed the hill to the meseta, zooming past many other pilgrims. After a quick goodbye to the view of Castrojeriz behind me, I proceeded forward into the expanse of green fields, which were flat, but not as flat as the ominous warnings of Camino Repeaters suggested and did not, in fact, resemble Mordor in the slightest.

    So close!

    As I ambled along, I tried to figure life out, but didn’t make much progress. After about 8 km of nothing but wheat, barley, more wheat, and barley again, there was a makeshift food truck. It was an RV, and the owner was selling orange juice and snacks he’d picked up at the grocery store. I really needed an energy boost at that point, so I bought a glass of orange juice. Service was hard to get and then he charged what I could have bought two full breakfasts for.

    Not more than another kilometer down the trail was a town with a nice café where I got a real breakfast for a fair price. Service was still hard to get and a rude boy cut in front of me. My alter ego, Spanish Victoria, was not doing her job, possibly because the people there didn’t actually speak Spanish.

    Frustrated, I resumed the trail, my confident amble deteriorated to a weak stomp. A pilgrim who passed me was blaring a podcast from his phone. I was appalled, not at his rudeness (he was going to be out of my earshot in less than a minute anyway), but at the garbage he was wasting his time and brain cells on. I kid you not, he was listening to some guy give a lackluster description of a sandwich he had once to another guy who clearly didn’t care. On a journey where people are trying to think, this guy would rather listen to someone else’s tedious conversation than his own thoughts.

    The only reliable weather source.

    Dark rainclouds filled the sky and the distant sound of the cuckoo bird’s call became a countdown to imminent downpour. The wind picked up, rippling the fields around me like a green, undulating ocean. I imagined I was swimming in choppy, open water.

    The skies opened up just as I made it to a small town. I checked into the larger of the two albergues near the church which was topped with huge stork nests. I scored a bottom bunk, took a much needed shower with the water pressure of Niagara Falls, and spent some time relaxing next to a roaring fire in the common room.

    Pilgrim dinner was next door in the adjoining hotel. Usually we were expected to pay in advance, but here they asked that everyone pay at the bar on their way out and joked that if we’d better not forget because they know where we’re sleeping. Dinner was the usual: lentil soup, chicken or fish, and flan or rice pudding for dessert. I chatted with John from Texas who enjoys retirement on a boat with no responsibilities. I told him about my career dilemma. His philosophy was that life is good if you do what you enjoy. He said he encourages his adult kids to follow their own paths, and that I should follow my interests and work interesting fun jobs around the world.

    Back at my bunk in the albergue section of the establishment, I finished writing my journal entry for the day, put on my somewhat clean jammies, snuggled into my sleeping bag, and closed my eyes. But not for long. My eyes snapped open and my heartrate shot up. I’d forgotten to pay for dinner! I scrambled out of my warm sleeping bag, threw on my sandals, and sprinted (or as close to a sprint as I could manage) through the rain to the bar. That was a close one. I paid and returned to bed to curl up in my now slightly damp jammies.

    Day 21: Boadilla del Camino → Villarmentero de Campos (14.59 km)

    One of the nicest things about the Camino Francés is that you always walk west with the sun behind you in the morning. That morning I left earlier than usual and peaked over my shoulder every few seconds to glimpse the sunrise that was visible below the surviving clouds. The trail paralleled a canal, and I’d heard that it’s possible to travel this section by boat, but I never saw one. If one had happened to come along I would definitely have stuck my thumb out.

    Along the canal there were a few small forests where the trees grew in suspiciously neat rows. The Camino crossed a lock where I ran into a couple of the Aussie nurses. I assured them that my blisters were doing much better. Actually, the one on the bottom of my foot had grown to the size of the patch that covered it.

    Victoria Castillo on the meseta on the Camino de Santiago.

    The dark clouds showed no sign of clearing up. I arrived at a town and slipped into a café just as it started sprinkling. There I had breakfast and a good conversation with Lori from North Carolina about the history of the Camino. She’d learned somewhere that even hundreds of years ago, the Camino had been used to draw in tourism, but it had also been used as a punishment. A wrongdoer might have been sentenced to the walk to Santiago as penance for their crime with the hope that they wouldn’t come back. I admit I felt more like I was doing penance than enjoying a vacation, but it still felt worth continuing.

    One of my fellow pilgrims. No Donkey Service for him!

    The rain was still fairly light, so I put on my poncho and kept walking. I looked down to avoid stepping on the snails that populated the trail, which had become a grassy path next to the road. I tried to make the most of the walk by trying to plan my life (in vain) and contemplating the universe. At one point I thought I’d figured out God until I remembered there were a few hundred thousand things I hadn’t taken into account. Then it rained hard. My boots soaked through and water crept up my pant legs up to my knees. In the next town I sought refuge in a café where I found Geraldine and Troy. I removed my boots and the now drenched bottom of my pants, which I was very grateful could be zipped off, and joined them for a hot ColaCao. They very kindly gave me a bandage for my now aggravated blister. I set off again in my sandals and shorts, somehow more confident than before. The new bandage lasted less than two meters, but I didn’t care anymore. I limped my way onwards, whistling “Singin’ In the Rain” all the way to the next town. A much better use of my time than all that over-thinking.

    Victoria Castillo on the meseta in the rain on the Camino de Santiago.
    Ready for anything in my “Jesus sandals”.

    As I entered the next tiny town and began scanning for albergues, a voice called my name and I started. It was Fiona looking for coffee. She and her daughter had gotten a private room at a hostel nearby. I wished her good luck on her coffee hunt and opted for the albergue. A group of Germans were there waiting for a taxi to Carrión de los Condes because there was a power outage here. I didn’t know if it was another major blackout or just this place, but either way it didn’t bother me as long as there was a dry bed to sleep in. The place was operated entirely by one very nice hospitalero who gave me a discount due to the lack of power.

    Within a couple of hours, the rain cleared up and the power came back and a couple other pilgrims checked in. We hung our wet things outside to dry next to the donkey paddock. Meanwhile, I found a ukulele inside and occupied myself trying to remember a few songs.

    Who knows the name of this tune?

    While I was plucking away, the hospitalero came over and calmly asked me how to say “lluvia” in English. I told him, “rain”. He immediately shouted for everyone to hear, “It’s rain!” and we all dashed outside to rescue our clothes.

    Dinner was a whole lot of lentil soup and fruit. Afterwards we (including our hospitalero) watched the epic clouds billowing up on the horizon. My fellow pilgrims were Ulrica from Germany, and a Hungarian man whose name I can’t remember. Ulrica spoke a little English, the Hungarian spoke no English but a little German, and the hospitalero spoke only Spanish. We managed a little general conversation about the Camino. Ulrica said that she’d heard it said in a movie once that “you think at the pace you walk” and that idea had stuck with her and fueled her motivation to walk the Camino. I would remember that later when my thoughts became more productive.

    It must have been even colder in the albergue than it was outside because I had to put an extra blanket on top of my sleeping bag that night. The donkeys in the paddock didn’t seem to mind at all.

    Day 22: Villarmentero de Campos → Carrión de los Condes (9.67 km)

    I was the first one up in the morning and set out carrying my poncho under my arm in expectation of imminent rain that never came. It had to be a short walk because I had been warned that after Carrión there was a 17 km stretch with nothing except a food truck along the way, and I didn’t feel up to doing a 26 km day.

    Kim Kimmy had sent a message to the group chat that she’d lost the stuffed animal (apparently named “Labubu”) that she had hanging from her backpack. She thought he might have fallen off at a certain place near where I was. I searched the area and found him hanging from the door of a house, wet but otherwise unharmed. I decided to have a little fun with him…

    Victoria Castillo on the meseta on the Camino de Santiago.
    Eureka!
    Victoria Castillo on the meseta on the Camino de Santiago.
    Other than Labubu, I only saw two other pilgrims that morning on the way to Carrión.
    Victoria Castillo on the meseta on the Camino de Santiago.
    We stopped in at the first café for some warm breakfast.
    We saw the sights. (This might be the best photo I took on the whole Camino.)

    Labubu and I checked into Albergue Espiritu Santos which had a big female dorm and single beds. Ulrica arrived there not long after I did. We had a couple hours of peaceful rest that was only disturbed by a group of old women who failed to read the room and constantly shouted to each other across it.

    Labubu took a siesta while I machine washed my muddy clothes.

    I went to the church to see the famous singing nuns and meet up with Jack, who had been tragically slowed down by tendonitis, and found Fiona and Evannah there too. There were four nuns, one played guitar, and they did the entire performance sitting in the front row facing the alter. Afterwards they hosted a group singalong in the albergue that they run next door. There was a big turnout; we were crowded into the foyer of the albergue with people lining the open stairway up to the next floor. They had everyone introduce themselves to the group. Most of the introductions started with “I’m so-and-so from wherever and I recently retired”, so when my turn came around I couldn’t resist following the format, much my own amusement and I hope some of the others.

    Once we’d all heard and forgotten each other’s names, the nuns passed out sheets of lyrics. For a minute I thought I’d been roped into a Jesus song circle, until they kicked the party off with “Guantanamera” (a song ubiquitous at Latin American parties). With their coolness officially established, they asked whoever wanted to to share a song. An Irishman jumped right in and impressed us with a soulful ballad. Then the volunteer hospitalera asked all the Americans present to join her in singing the last song she ever sang with her late mother. To our great relief, it was just “Home On the Range”, a simple folksong that every American is practically born knowing the first verse and chorus of. As we crooned our hearts out, I found myself singing better than I’m usually able to. I suspect some magic was at work there.

    Oh give me a home, where the buffalo roam
    Where the deer and the antelope play
    Where seldom is heard, a discouraging word
    And the skies are not cloudy all day

    Home, home on the range
    Where the deer and the antelope play
    Where seldom is heard, a discouraging word
    And the skies are not cloudy all day

    Several others were eager to share. We heard a Chinese song from a group of ladies; a young Italian man borrowed the nun’s guitar to play an original song that he’d written about the Camino; a Swede with a deep voice sang a very short song that he apparently starts every morning with about how “today is gonna be a good day”. I tried to persuade Fiona and Evannah to share an Australian song, but they begged off because they still had a cough. Jack was equally averse to honoring us with an English drinking song. We finished off with the whole room singing “Ode to Joy” in both German and Spanish (pronunciation was admittedly a little rough) in honor of our German friends in the room who were feeling a little shy. Then it was back to the church for mass and a pilgrim blessing. The nuns remarked that it was huge turnout and gave everyone a paper star to carry to Santiago de Compostela, because Compostela means “field of stars”.

    It was surprisingly difficult to find dinner in the area, but eventually I found a place that served cheap burgers. I also picked up a chocolate bar from the grocery store to take on the long stretch coming up. Labubu and I got a good night’s sleep in the quiet dorm.

    Day 23: Carrión de los Condes → Ledigos (23.2 km)

    Victoria Castillo on the meseta on the Camino de Santiago.

    The 17 km stretch was flat and straight through fields, some covered in pretty flowers. “Home On the Range” played on repeat in my head as I strolled along, making me wish I knew more of the lyrics. I was solo most of the day, saying brief hellos to acquaintances as they passed me. The only people I passed were octogenarians.

    I passed Anthony (I’m not sure if he’s an octogenarian), who I hadn’t seen for a couple of weeks, still going at his own slow and steady pace. He declared, “I go all the way to Santiago!” Although I wouldn’t see him there, I believe he probably did.

    Victoria Castillo and friend on the meseta on the Camino de Santiago.

    The legendary popup bar was about 7 km in. Jack was just leaving when I arrived. We said the usual “see you down the trail”, but that was the last time I saw him in the flesh. Now that his tendonitis was better I would have had to take three steps for every one of his. I felt in no rush, however, and sat down to enjoy breakfast. Their tortilla was excellent and came with a little glass of fresh zumo de naranja. I was a little concerned about the lack of facilities, since there was still another 10 km to go through open fields with no sign of adequate tree coverage.

    I rejoined civilization (intact) at the same time as Carrie and Julia. Julia went on to catch some transportation and continue the Camino in her own way. Carrie and I went straight to the bathroom. We had lunch—the paella was disappointing—and chatted about the Camino experience so far. She had accommodation in that town, but once again I decided to push myself a little further.

    Victoria Castillo and friend on the meseta on the Camino de Santiago.

    My legs were hurting badly by the end. As I got more stiff and sore, the sunshine that had endured all day gave way to clouds. Fiona and Evannah caught up to me and we arrived in the next town as it started raining. There were signs for two different albergues and we went to the nicer looking one. It had pod style beds and a nice patio area where pilgrims were enjoying themselves. Unfortunately, they were all booked up with reservations. The other albergue had beds, but they were not so nice. I got a top bunk with a ladder this time, but it was held on by duct tape and fell off when I touched it.

    There were a couple of pilgrims who played guitar and a little music group formed. I joined them shortly before dinner. Either the magic spell was still in effect and I still sounded like I actually knew how to sing, or my companions were overzealous in their praise. I suspect a little bit of both.

    Dinner was a typical pilgrim meal: soup, chicken or fish , ice cream for dessert, and plenty of wine to drink. A few people may have had a little too much wine. I fell asleep to the sounds of random laughter about nothing and some odd folks shaving each other’s heads in the bathroom. I was glad that these were not representative of typical pilgrims and that I had found other friends.

    I burrowed deep inside my sleeping bag, and before I knew it I woke up with the disturbing sensation that someone was touching me, but I couldn’t move. I was lying on my side and it felt like a woman’s hand and arm was holding me down. Was someone trying to rob me? I could see only blackness inside my sleeping bag. I tried to call for help, but no sound came out. I tried to scream. Nothing. I recognized this nightmare: sleep paralysis. I’d had it before. If you’ve never heard of sleep paralysis, it’s when you wake up during the cycle of sleep when the body is naturally paralyzed. It is common for people to have hallucinations during this state of what are known as “sleep paralysis demons” and to feel physical pressure, usually on the chest. And it’s terrifying. Especially in a strange place surrounded by strange people. Had I not known what was happening I probably would have panicked, but I forced myself to remain calm and wait. The demon hand and arm continued to hold me down until I fell back into a state of fitful sleep.

    Day 24: Ledigos → Sahagún (15.19 km)

    The first thing I did in the morning was confirm that I had not been robbed. I hadn’t. The whole thing had been a chilling hallucination just as I’d thought. That knowledge didn’t clear up the sense of eeriness however, and I proceeded to get the hell out of Dodge.

    The trail swung near the highway, and the signs revealed that we’d entered the León part of Castilla y León. The terrain didn’t change much except that now Castilla was crossed out on all the way markers.

    Victoria Castillo on the meseta on the Camino de Santiago.

    The musical spell still lingered. An old man passed me (I was even slower than the day before) at a steady pace with his poles adding beats to the rhythm of his steps. An accompanying sequence of long notes started playing in my head. I matched the man’s pace and kept up with him in his blind spot like an obnoxious driver on the freeway. Walking to the beat helped me to keep going until there was a nice breakfast stop. The café/bar was in an albergue where they gave out wax stamps. You even get to choose the colors and design.

    Without the old man keeping pace with his poles, I got slower and slower. I rested for a little while by an old Roman bridge and finished off my chocolate bar. The town was in sight, less than a kilometer away. When I dragged myself up, I tried to walk on the softer patches of grass. Pasqual, one of my Italian friends, saw me hobbling and “towed” me the rest of the way into town. Basically, he stuck one of his poles out behind him, I held on to the end, and we marched together along to reggae music. It was surprisingly effective.

    He deposited me on the doorstep of the municipal albergue and into the care of a nice pilgrim named Pedro, who gave me a needle and thread for my blisters. These items had not been available in any pharmacy, but now I recognized that this truly was the one true way to treat blisters. I will spare you the photo of the carnage.

    I learned from friends that this town marked the halfway point of the Camino Francés. Apparently you can get a halfway certificate at one of the churches. I thought about going to get mine, but only made it as far as dinner, where I enjoyed an enormous bowl of lentils. The rest of the evening was spent listening to someone having a flute lesson somewhere in the large building that the albergue was only a part of. It was nice as far as municipals go, with pod bunk beds and ok showers. I had a good night, no sleep paralysis.

    Day 25: Sahagún → El Burgo Ranero (18.17 km)

    My journal entry for this day leaves a few things to be desired, like details and complete sentences. I had been so fixated on my blisters up until this point that I hadn’t noticed I was getting shin splints too.

    It was another sandals and toe socks day. I walked to the edge of town to wait for Kim Kimmy. She and Labubu were reunited, and she introduced me to a new friend, and one of the bravest pilgrims I met: Noriko from Japan. Noriko spoke neither English nor Spanish, only Japanese, and communicated with a special handheld electronic translator.

    Early on there was a fork in the trail, and we decided on the shorter path that wasn’t next to the road. From there my memory is a fuzzy blur. It was probably flat, there were probably fields, my legs definitely hurt. My mind kept asking, “Why are we going to Santiago?” To which I kept replying, “I don’t know, but we’re doing it anyway.”

    I arrived at the tiny town completely despondent at the site. It looked too much like Dead End, USA, complete with train tracks and a truck stop. I stumbled into the first albergue I could find (the Camino path didn’t follow where the actual businesses were for some reason) and got a cheap private room where I could cry without anyone looking at me. It had two twin beds and a bathtub so small that I just used it to wash my feet.

    My charger stopped working and my phone died, but eventually I found where Kim Kimmy and Noriko were having dinner. Apparently I was late for the reservation, but the lady running the establishment forgave me when she witnessed the incredible speed at which I ate and the profuse compliments I gave. The food was truly excellent; I think I inhaled half a chicken.

    That night I had a strange dream (no sleep paralysis) in which I was given a drug that made my vision slightly blurry so that I would “see the big picture and not get lost in the details.” Something for me to work on in the next couple of days.

  • Camino de Santiago: Days 16-19: Villambistia to Castrojeriz

    Day 16: Villambistia → Burgos (43.12 km)

    In the morning, my feet still stubbornly refused to go on. I looked up the timetable for the bus and hobbled across the road to wait, accompanied by a Kiwi named Barry. The bus stop was an abandoned, disintegrating booth covered in graffiti. Half an hour after the scheduled pickup time, we were on the verge of maybe, possibly, considering giving up and walking the 1.5 km to the next town, when the bus finally arrived. I bought myself a ticket to Burgos, the next major city, because I couldn’t risk ending up somewhere that didn’t have a pharmacy. As bad as I was hurting, two things instantly made me feel a lot better: several friends got on the bus in the next town, and it rained. Thus all FOMO was obliterated, and I felt no sense of loss for those 43 km.

    In Burgos, we picked up some maps at the tourist office, took pictures outside of the magnificent cathedral, then looked for our respective albergues, hostels, and hotels. (I think Geraldine, Carrie, and Michelle were there but no one can find the group photo.)

    Victoria Castillo in front of Burgos Cathedral on the Camino de Santiago.

    I put my backpack in the queue for the municipal albergue, and we met up for breakfast in the café across the street while waiting for check-in time. It ended up being one of the nicest municipal albergues I stayed in, with cubby-like bunkbeds that gave a little more privacy and blocked a lot of noise. Each little block even had its own sink. My bunkmate was a nice lady with a comforting presence named Foster, originally from Australia, now living in London.

    Next stop was the pharmacy, where they told me nothing could be done for my blisters other than prevent infection and rest. In other words, no walking tomorrow either. I bought some antiseptic and walked back to the albergue in tears to hand-wash my underwear. C’est la vie! Foster caught me crying and was very sympathetic.

    Blisters or no blisters, the cathedral was too tempting to resist. I spent several hours hobbling from bench to bench to sit and admire the intricate stonework, carvings, paintings, and various gold thingamajigs (I believe that’s the technical term). Eunseok eventually found me there. We’d seen a lot of cathedrals together at this point, and were starting to identify some common trends, but this one went above and beyond. He remarked, “Why do rich people love tiny dogs?” vis-à-vis the many crypts of royalty with dogs at their feet. The highlights for me were Leonardo da Vinci’s Santa María Magdalena, cowgirl angel, and monkey with a shotgun.

    Victoria Castillo in Burgos Cathedral on the Camino de Santiago.
    Left: Santa María Magdalena by Leonardo da Vinci, Right: A huge dork.
    I’m sure there’s a story to this, but I see a cowgirl angel returning from a fishing trip.
    Shotgun in one hand, flask in the other. (Thanks to Geraldine for a better photo than the one I took.)

    More friends arrived throughout the day. One of those friends was Julia. I’ve alluded to her only a couple times in this blog so far, but these minor mentions do not reflect the larger presence she had in my thoughts. She was the pilgrim who came alone instead of with her husband because he had passed away; she was the pilgrim who I lit a candle for in Estella; she was the pilgrim the encouraging messages were sent to. Her introduction at Orisson had hit me like a barbed arrow that wouldn’t come out, and even though we didn’t spend much time together, it felt very important to me for her to have a good Camino. The last time I had seen her was in the Pyrenees when she enlightened us that some little structures we kept seeing were for storing hay—she grew up on a dairy farm, if I remember correctly. I thought about her often as I walked and felt instinctively that she needed some help. Luckily, Kim Kimmy had done what I’d failed to and gotten her number. We added her to the group chat when I was back in Estella. She had been struggling a little further behind most of us and almost decided to go home, but here in Burgos, an oasis of white towels and bathtubs, she sent a message saying that “life is wonderful”.

    Plans for everyone to meet for dinner were made and cancelled due to exhaustion (Troy had walked 38 km!), illness (a nasty cough was going around), and preferring a warm shower to going outside in the cold (duh). All totally understandable, and reinforced my perspective that not making plans at all is the best way to go.

    Dinner ended up being just me and Kim Kimmy wedged into the tight corner of an irregularly-shaped restaurant. We split black sausage and a complicated tortilla that inexplicably came in its separate component parts and talked about the Camino and life. One of the big topics was how people try to put you in boxes. It was something she and I had in common and a prevalent theme of my Camino. Often when I meet people—and you meet a lot of people on the Camino—I find that they try to figure me out, label me, or “put me in a box”. That’s only natural, of course. The problem is most people don’t fit into any one box. Race is an easy example, but this applies for many other things too. You’d be surprised how often people ask me where I’m from and refuse to accept the answer. Personally, I don’t think that is very polite. When I met some pilgrims with thick Korean accents who told me they were from Los Angeles, I didn’t say, “But where are you really from?”, I said, “I’m from San Diego. We’re neighbors!” The thing is, people who reject the answer to “where are you from?” aren’t really asking that. What they really want to know is, “why do you look like that?” What a question! No wonder no one has the audacity to ask it directly. Kim Kimmy had the same kind of experience, being born in one country, raised in another, and now living in third. She dubbed me her “Camino daughter” and gave me much needed life advice.

    With a lot to think about, I retired to the municipal and squirted an excessive amount of antiseptic on my feet. It was a cold night. I was fine in my sleeping bag, but Foster only had a liner. I loaned her my puffy jacket to sleep in.

    Day 17: Burgos

    Evidently the puffy jacket was sufficiently warm because Foster was practically in hibernation throughout the morning while I got the rest of my things together. She was injury free and walking that day. After she left, I found my Dutch friend in the kitchen. She was sick and needed a rest day too, so we went to the front desk and begged for permission to stay a second night in the municipal, citing the pharmacist’s advice that I not walk. They assented as long as we waited a couple of hours after the regular check-in time, which I thought kind of asinine on account of there being more beds than they could possibly fill on a cold, rainy weekday (at least I assumed it was a weekday). Nevertheless, I waited.

    And what is the best way to wait when it’s cold and raining and you aren’t supposed to use your feet? You guessed it: sit in a café and blow half your budget on Colacao. Meanwhile, I aired my toes in the cold until they were numb, and then aired them some more.

    And I ruminated. I guess I was getting a head start on the mental challenge of the meseta. I second-guessed every major life decision I’d made since my quarter-life crisis began almost three years ago. Some of them I would have reversed in that moment if the opportunity had magically walked in the door. I really would have. Feeling cold, tired, and lonely will do that to your willpower. But those kinds of feelings are temporary, and somewhere inside, between my cold toes and my unwashed hair, the quintessence that is me remembered Oh, the Places You’ll Go! by Dr. Seuss and recognized the truth in it. I was in the waiting place.

    No! That wasn’t for me! I knocked off waxing philosophical on children’s literature, got off my melancholy butt, and set off for new heights. Literally. I followed some signs that said “castillo” which led up too many stairs to a castle on the top of a hill. The castle itself was under construction and not worth photographing, but there was a great view of the city and cathedral from up there.

    Victoria Castillo in Burgos on the Camino de Santiago.

    That was as much activity as I could muster for the day. After an early dinner of croquettes that were too heavy for me to finish, I went straight to sleep.

    Day 18: Burgos → Hornillos del Camino (20.87 km)

    The city was silent in the morning in a way no city in America knows how to be. Only the pilgrims were outside to see the storks wake up on their tall, stone perches and feel the cold finally lift up to a comfortable temperature.

    I’d told myself I would walk a relatively short distance and not push myself too hard. In the next small town I stopped at a café/bar for the usual breakfast items and a bocadillo para llevar. Before the edge of town I stopped to rest on some steps with Carrie. She had a reservation at a nice albergue there. Despite the temptation to join her and what I had told myself about taking it easy that day, it was still early and I was itching to keep going.

    Just up the road there was a small church. I probably would have passed by it if there hadn’t been a line of pilgrims out the door. Curious to know what was going on, I asked a pilgrim who was just leaving. There was a nun stamping pilgrim passports and giving blessings. I got in line. Where else can you have this kind of experience? It was not a fast-moving line. The nun did not merely bless and stamp in an assembly line fashion; she was not there to reach a quota. She took the time to speak to each and every pilgrim individually. She was a wizened, elderly nun, who reminded me of my late abuela (grandmother) and was so tiny that she had to reach up to put her hand on my head—and I’m only 5 feet (152 cm) tall. When it was my turn she looked into my eyes and asked me (in Spanish) my name, and I told her in my best Castilian accent. She complimented the way I said it and we talked for a couple of minutes. One of the things she told me was that I am very young and therefore have a longer way to walk. I think she was talking more about the pilgrimage of life than the road to Santiago. I’m not really so young as all that, but perhaps my soul is and she could see it. She had an air about her that I don’t know how to put into words. Even now, I cannot seem to think, or talk, or write about her without tearing up. I got the sense that she genuinely loved every single pilgrim. The little pendant she gave me—every pilgrim got the same one—was of the Virgin Mary. I tied it to my backpack where it hung for the rest of my Camino.

    Victoria Castillo on the Camino de Santiago.
    I didn’t mean for it to look like I’m holding up a tiny backpack.

    After that the terrain became highly reminiscent of the original Microsoft Windows default wallpaper.

    I actually took this photo. Doesn’t it look familiar?

    Then it went completely flat with nothing but windmills in the distance, leading me to believe that I was already on the meseta. I stopped on the grassy side of the trail to attempt to mitigate the new blisters that were already forming on the bottom of my feet. Someone passing by was regaling a group with the story of the bus replacement from Bayonne to St. Jean. I called after them, “I was on the second bus!” They either didn’t hear me or didn’t care.

    Victoria Castillo on the Camino de Santiago.
    I call this one “Enthusiasm”.

    My final stopping place was Hornillos del Camino, twice as far from Burgos as I probably should have walked that day. I tiptoed through a cluster of cats into the municipal where I was assigned a top bunk as usual. While I was in the shower (3/10, co-ed, locking stall door, one hook, dirty floor), the ladder from my bunk mysteriously wandered off and was replaced with a wooden stool for me to use to climb up.

    The albergue was next to the church and across from a bar/restaurant that blared rock n’ roll music even through mass. Most pilgrims would have been happier if they’d served a communal dinner, but that wasn’t how they operated. They only had five small tables and every group had to put a name on a waiting list. None of my friends were around and I wasn’t in a social mood, so ended up being an awkward group of one. While I was enjoying a good steak and an even better ice cream sundae, I watched the busy waitress run back and forth. She was a Swiss girl who was trying to learn English and Spanish at the same time while everything in her head was in French. She was working so hard that I was determined to tell her she was doing a good job. That’s the kind of thing I often want to do and regretfully fail to follow through with. She was so busy that I nearly lost the opportunity, but on my way out I gave her a poke and told her, and she seemed so glad to hear it.

    The rest of the sunny evening—the daylight hours were getting longer and longer—I spent on the church terrace where most of the pilgrims staying in the municipal were hanging out. Word came through the group chat that Teresa and Archer had made it to Burgos and the end of their Camino. I missed them already. One of Teresa’s funny stories would have been great to hear right then. Feeling a little downcast, I chose to read rather than socialize and was slogging my way through Hemingway (not exactly uplifting literature), when there was a sudden commotion and two guys sprinted in the direction of the bar. I moved to where I could see what was going on. A pilgrim had collapsed in front of the bar. A lot of people were already helping and an ambulance was called, and there was nothing I could do other than get in the way, so I sat down on the steps to watch.

    While I sat there Thomas from Sweden came and talked to me. He’d noticed I seemed withdrawn and lonely. I kept trying not to cry, but couldn’t help it. He made me tell him what was wrong and I really tried. I awkwardly boiled it down to not knowing what to do with my life, difficulty defying the expectations of others, confusion over whether I’d made good decisions, and guilt over feeling sad when I’ve been lucky and had so many opportunities in life. He was sympathetic. This was his first Camino too and we talked about our impressions and expectations.

    Meanwhile, the collapsed pilgrim was lifted and propped up in a chair. The blood on his head was visible from where we sat about 50 feet (15 meters) away, but something else must have been wrong that caused him to fall in the first place. The responders commenced arguing what to do next.

    Thomas had a theory that people who do the Camino over and over again do so because they discover themselves or some sense of freedom on the Camino, but when they go back to their everyday life they don’t change anything. He literally called it going “back into the box”. So they have to come back to the Camino to find themselves again. At the time I thought this was probably true. But then I still had more than half of the way to go and a lot to learn.

    The loudest and most stressed responder won the argument, and the injured man was laid back down on the ground. The hospitalera who ran the municipal brought a pillow for his head.

    We contemplated the meseta and Thomas revealed the shocking truth that we weren’t on it yet. He predicted that the walk across the meseta would be a time when we would look inward and think without distractions and that I would discover who I am. I hoped so; although, at the moment it felt like the more likely scenario was that I would cry my way across it in confusion. Nevertheless, talking to someone helped. I resolved then to think outside of the box about what I really want from life and somehow find the courage to do it no matter what anyone else thinks. That is the hardest thing.

    An ambulance finally arrived and the professionals took over. Once they’d loaded the patient into the ambulance, it sat there for what felt like a long time and then drove off back towards Burgos. I never found out who the pilgrim was or what happened to him.

    As the sun finally started to admit that it was bedtime, I sidled my way past a volley of scraps that the hospitalera was flinging at the cats, up the wooden stool to my bunk, and into my sleeping bag.

    Day 19: Hornillos del Camino → Castrojeriz (19.47 km)

    To say I woke up with a positive attitude, ready to seize the day would be a preposterous lie. My eyes thought they smelled onions and didn’t show any sign of changing their mind. I snuck out before anyone could see me, weaving my way through the cats who had formed a militaristic pattern in the tiny foyer, presumably in preparation for an imminent invasion of the kitchen. I left intending to only walk about 10 km, but (spoiler alert) I ended up going 20 km again.

    Victoria Castillo on the Camino de Santiago.
    “Morning Mood”

    There was a lot of flat terrain again, but every time I thought I must finally be on the meseta, a hill or valley would appear around the bend, and the cuckoo bird would utter its mocking chime.

    One of the many pilgrims who passed me that day—I passed no one—was the Spaniard whose backpack had weighed 22 kg in Pamplona. He recognized me and asked about the “Korean guy with the new stuff who didn’t know anything.” I had to admit that I hadn’t seen him at all. As the good-natured Spaniard continued on at a pace I would have had to run to keep up with, he looked back at me and smiled. I was surprised how much I felt cheered up. Then I noticed that he carried only a small day pack and almost laughed.

    Later, when I’d just finished airing my feet for the fourth time, Sarah, Emma, Andrew, and Gillian caught up to me. They were cheerful as usual. Sarah chatted with me for a little while about our surroundings. She’d drawn the Microsoft Windows connection too and thought it was pretty. I found the flat bits a little too reminiscent of Oklahoma for my taste. Landscape snobbery aside, Sarah’s smile and the unbreakable good humor of the entire family cheered me up even more.

    Somewhere in the middle of the boundless green desert was a café oasis where everyone who’d passed me (so it seemed) was eating and relaxing on the patio. As I staggered up to it with fantasies of orange juice and pastries swirling before my eyes, I was suddenly and swiftly pounced upon by what, at the time, I called a “gaggle” but have since considered to be a “pack” of Aussie nurses who ardently forced their care upon me and refused to take no for an answer. They ordered me into a chair, removed my boots, applied patches of useless Compeed, chastised me for insufficient use of Vaseline, slathered more on my feet themselves, then bought me a glass of zumo de naranja (for which I was truly thankful), and dosed me with 1 g of Paracetamol (Tylenol), the only available painkiller which I’m not allergic to. All the while they vehemently argued with Eliot, a retired Scottish soldier who leads expeditions around the world, about footcare and the proper way to pack a backpack. I think he was actually right about everything, but I dared not go against them for fear of disparaging their profession. If this was their care, I certainly didn’t want to incite their wrath. Then, as quickly as the onslaught had begun, they got up and left, along with almost everyone else. I sat there stunned for a minute or two, with my four cheerful friends as the only remaining witnesses. I wanted to go inside and order more food and get a stamp, but I didn’t. In a daze, I got up and continued walking.

    Less than a kilometer down the trail was Hontanas, the town I planned to stop in. It was cute and there were several nice looking albergues/hostels to choose from, including one with a spa. But the painkillers had just kicked in, so against the better judgment of everyone else, I kept walking.

    Almost there!

    There is a lot to be said for the belief in fate, or that everything happens for a reason, or that you should trust your instincts to take you where you’re meant to be. The path beyond that town where I might have stopped finally induced me to admit that the landscape was beautiful. There were fields of grain that looked almost like soft fur that I wanted to pet, and the breeze rippled its surface like water. I came to a part of the path where I could reach the grain and run my hand over it. It did not disappoint. It really did feel like soft fur. As I was enjoying this sensation, I looked up and saw Foster coming up the trail. She had walked as far as she had time for and was walking back to Burgos to make her way home to London. She said she’d had a feeling she would see me again. If I had stopped earlier, we probably would have missed each other.

    Victoria Castillo and friend on the Camino de Santiago.
    Foster and me by the soft grain.

    Approaching Castrojeriz, the trail passed through some ruins into more rippling fields lined with flowers.

    Victoria Castillo on the Camino de Santiago.

    The town itself abutted a hill topped with a ruined castle that loomed triumphantly over the rest of the land. I limped along the cobblestone street expecting to end up in another shabby municipal albergue, when a miracle occurred. I got too tired to continue (that’s not a miracle), so I took a chance and looked into the nearest albergue, which happened to be Albergue Ultreia. It ended up being one of my favorite places I stayed on the Camino. Not only did the owner graciously welcome me in, he gave me a single bed and I didn’t even have to beg or lay siege to it. I took a shower (clean, but still not enough hooks), then hand-washed my laundry to the tune of the serenade of an old Italian pilgrim. And I got my spa experience after all in the refreshingly cold foot soaking tub they had in the rooftop garden.

    Victoria Castillo in Albergue Ultreia on the Camino de Santiago.
    Heaven is cold water when your feet hurt.

    The pilgrim dinner at Ultreia was the most fun I’d had in days. We were a party of two French, two Germans, two Italians, two Americans (including me), and a Kiwi named Dudley Moore. The food was the usual three courses: vegetable soup and bread, chicken, wine and homemade sangria to drink, and ice cream for dessert. But the real treat was the after-dinner tour of the ancient wine cellar underneath the albergue. Our illustrious guide (the owner) related the history of the place, translating all the important nouns into every language represented and making many “oohs” and “aahs” which we of course echoed through giggles. He let us turn the wine press, then we went down into the cellar where he lit and passed around some twelfth century oil lamps and showed us the old tunnels that used to lead all the way up to the castle. The tour concluded with a tasting of the wine and a toast.

    Pretending the press is full of grapes and difficult to turn.
    Victoria Castillo on the Camino de Santiago.
    The old tunnel leading up to the castle.

    As we got ready for bed, someone got the news that a new pope had been elected and was an American. This was a big surprise to everyone. I don’t know anything about how the pope is selected, but somehow I didn’t think an American would have been allowed. Silly, I know.

    My new Italian friends warned me that the real meseta would officially start tomorrow. Based on the foreboding attitude everyone seemed to have about it, I imagined a desolate wasteland resembling Mordor from The Lord of the Rings and mentally braced myself.