Our last day on the Camino. It’s a short one, just under 20 km, or about 12 miles.
Here is the pensione where we spent our final night.
After walking a short distance from the pensione, we were in a eucalyptus grove.
Some old friends joined us for part of the walk today.
Although the walk was pretty flat, there were several steep climbs, including this one just outside Pedrouzo.
When we left the pensione in Pedrouzo, the woman running it told us that we could look forward to an easy walk with no more hills. We have heard some version of this description of the Camino since Sarria, and it’s always wrong.
After a few hours of walking, we reached the outskirts of Santiago.
Below is our first view of Santiago. We are standing on Monte del Gozo, which is several miles outside the center of the city.
We then walked down the hill into Santiago. Here is our first view of the cathedral from the old quarter of the city.
And here is Anne in the square in front of the cathedral.
We arrived in Santiago at around 2 in the afternoon, well after the Pilgrim’s Mass, which is held at noon.
Since we missed the Pilgrim’s Mass when we arrived, we went this morning (Tuesday) to a English Mass at 10 in one of the side chapels at the cathedral and then to the Pilgrim’s Mass at noon. Both were packed. And where two or more pilgrims are gathered, it smells like someone needs a shower.
Although the Pilgrim’s Mass was in Spanish, I caught a little of the homily. The priest pointed that we had come all parts of the world to walk the Camino. He said that what we had found on the Camino, we must take back home with us.
After Mass, Anne and I walked to a park on a hill just outside the old quarter. Here is the cathedral from the park:
Later, we went to the Pilgrim’s Office where we had picked our Compestellas shortly after arriving in Santiago. The Compestellas are a document certifying completion of the Camino. We went back to the office today to add our poles to a large pile the pilgrims had deposited there, having no further need for them. When we got to the office, we bumped into an Australian woman who we had met our first night in Orisson. She was picking up her Compestella. We have seen her off and on for the past several weeks, traveling alone, and keeping to herself. This time we talked, hugged one another, and said goodbye.
We are about 25 miles from Santiago, and we have two more days of walking.
We fell in with a couple of Australians, a man and a woman who first met when they signed up with a tour company to walk the Camino.
Just inside the entrance of the church was a picture of Pope John Paul II.
We walked through several villages today, including Lobreiro.
The biggest town that we walked through today was Melide.
We stopped at a pulperia in Melide at around 10:30. We have found it difficult to eat on the Camino.
After walking for about an hour, we arrived in the village of Boente and the iglesia de Santiago.


We saw posters in Sarria mapping the elevations between Sarria and Santiago.
We walked about 24 km or right around 15 miles.
We first saw storks and their nests outside of Burgos. They had nests on almost every church steeple between Burgos and Astorga. It has been awhile since we have seen a stork or a stork nest.
We finally got close enough to look inside one today.





Our guidebook said that that albergue was 1.5 km off the Camino; but it was easily twice that.
For several weeks, we have been staying in smaller villages that are midway between the larger ones that are the recommended stopovers in our guidebook.





A short time later, we were at our hostel.


Thanks to the many cows, we continue to step around the splatter art on the Camoono.

The next several days are short, so more art should be in the offing.
Pilgrims need to watch their step because the Va-ca-mino is littered with cow poop.

We followed the stream up the valley.
We were on an remote branch of the Camino that is an offshoot of the main path. Our branch had couple of poorly marked forks.




About an hour outside of Sarria, it started to rain. We are spending an extra day in Sarria to rest. People have talked about Sarria since the beginning of the Camino. They say it is where everything changes because of the increased traffic on the Camino. There are two reasons for this. Sarria is where the Camino Frances, which we have been following, joins the Northern Camino, which travels along the northern coast of Spain. It is also 100 km from Santiago, and so is the nearest point where pilgrims can begin their walk and still obtain a compostela or pilgrim’s passport at the cathedral in Santiago. So far we haven’t seen the crowds. Most of the day today, we were walking alone. Company would be welcome.
Herrerias is at the end of a long valley.
The first village we reached on the side of the mountain was La Faba, where we had breakfast.




At the top of the mountain is the village of O’Cebreiro, which is in the autonomous region of Galicia, the western-most region in Spain.
We arrived minutes before the noon Mass.



We walk to Sarria tomorrow, where we have a rest day, which I hope will put us back on track.
We had a long day ahead.




There are cherry trees alongside the Camino here, and the cherries are just ripening.
The church has La Puerta del Perdon that allows sick or injured pilgrims to be forgiven for cutting their pilgrimages short, if they pass through the puerta.
In front of Anne and behind where I am standing taking the picture is a large house with windows overlooking the river.

It was a long day, and we were glad when we reached our hotel.
It rained steadily for the first hour of our walk from Molinaseca to Campo, which was entirely on sidewalks.


After leaving the castle, we walked up a hill to the church on Ponferrada’s main plaza.
Most of the walking today was on sidewalks but some was directly on the street.
It is raining hard now, and rain is forecast for the next several days.