Thinking about food, as I so often do..... In Greece, we had fresh salads of cucumber, tomato and feta cheese if you wished. Good heavy country white bread. The main dish was usually meat or fish and nothing else, occasionally french fries or fried potato. The cost of the entree was about the same as the salad or the vegetable (greens like spinach or the salad) and cheap wine, of course. A small dessert and a liquer, rakki, were usually on the house and then a euro charge for bread was standard.
In Spain so far, we find that the foods available are somewhat limiting. There are green beans in a jar, archichokes in a jar, pimiento in a jar, tuna in a can, iceberg lettuce, good white bread if you choose it. A lot of oil and a lot of fried foods. Salsa is the word used if there is a sauce and they are usually pretty mild. There is fried fish, chops (quarter inch thick), rabbit, chicken and sometimes tripe or cheek or foot. We pretty much choose familiar including rabbit which is pretty much like chicken. Not too keen on organs though they gave some for us to try and Clive like it! Ugh! I am surprised by the lack of fresh vegetables around especially since there seems to be so much good weather for growing grapes and wheat. These countries make me realize how ethnically diverse our diet is and how much of everything we eat and the huge variety that we have to choose from!
Day 11
Well, time is passing and it has been interesting. I love meeting the travellers and so many of them have walked for a long time and they never tire of it either. I like it best when it is busy....and that is not every day or not all of the time every day. As time passes, people adjust differently. Antoin is gone. So Clive and I said that we were not prepared to put in any more time (one of us is receiving guests from 11am to 10pm. The Spanish lady thinks that we need 2 on. Clive and I disagreed. She got all wordy and phoned the Confradia here. They obviously did not back her up so we now have one on all of the time (I would do more but there are not enough pilgrims to keep busy). She has totally withdrawn and now only does the minimum and is no longer running the show. I wanted an hour off tonight and she would not help me make a phone call to arrange this ( a musical group doing Gregorian chant is coming to the cathedral). So I did fine phoning on my own - but previously she would not have let me do something like that because of my poor Spanish. She is tired and has lost interest. Clive has found a book online for something to read during his spare time. He has adjusted well. I think if I was not so keen that he might be ready to leave - but he is making the most of it. I like it here....nothing is perfect and it is an experience. The guests, we both agree, are most interesting people. ....can there be that many interesting people around. ...and somebody else cooks our evening meal and we enjoy a glass of wine and a coffee everyday and sunshine and a comfortable interesting stay ...with some time waiting for new guests. We hear the cathedral bells every hour and sometimes every quarter hour, we hear the birds and we see the sky and the sunshine most days.
Today I met an Argentinan doing the Camino twice back to back. An infatuation on the first go round and so quick and a more reflective time this time with her cousin. A young fellow from Quebec and one from Florida walking from LePuy adding another month....and then I find that one of them ships his backpack on days like today. The German fellow with a sore foot is catching a bus to the next alburgue with a pool! Some people walk so far, all are enthusiastic about their experience, some have sore feet, all seem to be experiencing life on some intense level. The young French girl who said she learned so much practising her languages, meeting people and gaining confidence and realzing that the world is out there and ready to be explored. The Mexican today who said that he really finds Mexico City somewhat unsafe for Mexicans. The girl with her best friend her dog last night and sleeping in the garden in her simple European design tent. The 71 year old Frenchman who rode from Caen Rouen France averaging 125 km per day and a bike with 2 front panniers, a handlecar pouch, 2 rear panniers, stuff on top and a light back pack....so fit, so experienced...but why so much stuff. Today 3 Japanese, 2 Koreans, an English speaking group, last night a different group were enjoying each other. Every day is different. Each persons experience depends somewhat on the mix of people that they meet.
I have seen individuals, small groups, different languages, same language groups, couples, cycling from solo to groups and so on. Depending on the speed you walk or cycle will affect whether you stay with and continue to see the same group or if you travel different than the norm more different faces each day. I see that I travelled the average speed when I did and with a group that pretty much kept to themselves - friendly but not overly social. Interesting...
Day 13
Clive took a day off today and went to Burgos to see the the town and Cathedral
Burgos Cathedral
Burgos Old Town Entrance Gate