Saturday 8 December 2012

Want some photos?

I have been sorting out the photos and video clips I took on the Camino.

If you think I have a photo that you would like have, send me an email at
ozyazik@gmail.com

and I can send you a copy of it.

I have put some videos on YouTube here:

A Korean children's choir at Cruz de Ferro

 


Walking in Galicia, just after leaving O'Cebriero


The main square in Pamplona


Some cows minding their own business in the Pyrenees

A rainbow on the Meseta



The lighthouse at Fistera

Friday 7 December 2012

Walk




Halfway through a 10km walk, trying to keep up the exercise. The first 5km took 1 hour, whereas I did about 3km per hour on the Camino. Why is it so?


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Location:Middle Head Road,Mosman,Australia

Thursday 6 December 2012

Camino equipment

I wanted to record the things I took with me on the Camino, so here they are:


External: backpack (35 litres), sleeping bag (the smallest and lightest they had), walking stocks, rain protector for backpack, poncho.




Clothes I wore every day: shirt, trousers etc, plus passport and spare travel money card in money belt, wallet, camera, reading glasses, mobile phone with TravelSIM card and smartphone with Spanish SIM card for calls and data.




Underwear and socks. Shorts for wearing after showering each day



Clothes I wore sometimes, plus waterproof bag to keep them dry inside the backpack. Light T shirt, warm jumper, beanie and gloves (which I never needed), neck protector, towel and sandals for wearing at the end of the day.




Gadgets and waterproof bag to protect them. Batteries for camera, spare battery for smartphone and spare memory cards for camera



Medicines, bandages, foot lotions, protection and repair, toothbrush and paste, shaving cream and razor.

Not shown above are
- the guidebook and Pilgrim Passport
- a pen and notebook.
- two 0.5L plastic mineral water bottles
- lunch snack if necessary, eg bocadillo
- chocolate bar
- comb


Weather

Having returned from the Autumn in Spain and Belgium to the humidity and heat of Sydney, I have recently been thinking often about the weather.
I just read a column by Peter Hitchens about the season of Advent where he talks about the weather in England at this time of year.
I find Hitchens a puzzling writer. As a political journalist, he can become tedious and repetitive, even if you agree with what he is saying. However, every now and then he breaks into gloriously descriptive and thoughtful prose, for example his description in this article of the weather in the season of Advent:


"Now, to Advent. Being a northern person who greatly prefers a frosty morning to a sunny afternoon, who loves to see  storms beating on the coast and trees shaken by the wind,  I enjoy this time of year, which seems to me to be full of promise and immensely exhilarating.
There is something about the long light of the low sun (when it appears)  which is particularly thrilling, and the rapid dusk of the short afternoons intensifies the pleasure of homecoming from a long walk in the crisp, open air."

As I have been telling people, every gene in my body is designed for northern winters, not southern summers. As much as dozing on a beach can give pleasure, I also thrill to the weather that Hitchens describes so well.