Monthly Archives: September 2025

Camino Climax Autumn 2026

“Climax” is actually too noisy a word to describe the Camino (although alliterative). The Camino is more gentle, quiet and steady.

After leaving Burgos we walked for 4 days averaging 10 plus kms to reach our personal end point, not Santiago de Campostela, but Carrion de los Condes. Carrion is near the mid point for the 900 km. Camino -French Way and a place that was spiritually significant for us in 2015 when we first walked it.

First glimpse of sign for Carrion de los Condes on our 14th day of walking.

Carrion is also in the middle of the vast and beautiful “meseta,” the serenely beautiful high grain basket of Spain. At one point there is a challenging 200 plus meter climb from the valley floor to the “alto” (high point) of the meseta. A sweaty work out (better if you don’t stop!) is rewarded by stunning views from the top.

And then, the views! In every direction.

Still wildflowers bloom even in late September. The meseta depends on rivers and irrigation for life-giving water.

Clouds reflected in the river.

I am writing on September 28 from a lovely hotel room in Budapest, the first post-Camino stage of our sojourn. We’ve had a lot of adventures and mini-close encounters on this Camino, but basically, with the God’s generous providence, we are happy and well. Ed’s cold is passing, my blisters are toughening, and the cold that started for me 3 days ago is not too bad. The latest challenge is that Anne’s Samsung smart phone has stopped working.

We are still processing our many lessons from the Camino,  and thinking of each of you with love.

I have borrowed Ed’s phone to finish this post as mine has stopped working. Will we find Samsung help tomorrow (Monday) in Budapest?

Stay tuned.

View of the Alps from Iberia jet flying from Madrid to Budapest 2 days ago.

Burgos– our favorite city in Spain

Back in Burgos for the 3rd time (2015, 2024 and 2025) we renew our delight with the beauty of the Catedral and city,  people and ambiance.

Arriving at our favorite hotel, Crisol Meson del Cid, directly across from the stunningly brilliant Catedral de Burgos, a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Rain was in the forecast, which combined with my blisters, led us to take a taxi today. My feet are very happy to wear my “nighttime” sandals all day instead of gingerly wearing walking shoes with an array of silicone patches.

To prove the adage,  “no two days on the Camino are the same,” we experienced a breakdown with the Spanish Postal Service,  Correos, which has been forwarding a suitcase for us on the Camino to reduce the weight we carry (mostly Ed carries, not me). Correos operated flawlessly for the first 7 days,  but for a reason inexplicable delivered our bag yesterday to the wrong tiny mountain hamlet. After a 30,000 step day,  we were hot,  footsore and disappointed not too have our bag waiting for us.

Our albergue in Ages, an ancient and tiny mountain hamlet.

The kindness of the Camino came through. The bag was located with a long telephone call by our hostess,  and her husband drove to the other hamlet to retrieve it.

Another view of Ages’ half-timbered architecture, decorated by modern artists.
See the animal watching Ed from a second story window.
Arriving in Burgos, the gate opens through well preserved city walls. Residents and visitors alike enjoy the city’s spaces.
Catedral de Burgos is well restored and maintained. Burgos is the number 5 in Spain, we learn. We made 10:30 am Sunday mass inside in the beautiful Chapel of Saint Tecla.
Promenade along the river leads to the Museum of Human Evolution.
This museum features important archeological finds from the nearby site of Atapuerca, pushing human life in Europe earlier than previously understood.
The view from our hotel room of the beautifully lit Catedral illumined our sleep.

We are publishing this now because we don’t know when we will get good internet again.

Early autumn on the Camino 2025

Even though we get up and walk each day, no two days are the same on the Camino. And even though we’ve done this before, the details to come are unknown.

Ed with red backpack on Camino in La Rioja

What’s been consistent: good weather,  cool mornings turning hot. Indications of harvest: grapes dark and white,  hanging in bunches from ancient vine stocks. Beauty everywhere: the colors and contours,  rolling vistas and tiny wildflowers blooming into autumn.

Vineyard in Navarre
Wildflowers in margins of fields
Vineyards in the famous wine growing province of La Rioja

What’s been inconsistent? A few hosts who seem new to the Camino have not been as helpful as most. A turnover of a generation, noticed by us compared to our first Camino 10 years ago? Fortunately, most hosts continue to go out of their way to help.

Lovely hosts Betty and Bart who are from the Netherlands and welcoming peregrinos for over 10 years, in their kitchen at Cass  Rurale Montededeio in Villa Mayor de Montjardin (Navarre)
Betty and Bart’s daughters Anna and Aileen, who are learning Spanish and English in addition to their Dutch at the local school

Other inconsistencies? In the last 10 years many of the plumbing and electrical fixtures have not been upgraded from their previous decrepid state, leading to awkward dances with the soap, etc. And wifi is always advertised but frequently non functional.

A helpful volunteer administers a sello (stamp) into Ed’s pilgrim passport (campostela) at San Pedro’s  in Estella. This photo is reminiscent of Carravaggio, I thought…

Some days the Camino seems crowded with other pilgrims never out of eye or ear shot. Indeed, the 2025 projection is for 430,000 compared to 240,000 (then a record) in 2015. But today our way was quiet and shared with only a few.

Today’s crop is sunflowers in Castile y Leon, Spain’s largest province, which we will cross for the next a number of days.

Health updates: Ed’s cold appears to be improving.  Anne’s knee is doing well but she has a couple of troublesome blisters. It’s interesting that a tiny area on a foot can cause so much angst with each step. Last night’s wonderful host,  Fernando, drove Ed to a farmacia where he acquired a blister ointment called Blastoestimulina. It’s powerful name gives me confidence that it will be effective!

In front of the red sandstone cliffs of Najera.

Tomorrow it’s predicted to be cooler. We have a big walk up into the remote mountains with no auto roads, so we will need your prayers to be able to make it on my tender feet and safety for both of us. We continue to carry each of you and your prayers with us with every step.

Camino de Santiago 2025 early stages

We have walked 3 stages starting in the beautiful province of Navarre in a Basque town called Estella.

St James peregrino (pilgrim) in S.Pedro, Estella
12th century cloister 12 C  S. Pedro

Getting to the starting point from Dulles Airport was a series of adventures and close calls in itself, involving trains,  planes,  buses and feet.  Some day we will share the stories   The short version is,  we made it.

The first night we treated ourselves inadvertently to a 3 am moonlight walk in Estrella because of time zone confusion.

Town is strangely empty. Then we figure out it is 3 am.

We’ve had 3 days of mostly sunny and hot weather. So far Anne’s left knee and other parts of both of us have held up… until Ed woke up this morning with the start of a cold. We still managed 7 km, 21 km and 10.5 km with some steep climbs especially today.

Picos de Europa mountains in the distance.
Picnic on the way.
Grapes will be harvested soon.
Tawny fields and hay.

The Camino is much the same as our first encounter 10 years ago and definitely NOT in the 21st century. For one thing, wifi in some locations is not up to snuff. So posts on this blog will be intermittent at best

If you want to contact us please use email NOT text or cell calls,  and be patient with our  response

On the Road for September 2025

Later today we will set off on our latest pilgrim jouney.

Common Buckeye butterfly in Maryland

It’s been a busy summer seeing family and friends and getting ready for the journey, which will take us to 5 countries — Spain, Hungary, Italy, Croatia and Ireland — over 6 weeks. The end of October should find us briefly back in DC before we head off to St Paul-Collegeville, Minnesota and then our winter nest in Naples,  Florida.

Summer has been richly filled with encounters with dear family and beloved friends. Thanks to my teammates where I volunteer at Naples Botanical Garden, I have started recording observations on inaturalist.com (a great app), like the butterfly pictured above. Thanks to Ed’s insistence,  we have logged over 50 miles of hiking over the last week to get legs and feet Camino-ready, providing opportunities to look and listen as we walk.

Most of our walking has been through Rock Creek Park, a National Park which runs behind our building into Maryland. It is a lovely green enclave with running water, shaded hiking trails and enough scrambling ups and downs to hold interest.

Eponymous Rocks

So far my left knee,  which was injured last fall and forced us to cut that walk short, has been holding up, DV  (dieu le veut, God Willing). A large supply of silicone blister patches is coming along for the first two weeks of our trip, which is planned for 2 weeks along the Camino de Santiago de Campostela Frances (The French Way).

From left,  Jack, Bob, Anne,Owen, Ed (not pictured is Ryan who lives and works in Pittsburg these days.

Golf with the boys and on our own has also provided lots of walking exercise.

We will start this Camino where we had to stop last year — Estella, and walk to Carrion de Los Condes, near the Camino’s mid point. Compared to our first Camino in 2015, when we walked the whole way to Finisterre on the Atlantic, this time we will not be carrying full packs (but using Spanish Postal Service Pac Mochila luggage forwarding) and we will also be limiting our daily distances. We will also be mostly avoiding bunk bed dormitories.

Staging area for packing for 6 weeks

Ed’s Travel Agency has been hard at work for weeks making air and hotel reservations. It’s an enormous amount of detailed work,  full of frustrations,  and much appreciated. Despite his efforts, no doubt we will be writing about unexpected occurrences that come with travel…

After 2 weeks, we plan to leave the Camino path on a bus, then fly from Bilbao to Budapest, which we’ve never visited. From Budapest we will fly to Bologna which gives access to Ravenna for a much-anticipated 4 day stay. Then we will make our way to Dubrovnik for the first time, returning to Rome (our favorite city in the world). We will travel finally to Ireland to see our lovely family in Derry, Northern Ireland,  and in Sligo in the west of the Republic, our way of honoring and remembering Ed’s brother,  Bill (1943-2022).

Closing this post with a summer highlight: Ed’s oldest brother Arthur celebrating his 95th birthday in July at the Walpole Senior center near Boston.

Arthur at left,  above, with kids, grands,nieces,nephews and, below, demonstrating his pool technique to Ed. Arthur is manager of the traveling pool team.

Will post again later.