....To Santiago

Friday, August 10, 2012

A Pilgrim Profile





There are some souls who have traveled the Way more than once,
who are drawn to pilgrimage regularly in their lives,
and who are rich with wisdom gathered from their conscious journeying.
Margaret is one of these souls, a woman I know only virtually
through one of the several Camino forums on the net.
Margaret is in her seventies now and has walked the
Camino Frances seven times, the first time in her mid-sixties
fulfilling a life-long dream.
She is preparing to begin her eighth Camino
later this year and she is an inspiration to many on the forum,
where she offers well-thought-out nuggets of advice and directs
pilgrims to her extensive blog entries on her seven journeys.
I am a fortunate pilgrim because Margaret has taken me
under her wing and regularly checks on my progress
with regard to preparations, both physical and spiritual,
for the Camino.

Here are a couple of the many wonderful quotes
which Margaret has found inspiring and which
she freely shares to those aspiring to the way of the pilgrim:

This reflection on the art of walking has become a favorite:

Few people know how to take a walk.
The qualifications are endurance, plain clothes,
old shoes, an eye for nature, good humor, vast curiosity,
good speech, good silence and nothing too much.        
~Ralph Waldo Emerson


Margaret also shared this with me today:

As Sir Walter Raleigh wrote in the 16th century in His Pilgrimage
GIVE me my scallop-shell of quiet,
My staff of faith to walk upon,
My scrip of joy, immortal diet,
My bottle of salvation,
My gown of glory, hope's true gauge;
And thus I'll take my pilgrimage....


And my favorite from Margaret herself is this:
Each pilgrim creates their own pattern as they move along.
After all my Caminos I know my strength;
'slow, but dependable’ could be my motto.
Trusting my gear, tenacity and ability to endure
I try to take it as it comes enjoying the good and bearing the bad.
After all this is life.











Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Heatwaves and Hikes

Training hikes are so problematic when it is 40 C outside, with 80% humidity;
a typical July in the Washington, D.C. swamplands.  Late in the day on July 4th, when the temps had dropped to 35 C, we heaved on our 60L packs fully loaded with  8kg and set off to hike on the C & O Canal for a practice run.
Two hours and 5.5 sweaty km later, we returned, wrung our clothes out and threw ourselves into the wading pool on our deck to cool down.
This is going to be a long, hot summer, and while I don't expect it to be quite that hot on the Iberian peninsula in late September, well, you never know, and we need to practice no matter what conditions prevail here.
The recent four day grid failure over July 4th week due to the derecho which hammered half of the continent gave us a chance to try out our tent in the backyard since the house was stifling by the fourth night of the heatwave.  The tent is ultralight at 1.25 kg including the footprint which makes it a justifiable item to carry if it will allow us some freedom on the camino.  I want to sleep out under the Milky Way as much as possible, though I know that most nights we will be staying in the albergues with other pilgrims.
Because of the camping gear, our packs will not be in the optimal weight range for this long walk on hard surfaces (90% of the camino is paved or hard gravel road), and we may end up having to make some tough decisions about heaving off ballast.  Pilgrims are fanatical about keeping their pack weight as low as possible because of the punishing conditions a heavy pack can wreak on the body, especially the feet.   Finally, there is one's true actual weight, with loaded pack and all your clothes and accessories, known as your FTSO weight (From The Skin Out).  You should ideally carry no more than 10% of your body weight in your pack. I find all this detail fascinating (Stuart not so much!) and I predict that I will be obsessing over every gram as soon as I get my postage scale in the mail!  Yes, I will be weighing everything I carry down to the smallest comb.  And one might observe that it is well nigh impossible to measure the weight of the fears that I will carry on the camino, for they say that the pilgrim carries her fears in her rucksack. 

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Preparations

Starting this blog is part of my preparations for a pilgrimage to Spain to walk the famous, ancient Way of St. James, known as El Camino de Santiago de Compostela.  There are many caminos, actually, and I will begin my unique camino the moment I step out my front door with my backpack and with my intention.

The camino that most people are familiar with is the Camino Frances, the French Way, which is the road that my pilgrimage companion, Stuart, and I will be taking in late September of this year.  Pilgrims on the Camino Frances traditionally begin the Way from the  small picaresque village of St. Jean Pied-de-Port at the foot of the Pyrenees in France.  The first day out is a trial by fire, walking straight up into
the mountains.  But most of the 800 km path to the city of Santiago is flat and wide and, happily, filled with pilgrims.  We expect to reach Santiago by the beginning of November, hopefully in time for All Saints Day.  From there, if we are able, we may walk on to Finisterre, the 'edge of the world' where Spain meets the Atlantic Ocean.