Day 29 Requejo to Lubian 15 kms
Last night, I was the only one in the brilliant and cheap municiple hostel and I had an excellent night’s sleep - that’s two nights running!
Today’s short walk took about 5 hours as the first 9km are uphill, to over 1300 metres. It was freezing cold when I set off before 8.00am so was well wrapped up. The forecast was clear blue skies and nice and warm.
You have to walk 4.5km uphill along the road, until you finally see a Camino Diversion sign that takes you on a track. I took this and within 500 meters, it met with the tarmac again. You can either continue with the track or just sod it and take the road. It was faster on the road, less painful underfoot and I really wanted to walk over the massive viaduct rather than follow a path down into the valley and up again the other side. You are also always in earshot of the motorway wherever you are so the road is a good option in my opinion. The road it was!
Walking across the viaduct is a real experience. It’s very high and is quite dizzy-inducing. There are great views from it as well. A few kilometres after the viaduct, you have to walk through a 385 metre tunnel. More fun. Somewhere around here is the highest point on the Camino.
After the tunnel, you hit Padornelo at about 9 kms from Requejo, a small village following along the road. You’ll see a few working water fountains and also a bar selling food and drink. A little further on is a petrol station and another place to eat.
The next few kilometers are a downhill road hike, until you turn off for Lubian, following the yellow arrows off to the left and then down under the motorway through a tunnel. The last three kms to Lubian are very pretty, mostly following a tree-lined lane. It’s down then up so can be quite a slog at the end of your day.
The hostel in Lubian is really fantastic, a small old stone building on two levels with a kitchen and a few beds on the lower level, and many more beds and a shower on the upper. It’s a real gem as is the village itself. As it was only about 1.00pm, I legged it round to the supermarket and spent 10 Euros on a bottle of wine and everything for lunch, dinner and breakfast tomorrow. The plan is to relax for the rest of the day, take in the massive hills that surround Lubian and hope that for three days running, no one else checks in! And about an hour after writing this, someone did, but he’s a friendly German with great English, so that’s okay. Interestingly, he said he slept on a mat in the sports hall yesterday in Asturianos, where I was on my own, as there were a lot of people, so he put in a big day today doing what I did in the kast two and just stayed on the roads. That’s a good incentive to keep moving.
The toes have some blisters after today but they aren’t painful. I’m using Compeed blister patches, which work really well and are well worth the money. There is still one very tender spot just behind the middle toes on my left foot. There’s not a lot I can do except take the pain, keep putting foot cream on it and put a bandage over it to cushion it a little. It’ll probably be fine when I finish the Camino
Starting to be concerned about cash. Down to my last 70 Euros so need to find an ATM soon or I will have to get a bus to find one. Hopefully there will be one in A Gudina. What do Spanish people do - there are so many villages and towns yet so few banks and ATMs?
I want to put in one more big day at some point, to keep ahead of the bubble behind me and to ensure I get to Santiago on time. I can easily see me hopping on a bus when one conveniently presents itself to me, just for 20km ….
Note to self: for the next Camino, I need to try and slow right down. There are so many nice places to stay in, it seems a shame to rush it all the time.