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Where do ( did ) you walk locally in 2024?

When I'm walking in Spain I sometimes make a palm cross or two from the fronds of the cabbage palms you often find by the path. Just to keep in practice though I do sometimes offer one as a souvenir to any passing pilgrim. Struck me today that I could do something similar with the broad leaf rush that grows in boggy ground beside the cycle path. Much thinner and less durable but transience sometimes has its own appeal.

On to the pub with a little detour past the site of Melin Mynach (Monks Mill) - a former watermill dating back as far as the 12th century though what can be seen today is much later. Bluebells in bloom. Including white bluebells if that makes any sense! :)

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Technical backpack for day trips with backpack cover and internal compartment for the hydration bladder. Ideal daypack for excursions where we need a medium capacity backpack. The back with Air Flow System creates large air channels that will keep our back as cool as possible.

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13k organised walk at Webbekoms brook. Afterwards mini pub crawl in Diest.
Excellent weather with 25C.
Labour Day so lots of people enjoying this day off.



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The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
Last days in the marshes: frogs leaping at footfall; bird whizzling & trilling in a hedge; the haze of reeds bordering slimy canals; newborn calfs; chatting in an old pub where lanes cross.

*Walking through the fields from New Romney to Old Romney medieval church:

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New Romney
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Old Romney

* then from Brenzett via Snargate to Snave:

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Snargate at the pub

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Snave

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Meeting in Leuven with a dear Caminofriend.
No pictures seeing we were too busy talking.
We had a nice pizza and afterwards we went to visit some open churches.
The Saint Kwinten church appealed the most to us.



The anatomical theatre is also worthwile to visit.

 
Local walks with the dogs these days: While most are already posting green landscapes, we are still not there yet up north 😉 Still plenty of snow, but plenty of sunshine as well - which feels like hot summer. It is the in-between season in between seasons. Most roads are snow free but very wet, sometimes horribly muddy, the large river has mostly opened up and only patches of ice remain. However, some more snow to come next week :cool:
 

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Ideal sleeping bag liner whether we want to add a thermal plus to our bag, or if we want to use it alone to sleep in shelters or hostels. Thanks to its mummy shape, it adapts perfectly to our body.

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While most are already posting green landscapes, we are still not there yet up north 😉
I walked the ST Olavsleden from Sundsvall to Trondheim in May. Beautiful but chilly! Mostly snow-free apart from the border crossing into Norway where there were still a few deep drifts that came as a bit of a surprise! :cool:

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I walked the ST Olavsleden from Sundsvall to Trondheim in May. Beautiful but chilly! Mostly snow-free apart from the border crossing into Norway where there were still a few deep drifts that came as a bit of a surprise! :cool:

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Trondheim is about 400 km further south from here, but as you say, in the mountains the altitude helps preserving some snow in places :)
 
The usual stroll along the ex railway line to the pub and back yesterday. An exceptionally warm sunny day. The tables turned for once. On a day when Galicia was wet and cold we here in Wales managed to sit outside in the warm sunshine at 5pm. Didn't last long but much appreciated! On the way back I spotted these poppies. The red poppies are probably in bloom now or very soon out on the meseta. But these are Welsh poppies and have to be a little bit different! :cool:

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The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
The usual stroll along the ex railway line to the pub and back yesterday. An exceptionally warm sunny day. The tables turned for once. On a day when Galicia was wet and cold we here in Wales managed to sit outside in the warm sunshine at 5pm. Didn't last long but much appreciated! On the way back I spotted these poppies. The red poppies are probably in bloom now or very soon out on the meseta. But these are Welsh poppies and have to be a little bit different! :cool:
unbelievable warmth and growth from my (sub)arctic perspective ;-)
 
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So far today it has been wet so we have only walked around the house. Very local :) .
However sitting with a cup of tea we saw 2 goldfinches on the fence. Not a great quality photo as it was taken on my old phone and through the window.
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The sun is coming out now - so off for a short walk.
 
A visit with a friend to Hayling island on the south coast
The island is 4 by 4 miles and shaped like an inverted T
Access by a bridge
Still a lot of flood water so we didn’t get very far on our walk

A visit to St Peter’s church and surrounded by some beautiful houses
Inside, prayer mats covered with cross stitched covers

Outside a little Easter grotto in a tree

A headstone for a Russian Princess Catherine Yourievsky, daughter of Alexander 11 born in 1878
She fled Russia in the wake of the communist revolution and came to London where she had a singing career.
Later on, in 1932 she moved to the island and died in a care home in 1959
Her funeral was attended by just 8 people IMG_7581.jpegIMG_7579.jpegIMG_7576.jpegIMG_7575.jpegIMG_7570.jpegIMG_7569.jpegIMG_7568.jpegIMG_7568.jpegIMG_7562.jpegIMG_7565.jpegIMG_7566.jpeg
 
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Today we walked round the lake at Stover Park. There were several coot families with their chicks as we walked round the lake. The lake itself, which had been very overgrown, has been cleared and is being dredged as part of the restoration project. The silt will be dried and used in the woods to plant new trees.
Further along the path there was a fallen tree with bees around the exposed honeycomb - and a warning not to linger!

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My mother-in-law walked the Camino Frances 5 years before I did. When I got back to London at the end of my walk she asked which section I'd liked most. When I replied 'Galicia' she said 'Of course - it's so like Scotland!' :cool:

Maybe that’s why we pilgrims love the Camino so much.

Bits and pieces of it remind us of home.
 
Mt Tamahunga at 463m is one of the higher hills in the Auckland region. This tramp follows a ridgeline straight up, lunch at the top and then straight back down again.

A bit of mud, because it is Autumn, but not too much. Lots of tree roots to help with the very steep parts but not too many of those.

A good old Kiwi day tramp with friends.

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Mt Tamahunga at 463m is one of the higher hills in the Auckland region. This tramp follows a ridgeline straight up, lunch at the top and then straight back down again.

A bit of mud, because it is Autumn, but not too much. Lots of tree roots to help with the very steep parts but not too many of those.

A good old Kiwi day tramp with friends.

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...they're not smiling. Must have been quite an ascent.
 
...they're not smiling. Must have been quite an ascent.
It did get the lungs working a bit but I think that the expression in the group of three people is more quizzical than tiredness. There was something happening behind me and I took that opportunity to take a photo.
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
Loved Auckland!
Unfortunately, I lived in Wellington 😳😁
You are the exception that proves the rule. Most people from outside Auckland call us JAFAs (Just another "friendly" Aucklander)😉

I have also lived in Wellington and it has its charms. Wellington on a good day is brilliant! Unfortunately there aren't many good days 😔

Wellington has great coffee, has a compact downtown area and, in general, is friendlier to people from out of town as most people there are from out of town.

I enjoyed the years that I lived in Wellington.
 
I think that it was a Kererū. A native bird that is called a pigeon by some. They are very large for a non-predatory flying bird and seem to be on the edge of an evolutionary change where they, perhaps, lose the ability to fly.

They are so heavy, especially after a meal, that they fly below the tree top line and so it is easy to hear them. Often, on a hike, you hear Kererū before you see them.

They have a fuff, fuff, fuff sound as they beat their wings.

I think what happened was that we heard the telltale sound somewhere behind me and so they were looking for the Kererū but couldn't immediately spot it.

Here is a link to a video with the flight sound
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
I too, appreciate you who can stand living in the Big Smoke. I lived in Taupo, which surpassed both Auckland and Wellington, hands down.
I, on the other hand, love living in a vibrant city situated between two beautiful harbours that has everything that I enjoy within very easy reach.

In my mind Auckland is the most Pasifika area of Aotearoa New Zealand and what sets Auckland apart are the islands and animals of the Waitemata harbour.

I tell visitors that if you want to appreciate the real character of Tamaki Makaurau Auckland then you need to take a trip out into the harbour in a boat. Preferably a small boat but if you don't have access to one of those then a ferry trip, perhaps to Waiheke (where I think that you also lived), might surfice.

I love being on the harbour and observing dolphins, penguins, sharks and other fish.

The other beauty of Auckland for me is that it is big enough to have culture as well as nature.

On Thursday I was hiking in the bush 45 minutes drive from home, on Friday I enjoyed great coffee in the morning followed by great restaurant food in the evening, today I watched top class Rugby in an international class stadium (The Blues won and are now top of the table) and followed that with an Italian film depicting the life of Michaelangelo the painter.

Hard to beat that.
 
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I think that it was a Kererū. A native bird that is called a pigeon by some. They are very large for a non-predatory flying bird and seem to be on the edge of an evolutionary change where they, perhaps, lose the ability to fly.

They are so heavy, especially after a meal, that they fly below the tree top line and so it is easy to hear them. Oftekn, on a hike, you hear Kererū before you see them.

They have a fuff, fuff, fuff sound as they beat their wings.

I think what happened was that we heard the telltale sound somewhere behind me and so they were looking for the Kererū but couldn't immediately spot it.

Here is a link to a video with the flight sound
I saw a Kererū in it's natural habitat once (as opposed to in old paintings and stuffed toy ones) whilst tramping the Abel Tasman Inland Track, between Moa Park shelter and Castle hut. The Kererū was so plump and slow in flight that I reckon if I'd had a butterfly net I could have caught it just like that.

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Pikitia.co.nz
 
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Ideal pocket guides for during & after your Camino. Each weighs only 1.4 oz (40g)!
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
Thursday we walked 16k at Tielt-Winge.
One of the wineregions in Belgium.
It was one big long slippery walk in the most horrid sticky mud.
Then to say the organisation rerouted parts seeing they considered it as too muddy. Can't imagine how those stretches looked like.
The second part was through the wine slopes and much drier.
At the start there was also a mobile vendor with outdoorgear.
Democratic prices at the canteen.

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Today’s training was one hour hill walk with 3 kg backpack.
So off I went up Santa Barbara castle.
After a Sunday lunch and aperitivo, not a good idea!
It nearly killed me lolol
(But I did it!)
 

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New Original Camino Gear Designed Especially with The Modern Peregrino In Mind!
PCT - Day 28 - Wrightwood, Ca - 369 mi (605 km)

The path from Big Bear to Wrightwood was the best yet so far. It was without the drama of dangerous snow, washed out trails, or viral outbreaks. It included a trip to McDonald's, well actually 2, and even many more friends met. The scenery shifted from mountains to desert back to mountains again. Views were spectacular. Logistically, somehow the package my sister sent from San Diego to Wrightwood ended up in Washington DC and is still there. Whatever, I'll deal.
 

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PCT - Day 28 - Wrightwood, Ca - 369 mi (605 km)

The path from Big Bear to Wrightwood was the best yet so far. It was without the drama of dangerous snow, washed out trails, or viral outbreaks. It included a trip to McDonald's, well actually 2, and even many more friends met. The scenery shifted from mountains to desert back to mountains again. Views were spectacular. Logistically, somehow the package my sister sent from San Diego to Wrightwood ended up in Washington DC and is still there. Whatever, I'll deal.
28 days already, that's transformative! Those are fine views in your photos @Damien Reynolds . How many more miles will you be walking and for how long?

Buen camino
 
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€46,-
A walk from the 7 sisters visitor centre passing the Belle Tout lighthouse and Beachy head with much needed tea at Birling gap
These 7 sisters are some tough ladies for sure!
Beautiful scenery all the way
13 km and 5 hours got us to Eastbourne

Beachy head is one of the most notorious suicide spots in the world with approximately 500 suicides since 1965

The Chaplaincy team …a charity search and rescue team patrol the area by foot and car and are available for anyone in distress 365 days a year.
They are supported by a large team of volunteers that seek to save lives at Beachy head and have responded to some 15,000 incidents since 2004 IMG_7640.jpegIMG_7643.jpegIMG_7646.jpegIMG_7647.jpegIMG_7649.jpegIMG_7652.jpegIMG_7654.jpegIMG_7659.jpegIMG_7666.png
 
A few days back from me walking some more of the South West Coastal Path in Devon and Cornwall , England.
 

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A few days back from me walking some more of the South West Coastal Path in Devon and Cornwall , England.
😍 I remember that path fondly! I also happen to be coauthor to a German guidebook on the SWCP ...
I see you also made it through Clovelly. One of my favourite places for a weekend trip when I was living in Exeter. It certainly has become very touristy during the last decades but still I think it is a beautiful place. Together with Bucks Mills nearby.
You just stirred up lots and lots of memories from the past :)
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
😍 I remember that path fondly! I also happen to be coauthor to a German guidebook on the SWCP ...
I see you also made it through Clovelly. One of my favourite places for a weekend trip when I was living in Exeter. It certainly has become very touristy during the last decades but still I think it is a beautiful place. Together with Bucks Mills nearby.
You just stirred up lots and lots of memories from the past :)
I live in Sussex but am fortunate to be able to use a friends static caravan in North Cornwall and be able to walk from lots of locations near there. The tourists arrive when the nice photos appear and give them ideas :)

I have completed maybe 500km of the path now but not able to do a continual start to finish.
 
I live in Sussex but am fortunate to be able to use a friends static caravan in North Cornwall and be able to walk from lots of locations near there. The tourists arrive when the nice photos appear and give them ideas :)

I have completed maybe 500km of the path now but not able to do a continual start to finish.
I did not do the whole path myself but only some sections, but some of them repeatedly. My OH did the whole thing though, while I was doing remote office work in a small cottage near Pendeen. Beautiful coastline.
 
I too, appreciate you who can stand living in the Big Smoke. I lived in Taupo, which surpassed both Auckland and Wellington, hands down.
I read this very well written article about growing up in New York City versus other places.

Of course Auckland is not NYC but I think that similar concepts apply.

Where’s the best place to raise a small child: New York City, or literally anywhere else? https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/article/2024/may/14/best-city-raise-child?CMP=share_btn_url
 
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Where’s the best place to raise a small child: New York City, or literally anywhere else?
Anywhere else, please. 🙃
Auckland would be a fine place. Or Waiheke, even better. The city is close enough to be easily reached but emphatically separate.

An evening stroll in Emelia Romana - I'm busy, but there is time at day's end to walk a bit.
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