• Remove ads on the forum by becoming a donating member. More here.
This is a mobile optimized page that loads fast, if you want to load the real page, click this text.

A Camino Christmas Small Miracle

Kevin Considine

Active Member
Time of past OR future Camino
2021
A Merry Christmas fellow Pilgrims. A Christmas (Camino) small miracle from 2019:

Our view at breakfast; Machhapuchhare(6,993 meters) and Annapurna South, (7,219 meters/23,684 feet)

A few days before Christmas we were walking in the Annapurna region of Nepal from Tadapani to Chomrong, on the Annapurna Sanctuary Trek. We made it early and had lunch at a tea house enjoying the spectacular backdrop of steep green fields with the white capped Himalayas in the background.

Having lunch in Chomrong

The owner was not friendly though and Mika said she wanted to leave. I was surprised, but her intuition is almost always correct. So without further thought, feeling cold we took a steep descent down the mountain to Jhinu on the Modi Khola River where there is a hot spring. As we walked I was thinking how there were no displays of Christmas which of course is logical in a country of mostly Buddhists and Hindus and about 1.4% Christians. But while I missed my kids, family, and friends it was hard to feel sad in a place of such spectacular scenery and friendly gentle people.

Near the bottom in Jhinu we saw a young guy with lots of hair in front of a tea house who kindly directed us to the path down to the hot spring. First we got a room at a Tea House then walked downhill 20 minutes to the river. The same young man was one of just a few in the bath. We joined him and soon found out he is a fellow Chicagoan. We talked about a few things including the Camino as he noticed my blue cloth yellow arrow and shell wristband. After an hour or so of friendly conversation we exited the pool to leave and I turned back and asked his name. “Jack Rigali” he says. Holy Moly. He is my cousin Netty Rigali’s nephew. I remembered Netty suggesting to him and me for a few years that we should talk together about the Camino de Santiago but it never happened until today.


Jack joined us for drinks that night and we talked for a few hours about the Camino and several possible routes for him this spring.

And 2 days later he joined us for a very fun Christmas dinner on December 23 with another guest, Japanese Buddhist Monk, Dai Nishikawa, from the World Peace Pagoda in the mountains above Pokhara.

I have no doubt this was a small Christmas/Camino miracle where the power of Netty’s thoughts and the magic of the Camino brought us together for me to provide Jack with some focus for his first Camino and for both of us to connect with family on the other side of the globe from Chicago.

For the actual blog post including more photos click on:

And for other Special Moments on the Camino:
 
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.

€46,-
Holy Moly. He is my cousin Netty Rigali’s nephew. I remembered Netty suggesting to him and me for a few years that we should talk together about the Camino de Santiago but it never happened until today.
Such things happen from time to time.

In the early 1980's when I was working and living in London, I was having a beer in a small pub one day and started chatting to the guy sitting next to me at the bar.

Eventually he asked me the obvious question "where are you from?". I told him Aotearoa New Zealand and laughing, he said "I guess that you know my brother then". In laughing he was making a comment about the smallness of ANZ.

I then asked him for his brother's name and he stopped laughing and his mouth dropped when I told him that I did know his brother and that he had been my boss just before I left on my multi-year trip.

I was able to tell him the name of the company where his brother worked, his job title and I then repeated an anecdote from his brother's life, confirming that the person that I knew was indeed his brother.
 
I had what may be called the inverse reaction at the Tatopani hot spring on a cold December day many year’s ago. After trekking the Annapurna circuit alone for a month, I was so looking forward to the hot springs and a warm “bath” (sun showers just don’t do it). But when I got there I saw hundreds of young people crowded into the baths. It was reverse/return culture shock, the end of solitude, and suddenly too much “familiar.”I realize this off subject, but some places just evoke unique memories.
 
Perfect memento/gift in a presentation box. Engraving available, 25 character max.
I’ve been to the Hot Springs at Tatopani. They have gotten crowded since you can now get there via bus from Pokhara.
 
What an absolutely fantastic story!!
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.

Most read last week in this forum