- Time of past OR future Camino
- Many, various, and continuing.
An unpleasant experience with three pilgrims and the Guardia Civil and a farmer.
The farmer this morning found the young men, pilgrims, camping on the edge of his wheat field. They had trampled several square meters of ripening rye. They had stripped the bark and branches off several nearby trees to make a campfire, which burned a strip of the field -- rendering the ground unusable for growing things for at least one season. They had taken garlic and spring onions from the huerta nearby, and were using stakes from a vineyard to peg up their tents. The farmer is hopping mad, saying that passing pilgrims ruined his vineyard last year by helping themselves to his grapes, and now they are stealing from his neighbors and ruining his feed crops, too.
The pilgrims campsite was neat and clean. The men said they are members of a "green community," and were going to Santiago with no money or food. They were "living off the Earth´s abundance," they said, "letting the land and camino provide." They usually stay in building sites and "free" albergues, but someone gave them tents so they pitch them up alongside fields and forage for what food the can at restaurant kitchen doors and trash bins, when other pilgrims or panhandling do not yield sufficient.They seem like fine guys -- just a bit unkempt.
The guardia took them away. The officers looked puzzled. I am not sure they know what charges to file against them, but the farmer said he would turn his dogs on them if they stayed around.
The farmer this morning found the young men, pilgrims, camping on the edge of his wheat field. They had trampled several square meters of ripening rye. They had stripped the bark and branches off several nearby trees to make a campfire, which burned a strip of the field -- rendering the ground unusable for growing things for at least one season. They had taken garlic and spring onions from the huerta nearby, and were using stakes from a vineyard to peg up their tents. The farmer is hopping mad, saying that passing pilgrims ruined his vineyard last year by helping themselves to his grapes, and now they are stealing from his neighbors and ruining his feed crops, too.
The pilgrims campsite was neat and clean. The men said they are members of a "green community," and were going to Santiago with no money or food. They were "living off the Earth´s abundance," they said, "letting the land and camino provide." They usually stay in building sites and "free" albergues, but someone gave them tents so they pitch them up alongside fields and forage for what food the can at restaurant kitchen doors and trash bins, when other pilgrims or panhandling do not yield sufficient.They seem like fine guys -- just a bit unkempt.
The guardia took them away. The officers looked puzzled. I am not sure they know what charges to file against them, but the farmer said he would turn his dogs on them if they stayed around.