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Mystery Resolved

scruffy1

Veteran Member
Time of past OR future Camino
Holy Year from Pamplona 2010, SJPP 2011, Lisbon 2012, Le Puy 2013, Vezelay (partial watch this space!) 2014; 2015 Toulouse-Puenta la Reina (Arles)
Our fellow caminante (a?) CaminoDebrita posted a picture of me from this past Camino with a reference to my tastes in the millinery arts. True I am a true scruff but don't touch my hat! My custom is to purchase wherever possibly a pin from whichever hamlet, village, or town which I happen to be passing through and to attach it to my hat. A walking credential if you will which later, at home, adorns the wall until next time through. A curious but pleasant habit harming no one but my own pocketbook. And yes, the row of pins goes all around the hat and includes every place and every thing possible.

upload_2015-12-27_23-25-40.png
PS For Ivar, Silly Season for sure but fun!
 
Join our full-service guided tour and let us convert you into a Pampered Pilgrim!
Very light, comfortable and compressible poncho. Specially designed for protection against water for any activity.

Our Atmospheric H30 poncho offers lightness and waterproofness. Easily compressible and made with our Waterproof fabric, its heat-sealed interior seams guarantee its waterproofness. Includes carrying bag.

€60,-
I buy the "town pins" along the way, where they are available. My collecting at home takes the form of my Hard Rock Cafe pins from places I have visited all over the world. The second pin collecting case display is for my growing collection of Camino pins.

Even when I walk through a little village or small town, I stop in the local cafe or tienda and ask: ¿Venden pines de colección? (Do you sell collector pins?).

If they say yes, I buy. If they say no, I sometimes will then ask "donde luego?" (Then where?). If they reply "no se," (I do not know), I reply with "gracias," finish my coffee or buy a bottle of water, and move on.

Photos and memories aside, pin collecting takes the least time and expense, and space. I do so dislike clutter.
 
Thing is, about pins, is that they are so beautiful - enamel and metal artworks in such a small package .. I have a number of different types in my Ebay shop - I don't collect things but can understand why someone would want to collect enamel lapel pins - also, each pin somehow holds the memory from a place and a time - sure, I get it.
 
Last edited:
3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
Our fellow caminante (a?) CaminoDebrita posted a picture of me from this past Camino with a reference to my tastes in the millinery arts. True I am a true scruff but don't touch my hat! My custom is to purchase wherever possibly a pin from whichever hamlet, village, or town which I happen to be passing through and to attach it to my hat. A walking credential if you will which later, at home, adorns the wall until next time through. A curious but pleasant habit harming no one but my own pocketbook. And yes, the row of pins goes all around the hat and includes every place and every thing possible.

View attachment 23019
PS For Ivar, Silly Season for sure but fun!

I always notice the little odd detail--or sometimes the large outrageous detail!--from my pilgrim friends. I loved seeing that great adorned hat on you, but the most enjoyable part of our first visit was when I was looking at your large and scruffy beard and your large eyes, not to mention noticing that you were built like a tree (rather statuesque) when suddenly, I was delighted to realize that the real person I was talking to---who was confusing me with a wealth of geographical knowledge---was the one and only Scruffy!

It was a great Camino, and I am online every few days working out the logistics of my March and April...

D
 
I always notice the little odd detail--or sometimes the large outrageous detail!--from my pilgrim friends. I loved seeing that great adorned hat on you, but the most enjoyable part of our first visit was when I was looking at your large and scruffy beard and your large eyes, not to mention noticing that you were built like a tree (rather statuesque) when suddenly, I was delighted to realize that the real person I was talking to---who was confusing me with a wealth of geographical knowledge---was the one and only Scruffy!

It was a great Camino, and I am online every few days working out the logistics of my March and April...

D

Blush :rolleyes:
 
The first edition came out in 2003 and has become the go-to-guide for many pilgrims over the years. It is shipping with a Pilgrim Passport (Credential) from the cathedral in Santiago de Compostela.
Our fellow caminante (a?) CaminoDebrita posted a picture of me from this past Camino with a reference to my tastes in the millinery arts. True I am a true scruff but don't touch my hat! My custom is to purchase wherever possibly a pin from whichever hamlet, village, or town which I happen to be passing through and to attach it to my hat. A walking credential if you will which later, at home, adorns the wall until next time through. A curious but pleasant habit harming no one but my own pocketbook. And yes, the row of pins goes all around the hat and includes every place and every thing possible.

View attachment 23019
PS For Ivar, Silly Season for sure but fun!
Brave man you must be, intentionally carrying around all that metal. I remember packing my backpack one morning in an albergue and toying with pieces of paper and thinking, "No, too heavy'....
 
Very light, comfortable and compressible poncho. Specially designed for protection against water for any activity.

Our Atmospheric H30 poncho offers lightness and waterproofness. Easily compressible and made with our Waterproof fabric, its heat-sealed interior seams guarantee its waterproofness. Includes carrying bag.

€60,-
don't want to get too much metal up there - think of lightning storms on the meseta ........ :):);)
Yes David. A bit like "Heavy Metal Heads,,,, lets get together"
 
So there we were on the Meseta, late and hurrying to the next town and he had just said "Hey, I really like the three more enamel badges I bought in the last village for my hat" and then I said "Cool, Hey, Rob, did you see that" ... ..... and then .....

 
I always notice the little odd detail--or sometimes the large outrageous detail!--from my pilgrim friends. I loved seeing that great adorned hat on you, but the most enjoyable part of our first visit was when I was looking at your large and scruffy beard and your large eyes, not to mention noticing that you were built like a tree (rather statuesque) when suddenly, I was delighted to realize that the real person I was talking to---who was confusing me with a wealth of geographical knowledge---was the one and only Scruffy!

It was a great Camino, and I am online every few days working out the logistics of my March and April...

D
I think it's very unfair that you were able to meet scruffy while many of us who have been hanging around this forum since you were in diapers have never had that luck.
 
Join our full-service guided tour and let us convert you into a Pampered Pilgrim!
So there we were on the Meseta, late and hurrying to the next town and he had just said "Hey, I really like the three more enamel badges I bought in the last village for my hat" and then I said "Cool, Hey, Rob, did you see that" ... ..... and then ..
Hola David - H.N.Y.! Whilst there is a case for the metal pins in the hat attracting the lightning - in this case I would proffer that Rob's proximity to the motor vehicle (a big hunk of metal) was a greater cause for his being struck!
 

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