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Thank you so much for posting this.I confess I have never heard this before,but I am sat in my back garden as the morning sun slowly edges over my rooftop reaching it's warming fingers towards where I am sitting,and my eyes are filled with teardrops as I relisten to the magic tones of Sean filling the beautiful words with magical wonder.Perhaps it's because I am older now and find emotion and teardrops are so much closer to the surface,but this is something I shall always keep.@JennyH94 , what a lovely idea, and a magnificent story. You have knitted together three different sets of connections, at least. I am very much of the moment, so my current best is this :
Hmmm....
Tears, here
Just beautiful
You have created a world in a lane
It was the little weed flowers that got me.... (@David S. Coleman)
I love being in the here and now.
It is where I belong!
And here and now I am on a camino like no other.
Not in any guide book, and anyone is capable of doing it!
Maybe I need to add a link to a poem that speaks more eloquently than I could ever do.
@JennyH94 , what a lovely idea, and a magnificent story. You have knitted together three different sets of connections, at least. I am very much of the moment, so my current best is this :
Hmmm....
Tears, here
Just beautiful
You have created a world in a lane
It was the little weed flowers that got me.... (@David S. Coleman)
I love being in the here and now.
It is where I belong!
And here and now I am on a camino like no other.
Not in any guide book, and anyone is capable of doing it!
Maybe I need to add a link to a poem that speaks more eloquently than I could ever do.
I confess I have told this story in reply to a previous request,but It can ( I hope ) bear retelling.I love the Church at Hontanas and always spend time there when passing through.It has a special atmosphere,peaceful,calming,spiritual and Sacred all in one.I light candles for missed loved ones and sit in contemplation.In 2018 whilst sat there,lost in my own thoughts,with a Spanish Hymn playing in the background a young Pilgrim walked in,pack on back and sticks in hands.She stood for a moment facing the Altar then began to sing along with the music with a beautiful voice.I sat there moved to tears,and when I looked at the girl she had tears running down her cheeks as she sang.When she finished she bowed towards the Altar and walked out.I never saw her again but I will never forget herOver the past weeks, out walking in our sleepy South Coast, New South Wales town of Culburra Beach, my thoughts inevitably turned to the Camino and in particular to the countless wonderful experiences I’ve had whilst on camino.
Many experiences came to mind, so I examined those experiences in turn and drew up a shortlist of those Camino Moments which gave me utter joy. Here is the Camino Moment which eclipsed all others:
In 2015, after a bike fall prevented me from joining @Saint Mike II on a bike camino from Pamplona, I joined @David on one of his many first aid caminos. David did the diagnosis, carried out the first aid and we both chatted to the pilgrims as he worked.
One night, at the fantastic Santiago Apostol albergue at Puente La Reina, David carried out first aid treatments for hours. The albergue was packed - so many pilgrims staying - the noise from the dining room was something you just had to be there to hear and to appreciate - the pilgrim community at its best. Many pilgrims needed first aid help and a long line formed.
One of the pilgrims needing that help was Max, a young American pilgrim, who was super-enthusiastic about everything on the Camino. His enthusiasm had him racing out of the ‘barrier’ that is St Jean Pied de Port and each day he walked too far and too fast. He had blisters and very sore legs. David suspected he might be heading towards shin splints. After David treated the blisters and tried to teach him how to walk so he didn’t get shin splints, which is an hilarious story in itself!, he asked Max to wait for him while he disappeared for a couple of minutes, without telling him why. He returned with a staff he’d made - he makes one before each first aid camino to give to a pilgrim in need. It was a beautiful thing with a proper handgrip, a metal tip at the bottom of the staff and adorned with a small metal scallop shell. He presented it to Max, who was completely overwhelmed - he was profuse in his thanks to David.
Here’s my All Time, Absolute BEST Camino moment! When Max went inside and into the dining room, David turned his attention to the next pilgrim needing help. A moment later we heard a massive roar, cheering and applause. We looked up to see Max, holding the staff in the air like a Viking - every pilgrim cheering and clapping. Gosh - the feeling! My heart nearly burst with joy.
Without doubt, this is what the Camino is all about.
In a recent email, David told me he has a staff ready to give to another pilgrim in need. Who that pilgrim will be is unknown, as is the time when it will be gifted. My hope is that it won’t be too long.
Here are a few photos of the new staff - beautiful, isn’t it?
View attachment 72898
I’d love to hear the stories of your All Time, Absolute BEST Camino Moment - please share your stories.
Cheers and best wishes from Oz -
Jenny
Lovely, thanks for posting this.@JennyH94 , what a lovely idea, and a magnificent story. You have knitted together three different sets of connections, at least. I am very much of the moment, so my current best is this :
Hmmm....
Tears, here
Just beautiful
You have created a world in a lane
It was the little weed flowers that got me.... (@David S. Coleman)
I love being in the here and now.
It is where I belong!
And here and now I am on a camino like no other.
Not in any guide book, and anyone is capable of doing it!
Maybe I need to add a link to a poem that speaks more eloquently than I could ever do.
Over the past weeks, out walking in our sleepy South Coast, New South Wales town of Culburra Beach, my thoughts inevitably turned to the Camino and in particular to the countless wonderful experiences I’ve had whilst on camino.
Many experiences came to mind, so I examined those experiences in turn and drew up a shortlist of those Camino Moments which gave me utter joy. Here is the Camino Moment which eclipsed all others:
In 2015, after a bike fall prevented me from joining @Saint Mike II on a bike camino from Pamplona, I joined @David on one of his many first aid caminos. David did the diagnosis, carried out the first aid and we both chatted to the pilgrims as he worked.
One night, at the fantastic Santiago Apostol albergue at Puente La Reina, David carried out first aid treatments for hours. The albergue was packed - so many pilgrims staying - the noise from the dining room was something you just had to be there to hear and to appreciate - the pilgrim community at its best. Many pilgrims needed first aid help and a long line formed.
One of the pilgrims needing that help was Max, a young American pilgrim, who was super-enthusiastic about everything on the Camino. His enthusiasm had him racing out of the ‘barrier’ that is St Jean Pied de Port and each day he walked too far and too fast. He had blisters and very sore legs. David suspected he might be heading towards shin splints. After David treated the blisters and tried to teach him how to walk so he didn’t get shin splints, which is an hilarious story in itself!, he asked Max to wait for him while he disappeared for a couple of minutes, without telling him why. He returned with a staff he’d made - he makes one before each first aid camino to give to a pilgrim in need. It was a beautiful thing with a proper handgrip, a metal tip at the bottom of the staff and adorned with a small metal scallop shell. He presented it to Max, who was completely overwhelmed - he was profuse in his thanks to David.
Here’s my All Time, Absolute BEST Camino moment! When Max went inside and into the dining room, David turned his attention to the next pilgrim needing help. A moment later we heard a massive roar, cheering and applause. We looked up to see Max, holding the staff in the air like a Viking - every pilgrim cheering and clapping. Gosh - the feeling! My heart nearly burst with joy.
Without doubt, this is what the Camino is all about.
In a recent email, David told me he has a staff ready to give to another pilgrim in need. Who that pilgrim will be is unknown, as is the time when it will be gifted. My hope is that it won’t be too long.
Here are a few photos of the new staff - beautiful, isn’t it?
View attachment 72898
I’d love to hear the stories of your All Time, Absolute BEST Camino Moment - please share your stories.
Cheers and best wishes from Oz -
Jenny
What a wonderful story and what a wonderful man. I’d be honoured to say ‘hello’ if we were ever on the same Camino. I don’t know any from the forum personally, but I like what I read.
@JennyH94 , what a lovely idea, and a magnificent story. You have knitted together three different sets of connections, at least. I am very much of the moment, so my current best is this :
Hmmm....
Tears, here
Just beautiful
You have created a world in a lane
It was the little weed flowers that got me.... (@David S. Coleman)
I love being in the here and now.
It is where I belong!
And here and now I am on a camino like no other.
Not in any guide book, and anyone is capable of doing it!
Maybe I need to add a link to a poem that speaks more eloquently than I could ever do.
Thanks JillThere isn't just one. But this one comes to mind. As I walked the C. Frances alone, I repeatedly ran into Lindsay, from Scotland. He is a guitar builder, and had built this travel guitar to carry along on the Camino. I mean, we met up in bars, on remote stretches on alternative routes, etc. without planning to. We didn't walk together and we didn't plan to meet again, but we did again and again, like you do...
Then when I got to Santiago, I ran into Lindsay again. We ending up hanging out and were having such fun, but it was getting late and everything was starting to close up. We saw a couple of men in a bar, but the door was locked, so we knocked and they let us in. These men were natives of Santiago, friends since childhood. The bar was closed, but they let us in and locked the door behind us. Lindsay got out his makeshift travel guitar ("Matilda") and started to play. It was a lovely, intimate time.
For some reason, this video is showing up sideways, so I hope you can flip it.
Here's a song Lindsay wrote and performed along the Way, that stuck with me as I walked.
Here's a song Lindsay wrote and performed along the Way, that stuck with me as I walked.
Hmm. Not my all time best, but two of my most memorable moments happened 2 years apart, and both involved my pants. As we all know, we only carry two pair, one to wear, one to wash.
I didn't know my pants were such a hot commodity.
It’s so hard to choose the moment which goes to the top of the list! It’ll be wonderful to hear which one that is for you, @VNwalking !I can't think of a single all-time best moment - there have been so many.
And I bet I'm not alone in coming up with a single 'best.'
Hmmm...let me get back to you on that, Jenny...!
Hello @kirkie ! Thank you for sharing the beautiful Ithaca video - listening to those wonderful words, spoken by Sean Connery, is such a balm - they go straight to our pilgrim hearts.@JennyH94 , what a lovely idea, and a magnificent story. You have knitted together three different sets of connections, at least. I am very much of the moment, so my current best is this :
Hmmm....
Tears, here
Just beautiful
You have created a world in a lane
It was the little weed flowers that got me.... (@David S. Coleman)
I
I love being in the here and now.
It is where I belong!
And here and now I am on a camino like no other.
Not in any guide book, and anyone is capable of doing it!
Maybe I need to add a link to a poem that speaks more eloquently than I could ever do.
What a wonderful experience, @mspath - and what a privilege. How thrilled and blessed you would have felt.Today in total confinement here in rural France this memory seems like a dream from another life.
However without a doubt for me it has always been and shall be January 24, 2009 in Roncesvalles. I walked 18 k in 5 hours through strong wind, heavy rain, sleet and eventually dense snow up the Valcarlos road to the almost mythic monastery ! Saw few people and no other pilgrims; I was the only one staying in the tiny old winter albergue.
The monk who stamped my Credential invited me to the evening benediction for pilgrims. It was lovely. The service was held in the ancient Romanesque church (wonderfully heated!!) in front of the magnificent silver sculpture of the Virgin. Three monks assisted and asked me to stand with them at the altar. ...In retrospect how special it was that snowy night to be the single pilgrim where crowds have stood throughout time. ...
May thankful crowds stand for their blessing at that special altar soon again.
Hi Philip - thank you for these lovely sentiments. Yes, the Ithaca words are filled with magical wonder. What a beautiful picture you paint of sitting in your back garden in the morning sun too.Thank you so much for posting this.I confess I have never heard this before,but I am sat in my back garden as the morning sun slowly edges over my rooftop reaching it's warming fingers towards where I am sitting,and my eyes are filled with teardrops as I relisten to the magic tones of Sean filling the beautiful words with magical wonder.Perhaps it's because I am older now and find emotion and teardrops are so much closer to the surface,but this is something I shall always keep.
Thank you @Camino Chrissy! I hope that one day you’ll meet @David on The Way - and share stories and thoughts together. There’ll be wonderful Camino memories there.Jenny, what a lovely idea for a thread! I will have to ponder to see if I have "one" outstanding moment to share out of sooo many wonderful Caminos.
In the mean time I would like to say that I have always called @David a selfless and true "Camino Angel".
Oh @Camino Chrissy ! I love this! How liberating it must have been to leave the hairpiece behind. I hope that he was able to start living without the hairpiece once he returned home - a new life, living with what is natural. He looks very handsome in the photo! And what a beautiful, personal, thing he shared with you - to share his story - it’s wonderful.Ok, this Camino moment popped into my head first, so here goes...
In 2015 just before Portomarin I stayed at Albergue Mercadoiro. At the communal dinner table that evening sat two men friends from South Korea. One was bald, saying that in his own country he always wore a hairpiece out of embarrassment, but had decided to leave it at home and for the first time be natural and how freeing it was. His friend kept smiling and nodding throughout the meal as he had taken a vow of silence for 7 days. Both stories really touched me in a special way.
View attachment 72925
Hi @Lisakline - I love that threads can bring beautiful, unexpected, gifts such as the Ithaca video.Lovely, thanks for posting this.
Gosh, Hugh - to see the flowering of a seed sown 25 years before would have been joyously overwhelming. Thank you for sharing your most memorable moment and for the lovely photo.There are many wonderful moments from the 2 Caminos walked by my wife and myself. My most memorable was in 2018 when I and my wife walked up to the cathedral with a dear Dutch friend (plus his wife and another dear mutual friend) who had planted the idea of doing a Camino 25 years earlier after suggesting a book that he had just completed reading.
Oh Kathy! This sounds like your All Time, Absolute WORST Camino moment!Hmm. Not my all time best, but two of my most memorable moments happened 2 years apart, and both involved my pants. As we all know, we only carry two pair, one to wear, one to wash.
I didn't know my pants were such a hot commodity.
Yes, @WalkingJane, this video is one to keep and to treasure.Oh, thank you! Splendid. I needed this today and will come back to it often.
Hi @efdoucette - thank you so much for your wonderful story and the photo. What an exceptional day that would have been.Just what I needed this morning, isolating at home and need me some Camino, so here goes.
It was 2 moments actually, back to back, on my 1st Camino Frances. Walking in to Viana, it was probably mid morning, and I stopped at an outside table for a coffee, across from the church. The sun was shining, it was a beautiful day, I was finally getting my legs, felt great. I sat and sipped my coffee watching my Camino friends walk by. I was feeling on top of the world.
Part 1
I finished my coffee and strolled over to the church, went inside, sat down just to breath as I have been doing. I became just overwhelmed with the whole experience, sat there and wept like a baby. I'll never forget that feeling. It was part of a healing, as I was later to come to understand.
Part 2
Before leaving Viana, I was loving the ambiance so much, I stopped again on the main street for another snack, coffee, juice and a piece of tortilla. I sat outside again in one of the 6 empty tables. Along walked an elderly man and I noticed that when he saw me he picked up his pace, entered the bar and came out with a glass of red wine, it was noon. He sat with me at my table even though the other tables were empty. He spoke no english, I spoke no Spanish but we communicated for 20-30 minutes. When I was leaving I pinned a Canadian flag to his sweater, he sang to me a song as I put on my pack and walked away. I took his picture and remember him often, especially these days.
Thanks for reading and allowing me to relive these moments this morning.
Oh @AlwynWellington - how your story touched my heart! How you must miss your beloved Cathy.@JennyH94, thank you for starting this thread.
Like others, I have so many memories. I think my all time absolute best camino (chemin / route) moment was hour one, day one. But, like many stories, there is a pre-story.
In early 2012, my wife Cathy was given some not so good health news. I had first met Cathy at the beginning of 2001 and she subscribed to a magazine called Tui-Motu. Soon after meeting Cathy I read a short piece, by a priest I had first met some 40 years before, about his trials and tribulations after setting out the year before. In a chat in early 2012, Cathy remembered that piece and said "when I am gone, you will be able to do that walk in Spain". My first training amble (4 km down hill) showed up many issues, obesity being but the least. I remember feeling pleased I had many years to get prepared.
Cathy died in late 2014 and often the next year my many neighbours asked when I was to get away: Cathy had told them. After winding up her estate I was able to get away in April 2016. Within four years preparation behind me, I was at Le Puy-en-Velay, mentally and physically ready to continue my ambling, this time for around 1,600 km.
I arrived at Le-Puy on the Monday evening and stayed two nights so I could rubber-neck for a full day and see the path away from the city. In the cathedral I noticed the, to my mind, awkward way to get from inside to great west door and so down the hill: you went out a side door, found some stairs, had some doors to get through, et cetera)
On Wednesday to the Cathedral for the 07h Mass with pilgrims blessing at the end. The bishop presided and a jovial fellow he was. Following a chat (Je n'ai pas compris) by the bishop after mass we went into the large sacristy to have our credentials stamped. Coming back to where I had sat to retrieve my pack I found the ventilation floor grills in the central aisle had been lifted up to reveal a stair case leading directly down to the great west door.
I put my pack on and started for the stairs. At the top I grabbed the handrail and was transfixed to the spot. It took quite a while to bring myself back to the moment and take my first step.
Kia kaha, kia maia, kia manawanui (Be strong, confident and patient)
I hope it was a camino full of blessings.
Thank youI felt strongly called to my first camino in 2015, although I had, and have, no idea how I heard about the camino. On the November day that I passed through Sarria, I stopped for the night at an albergue just past the village of Barbadelo. After my shower, I walked over to the Igrexa de Santiago. The cemetery next to the church is walled, like many in Galicia, and the tombs were heavily decorated with flowers, placed on family tombs to honour family members at All Souls Day, the day after All Saints Day (Nov. 1). I walked briefly in the cemetery/garden, then left to go around to the front of the church and see if it was open. As I walked around, a voice from a man in the cemetery called out to me. I thought it was the gardener. I stopped and he went around to the church door with me and we went in together. I had my credencial to be stamped and noticed some coins in the box with the sello. A search in my skirt pocket did not yield my change purse, which was still in the pocket of my walking clothes, so I pulled out a bill from my wallet and put it in the box with the words, "por l'iglesia." I then went to sit in the front row of the church, while the man went out a side door at the front of the church. He returned a few minutes later and set up the altar for the mass. I was still thinking that he, in his simple garments, was a lay assistant. But I was not too surprised when he returned a few moments later in liturgical robes and I realized that he was about to offer mass, with me as the only member of his congregation. As my Spanish was very basic, he helped me with the responses. At some point during the service, Jesus spoke to me and said, "I love you enough to die for you." [No audible words]. I am sharing this with you on this Easter Day, because He has made it clear to me that these words are not just for me, but for all of you. This was not just my best camino moment, but the best moment of my life.
Wow @AlwynWellington! What a Camino experience! What a special memory that dinner would be! Wasn’t “Two Steps Forward” a fantastic read? How wonderful that you helped with the story line. I loved the main character, Martin and I loved how the book came together at the end. If you follow the Via Francigena group Facebook page you might know they’re writing another Camino book. Anne Buist posted on that page a couple of months back, from Italy, just as It was going into lockdown - luckily they were heading home. I recognised her name and asked if they were in Italy with thoughts of writing another book and the great news came back to say, yes, they were! It’ll be something to look forward to.Thank you. I put this one up as it was the first of many best moments.
Three connected best moments happened a world apart. The first was at Livinhac-le-haut (day 8 since Le Puy). For the communal dinner at the gite, the woman to my left was an Australian: she warned me her husband was writing a book about a camino journey and to be careful what I said. The second happened near my home late the next year. I was on a training walk when a district nurse (who had attended Cathy) stopped to ask if it was me that was mentioned in a local radio interview with an Australian author. Intrigued, I got the audio file and all the memories of the meal flooded back. The last question: was there one person who helped with the story line? The author replied an older man wearing a kilt who was walking to honour his wife's request. So, yes it was me. The third was reading the book itself (and finding husband and wife were co-writers). The book: Two steps forward (2017) by Graeme Simsion and Anne Buist.
An elderly (much older than me) neighbour in my village said I was going on a great adventure. And so it turned out. Many private moments that I have shared with Cathy's friends. And so many blessings.
Oh Steve! Threads on the Forum will do that, won’t they! I frequently find myself in tears when I read the posts Forum members share! Laughing too - we have more than a few comedians here on the Forum! What a place of true community this is!I had to stop reading this thread as i was one moment crying and the next laughing thank you pilgrims be safe
Hi @Lindsay from Scotland - thanks for your wonderful thoughts in this post, as well as your previous post - btw - ‘love the guitar! And thank you for the lovely compliment.O.K!
Three best moments from CF 2017
The first was on the trail from Burguete when I realised that this was now for real. No more false starts or promises this was me on the Camino. I wept and saw the world, literally in a new light.
Number two was an early start from Astorga, in the dark with a full moon in the western sky and what I now know was Saturn behind me.
The rising sun cast ascending colours silhouetting the Astorga skyline and ahead was a single earthly light that turned out to be a welcoming small chapel occupied by a solatary pilgrim. I had been given the full celestial works and now the opportunity to say thank you! And I say thank you again on this Easter Sunday.
The third best moment was in Santiago when I woke up to realise that I had survived not only the pilgrimage but also the previous evenings celebrations.
When it becomes possible again I want to do it all again!
Great thread Jenny!
Gosh, @Albertagirl - what an intensely faith-affirming experience this would have been. Yes, I can see why it would have been the best moment of your life. How you were led to the church, to have the mass said, the sharing of the responses and to receive Jesus’s message is beyond coincidence - it was meant to be. What a joyous experience - an experience which will be with you forever.I felt strongly called to my first camino in 2015, although I had, and have, no idea how I heard about the camino. On the November day that I passed through Sarria, I stopped for the night at an albergue just past the village of Barbadelo. After my shower, I walked over to the Igrexa de Santiago. The cemetery next to the church is walled, like many in Galicia, and the tombs were heavily decorated with flowers, placed on family tombs to honour family members at All Souls Day, the day after All Saints Day (Nov. 1). I walked briefly in the cemetery/garden, then left to go around to the front of the church and see if it was open. As I walked around, a voice from a man in the cemetery called out to me. I thought it was the gardener. I stopped and he went around to the church door with me and we went in together. I had my credencial to be stamped and noticed some coins in the box with the sello. A search in my skirt pocket did not yield my change purse, which was still in the pocket of my walking clothes, so I pulled out a bill from my wallet and put it in the box with the words, "por l'iglesia." I then went to sit in the front row of the church, while the man went out a side door at the front of the church. He returned a few minutes later and set up the altar for the mass. I was still thinking that he, in his simple garments, was a lay assistant. But I was not too surprised when he returned a few moments later in liturgical robes and I realized that he was about to offer mass, with me as the only member of his congregation. As my Spanish was very basic, he helped me with the responses. At some point during the service, Jesus spoke to me and said, "I love you enough to die for you." [No audible words]. I am sharing this with you on this Easter Day, because He has made it clear to me that these words are not just for me, but for all of you. This was not just my best camino moment, but the best moment of my life.
Hi, Jenny:Gosh, @Albertagirl - what an intensely faith-affirming experience this would have been. Yes, I can see why it would have been the best moment of your life. How you were led to the church, to have the mass said, the sharing of the responses and to receive Jesus’s message is beyond coincidence - it was meant to be. What a joyous experience - an experience which will be with you forever.
Thank you for sharing this most wonderful experience with us.
I hope that your Easter, despite all that is happening, was a very special one.
Best wishes from Oz -
Jenny
Thanks so much for your post, Paul. To share a quiet Camino with your wife - meeting so few other pilgrims - and to have all the time walking together - would have been very special.So many moments but, without doubt, the most memorable was 20 April 2004!
Having completed 41 days walking the Ruta de la Plata (meeting so very few pilgrims over the near 1000km) from Sevilla, my wife and I arrived in Santiago.
At the sight of the Cathedral below us we paused, looked at each each and unashamedly wept.
It was her 60th birthday.
Hi John! It’s terrific to be in contact with you here on the Forum! (For those following this thread John and I occasionally see each other at Camino catchups in Sydney and the conversation is always fantastic!).A late entry.
Some of our best moments were on the Camino Frances in 2009 with the Easter Parades. On Palm Sunday we were in Pamplona when along came the procession towards the cathedral. The locals 'pulled' us into the procession and gave us palm leaves to wave. Shortly afterwards we were all in the cathedral for the service.
Five days later it was Good Friday. We had walked from Viana to Logrono for coffee and then headed out of town. I perceived that Elizabeth was a bit tired so I said "let's go back to Logrono and stay the night". We retraced our steps - and as we got back into town we could hear the beating of drums. We walked towards the sounds and came across a huge procession - with giant floats being supported by 16 men - and plenty of people in coloured 'ku-klux-klan' style costumes covering their bodies. You could only determine their sex by looking at their feet !
Then on Easter Sunday we were in Los Arcos. We went to the evening service and afterwards watched the procession through the town. There were lots of children in that procession. We wondered why there were so few people lining the streets watching. It then dawned on us that just about all the townspeople were in the procession.
Memorable times.
Hi Chrissy - thank you for your lovely post. I’ve really enjoyed reading of the memories and experiences of Forum members and I’ve appreciated so much everything that has been shared.I have enjoyed reading many of the special stories that have been shared on this thread and we each remember ours so very vividly. I have had many incredibly beautiful vacations in my lifetime, but it's the many memorable experiences on the Caminos that are set apart in a category all their own to be recalled and cherished.
@Phoenix - thank you for your beautiful post. To be able to share six weeks on the Camino with your son, after the five years he lived away from home, would have been absolutely wonderful. The bond you would have shared in that time together - the conversations, the memories and stories - all that you both shared - would stay with you both forever.Like many, mine is more a collection of moments from my second Camino. Spending 6 weeks with my younger son after he had spent 5 yrs away from home is near the top of my life experiences, not just Camino experiences. I will never regret spending those days with him.
Hi @digger - thank you too for your lovely post and for your thanks to all who’ve contributed to this thread. Gosh - our stories! All wonderful.Oh Jenny, What a good idea!
Gripped by cabin fever, and heartily sick of bathroom renovation, your thread prompted me to look back through my old journals. This excerpt describes what has to be right up there amongst my best moments (so far).
10 May: Quéntar to Granada -20. Up early again - had to wait 10 minutes for enough light to walk safely beside the river. The banks are a little overgrown and it’s hard to see things that could easily trip a numpty. Easy going at first but then up, and up, and up to a long high ridge that totally dominates the surrounding area. From the crests there are stupendous views back toward the snow-topped Sierra Nevada and down into the valleys either side. Walking easily on a wide, crushed gravel road along a knife-like ridge with visibility out to 20 miles, eagles overhead in cold clear skies, a stiff breeze blowing the wildflowers about and nothing but beauty all around, it’s easy to get a little emotional. In such an environment one tends to consider one’s blessings. I’m blessed with a loving wife who understands my need to do this stuff.
Thank you and all the other posters for this uplifting thread
Digger
Hi Mary Louise - thank you so much for your further post and the sharing of your conversation with your pastor.Hi, Jenny:
When I related this experience to my pastor at church, he pointed out to me the story in the gospel of John:11-18, where another Mary on another Easter morning meets Jesus in a garden and is spoken to by Him. This is one reason why I felt it appropriate to post it on the forum on an Easter Day when we are trying to deal with great loss and sorrow.
Mary Louise
Thank you. And I like the way you phrased your observation. The last few weeks, I have been enjoying tulips brought over by the same Dutch friends years ago bloom and bring forth such memories.Gosh, Hugh - to see the flowering of a seed sown 25 years before would have been joyously overwhelming. Thank you for sharing your most memorable moment and for the lovely photo.
Best wishes -
Jenny
Oh @Isca-camigo - thank you for your wonderful post - it resonated with me deeply. What sadness you were carrying - for your dear friend who had died and then the breakup of your relationship - no wonder you were feeling as you did. The burden would have been terrible.It is so hard to come up with one particular moment, when I look and remember a particular event I realise that there is something else which deserves a to be thought of in the same way as a sublime moment. However I realised that there is moment which isn't my all time favourite, which would be the wrong words for it,but holds a special place in my heart.
In may 2012 I started near Bordeaux on the Voie Littoral, prior to starting my best friend had died unexpectedly at the age of 42 in March on my birthday. I wasn't sure about doing this Camino,but to be truthful I was an emotional mess and just wanted to go away,hide. I was ok on the VL part of the Camino, I was alone and didn't have to interact with anyone apart from keeping in daily contact with my partner. At Irun I found it harder, more pilgrims joined and I kept myself to myself, not really wanting to chat or even meet them. My general mood detoriated after I split up with my partner by a telephone call after San Sebastian, I took exception to something and pressed the detonate button. So my Camino continued like this, I wasn't sure if I wanted to be on it but I didn't want to go home and I wasn't really opening up to other people,with one exception a French Peregrina who I would walk off and on with, who at every open Church would go in a and sing Ultreyia.
My Camino continued like this for weeks, it all came to a head at Bodeneya on the Camino Primitivo, I had a crazy night of drinking with a Johan who had walked from Belgium and I had been a general pain in the rear for the hospitalero -Alex. I woke up the next day and felt shame and regret and decided to go home. at the same time as climbing of the bunk bed something gave in my knee and I realised that was it anyway.
Alex was friendly and open with me that morning and seemed shocked when I told him that was it, he said go to Borres it is isolated and will give you time to clear your mind. When he realised that I was definitely going he came and gave me the biggest hug, I started crying, his hug allowed me to let out the weeks of pain and turmoil, it was such a genuine hug and totally unconditional on me having been a good or bad pilgrim or anything really. This hug has remained with me, and gives me a reference on noble behaviour when someone like me has been totally undeserving of it. So not my best or favourite but a very special one,that carries over into all my subsequent Camino's.
Hi David - thank you for your wonderful post and your thoughts about the time we shared on your September 2015 First Aid Camino - it was such an excellently memorable time!I am absolutely loving this thread!! I don’t know really .. so many things have happened …. in a general rather than specific moment … I have always been on Camino by myself, doing first aid, and pastoral care …. it is a singular thing .. most pilgrims I will never see again and it is a strangely sad thing that when a pilgrim is repaired and they walk off with their pilgrim friends they never look back … they are in the moment and walking onwards. I have altered my strategy now and sometimes leap ahead a few days so I can meet pilgrims again and check on how they are.
But – when my friend Jenny (who started this thread) accepted my invitation to Camino with me as she was injured and unable to do the Camino she had planned, for me it became a completely different experience .. someone to share the highs and lows with (and occasionally fall out with, my bad,) … a completely different experience – I loved it, helped by Jenny being so enthusiastic and positive about life, her empathy for others, and her brilliant sense of humour – we laughed so much, and she helped me with the casualties, sometimes turning her phone into a torch and focussing tirelessly as we worked late. She was a laughing Camino Angel!
So, a singular moment? This would be back in the year 5, fifteen years ago on my first Camino. I was walking through France along a slowly descending track with overhanging trees. Spring, sunny, hot, with the occasional small cloud. I wasn't really noticing my surroundings as I was deep into thinking.
My background is theology and my special interest was the development of early Christianity … you know how it is when you walk .. the blood is oxygenated, the frontal brain takes care of the walking and the rest of the oxygenated brain is free to ponder, to think … so I was thinking about what I knew about the development of Christianity, from Yeshua's brother and the Jewish followers still teaching in the temple in Jerusalem, to the alteration of the message by Paul .. the Roman war and destruction of Jerusalem and dispersal of those Christians, the successful spread of Paulist Christianity, defeating heresies and becoming orthodox …. and suddenly it all became clear and I could see the whole thing, the way one can look at one of those pendulum clocks under a glass dome where one can see all the workings and how they fit together ….
…… at that point I stopped dead in my tracks and thought “but, if this is so what does it say about an interventionist God?” - and then looked around me – I had arrived at the bottom of a small valley, a glade really, with grass cropped by rabbits … there was a beautiful bubbling stream with a tiny wooden bridge, the glade was edged with trees, green with Spring life … at that moment a cloud moved away from the sun and the rays came down, dappling everything through the branches .. and as I stood in utter wonder, a dozen small pale-blue butterflies rose up and danced around my naked legs – I laughed, so loud, deep laughing – Blessed the Good God for such a perfect answer, crossed the bridge, and walked on.
Buen Camino fellow pilgrims - hope to see you out there one day (preferably healthy of course)
Hi Mike -Thank you Jenmy.
It was a tough Camino, it's hard to walk for most of us at the best of times and the repeated daily walking needs a focus and determination, which I was lacking. After Bodeneya I caught a bus and train to Llanes and spent 4 nights there, I realised after about the 3rd night that I really wanted to finish my Camino, and that was all that I needed a time out and just to do something non - Camino related, however my knee wasn't capable of it, so I got the ferry home from Santander.
I reflected a lot on the whole experience and realised there was a lot of unique and special things happening around me but I wasn't capable of reaching out or opening up to them at that time.I used this knowledge to prepare myself for my next Camino from Montpellier to Santiago in 2014, patience was my partner on this journey. It became a special Camino for me.
Alex is a special person and if I was ever in position to have a place on the way and opened it for pilgrims then his living example would be in my thoughts.
Lots of hugs to you Jenny from Exeter in Lockdown.
Mike
Thank you, Hugh, for your kind words.Thank you. And I like the way you phrased your observation. The last few weeks, I have been enjoying tulips brought over by the same Dutch friends years ago bloom and bring forth such memories.
Hugh
Today in total confinement here in rural France this memory seems like a dream from another life.
However without a doubt for me it has always been and shall be January 24, 2009 in Roncesvalles. I walked 18 k in 5 hours through strong wind, heavy rain, sleet and eventually dense snow up the Valcarlos road to the almost mythic monastery ! Saw few people and no other pilgrims; I was the only one staying in the tiny old winter albergue.
The monk who stamped my Credential invited me to the evening benediction for pilgrims. It was lovely. The service was held in the ancient Romanesque church (wonderfully heated!!) in front of the magnificent silver sculpture of the Virgin. Three monks assisted and asked me to stand with them at the altar. ...In retrospect how special it was that snowy night to be the single pilgrim where crowds have stood throughout time. ...
May thankful crowds stand for their blessing at that special altar soon again.
Over the past weeks, out walking in our sleepy South Coast, New South Wales town of Culburra Beach, my thoughts inevitably turned to the Camino and in particular to the countless wonderful experiences I’ve had whilst on camino.
Many experiences came to mind, so I examined those experiences in turn and drew up a shortlist of those Camino Moments which gave me utter joy. Here is the Camino Moment which eclipsed all others:
In 2015, after a bike fall prevented me from joining @Saint Mike II on a bike camino from Pamplona, I joined @David on one of his many first aid caminos. David did the diagnosis, carried out the first aid and we both chatted to the pilgrims as he worked.
One night, at the fantastic Santiago Apostol albergue at Puente La Reina, David carried out first aid treatments for hours. The albergue was packed - so many pilgrims staying - the noise from the dining room was something you just had to be there to hear and to appreciate - the pilgrim community at its best. Many pilgrims needed first aid help and a long line formed.
One of the pilgrims needing that help was Max, a young American pilgrim, who was super-enthusiastic about everything on the Camino. His enthusiasm had him racing out of the ‘barrier’ that is St Jean Pied de Port and each day he walked too far and too fast. He had blisters and very sore legs. David suspected he might be heading towards shin splints. After David treated the blisters and tried to teach him how to walk so he didn’t get shin splints, which is an hilarious story in itself!, he asked Max to wait for him while he disappeared for a couple of minutes, without telling him why. He returned with a staff he’d made - he makes one before each first aid camino to give to a pilgrim in need. It was a beautiful thing with a proper handgrip, a metal tip at the bottom of the staff and adorned with a small metal scallop shell. He presented it to Max, who was completely overwhelmed - he was profuse in his thanks to David.
Here’s my All Time, Absolute BEST Camino moment! When Max went inside and into the dining room, David turned his attention to the next pilgrim needing help. A moment later we heard a massive roar, cheering and applause. We looked up to see Max, holding the staff in the air like a Viking - every pilgrim cheering and clapping. Gosh - the feeling! My heart nearly burst with joy.
Without doubt, this is what the Camino is all about.
In a recent email, David told me he has a staff ready to give to another pilgrim in need. Who that pilgrim will be is unknown, as is the time when it will be gifted. My hope is that it won’t be too long.
Here are a few photos of the new staff - beautiful, isn’t it?
View attachment 72898
I’d love to hear the stories of your All Time, Absolute BEST Camino Moment - please share your stories.
Cheers and best wishes from Oz -
Jenny
I felt strongly called to my first camino in 2015, although I had, and have, no idea how I heard about the camino. On the November day that I passed through Sarria, I stopped for the night at an albergue just past the village of Barbadelo. After my shower, I walked over to the Igrexa de Santiago. The cemetery next to the church is walled, like many in Galicia, and the tombs were heavily decorated with flowers, placed on family tombs to honour family members at All Souls Day, the day after All Saints Day (Nov. 1). I walked briefly in the cemetery/garden, then left to go around to the front of the church and see if it was open. As I walked around, a voice from a man in the cemetery called out to me. I thought it was the gardener. I stopped and he went around to the church door with me and we went in together. I had my credencial to be stamped and noticed some coins in the box with the sello. A search in my skirt pocket did not yield my change purse, which was still in the pocket of my walking clothes, so I pulled out a bill from my wallet and put it in the box with the words, "por l'iglesia." I then went to sit in the front row of the church, while the man went out a side door at the front of the church. He returned a few minutes later and set up the altar for the mass. I was still thinking that he, in his simple garments, was a lay assistant. But I was not too surprised when he returned a few moments later in liturgical robes and I realized that he was about to offer mass, with me as the only member of his congregation. As my Spanish was very basic, he helped me with the responses. At some point during the service, Jesus spoke to me and said, "I love you enough to die for you." [No audible words]. I am sharing this with you on this Easter Day, because He has made it clear to me that these words are not just for me, but for all of you. This was not just my best camino moment, but the best moment of my life.
Early mornings on the Camino are my best moments.Over the past weeks, out walking in our sleepy South Coast, New South Wales town of Culburra Beach, my thoughts inevitably turned to the Camino and in particular to the countless wonderful experiences I’ve had whilst on camino.
Many experiences came to mind, so I examined those experiences in turn and drew up a shortlist of those Camino Moments which gave me utter joy. Here is the Camino Moment which eclipsed all others:
In 2015, after a bike fall prevented me from joining @Saint Mike II on a bike camino from Pamplona, I joined @David on one of his many first aid caminos. David did the diagnosis, carried out the first aid and we both chatted to the pilgrims as he worked.
One night, at the fantastic Santiago Apostol albergue at Puente La Reina, David carried out first aid treatments for hours. The albergue was packed - so many pilgrims staying - the noise from the dining room was something you just had to be there to hear and to appreciate - the pilgrim community at its best. Many pilgrims needed first aid help and a long line formed.
One of the pilgrims needing that help was Max, a young American pilgrim, who was super-enthusiastic about everything on the Camino. His enthusiasm had him racing out of the ‘barrier’ that is St Jean Pied de Port and each day he walked too far and too fast. He had blisters and very sore legs. David suspected he might be heading towards shin splints. After David treated the blisters and tried to teach him how to walk so he didn’t get shin splints, which is an hilarious story in itself!, he asked Max to wait for him while he disappeared for a couple of minutes, without telling him why. He returned with a staff he’d made - he makes one before each first aid camino to give to a pilgrim in need. It was a beautiful thing with a proper handgrip, a metal tip at the bottom of the staff and adorned with a small metal scallop shell. He presented it to Max, who was completely overwhelmed - he was profuse in his thanks to David.
Here’s my All Time, Absolute BEST Camino moment! When Max went inside and into the dining room, David turned his attention to the next pilgrim needing help. A moment later we heard a massive roar, cheering and applause. We looked up to see Max, holding the staff in the air like a Viking - every pilgrim cheering and clapping. Gosh - the feeling! My heart nearly burst with joy.
Without doubt, this is what the Camino is all about.
In a recent email, David told me he has a staff ready to give to another pilgrim in need. Who that pilgrim will be is unknown, as is the time when it will be gifted. My hope is that it won’t be too long.
Here are a few photos of the new staff - beautiful, isn’t it?
View attachment 72898
I’d love to hear the stories of your All Time, Absolute BEST Camino Moment - please share your stories.
Cheers and best wishes from Oz -
Jenny
... the sky opened up ...
Yes...felt like I had it all in a few moments...the driving rain, the clapping thunder, the still, the sun, the moon, the feeling of accomplishment, relief, exhaustion & peace...was rather surreal ( as some experiences on the camino often are )Indeed
And is that the moon at bottom left, just above the treetops?
What a wonderful experience you had @JillGat - to be welcomed and included in the celebrations, as well as the Mass in the tiny and packed church - would be joyous. The kindness of strangers on the many different caminos is something exceptional.I expected my first Camino to end in Santiago, but when I reached there, I didn't feel at all like I was done walking. The evening I arrived in late June, I ended up having a couple glasses of wine in la Plaza de Cervantes with a couple of guys who talked me into walking with them the next day onto Finisterre and then Muxia.
One was a rather domineering, extroverted Brit, who had walked many caminos before. The other was a quiet, spiritual, bearded guy from South Africa. The two had met up on the Primitivo a week or so before and - odd couple though they were - they ended up being inseparable.
The next morning the three of us headed out together and, after a long day of walking, we started looking for a place to stop for the night. I was noticing women hanging bunches of plants and herbs on doorways, but I didn't know what that was about. As evening fell, people were lighting bonfires in their yards, which bothered the Brit enough that he stopped to reprimand one old fellow for creating such pollution.
After setting down our things in an albergue next to a beautiful tiny church on a stop in the road, I headed out to look around and was immediately roped in by a couple of local elderly women who explained to me that it was La Noche de San Juan and they insisted that I join them for some obligatory rituals. I went to get my friends, and the ladies led us in jumping over a bonfire nine times for good luck and then they grilled sardines, which we enjoyed on hunks of bread. Later came powerful Orujo punch and more pilgrims showed up. Although it was a Catholic holiday, it had a distinctly Galician pagan feel to me.
The quaint little church was locked, but an abuelita told me that the next day, June 24th, a priest from the capital of the parish would be coming... one of only a couple of days of the year the church would be opened and the mostly elderly locals (about 14 of them) would have the chance to celebrate Mass together on Saint John's day. She told me it would be nice if I could come, too.
This seemed important, especially after the way they had thoughtfully included us in the festivities the night before. So I went back to the albergue and announced to all the pilgrims that we would be staying for Mass the next morning. Everybody had other plans. All wanted to get up early and start walking. I insisted, even though it seemed pointless.
But the next morning the church was full, probably for the first time in many years. Twenty three foreign pilgrims joined the local elderly folks for Mass and stayed until early afternoon before walking on.
I don't remember the name of the town. I have pictures somewhere. But this was a special moment on the Camino for me.
Hello, I am writing to you from Barbadelo, from the CASA BARBADELO hostel, unfortunately Antonio (the priest) passed away a few months ago. Best regardsI remember that priest calling us in as we walked by, and making us so welcome
Hello, I am writing to you from Barbadelo, from the CASA BARBADELO hostel, unfortunately Antonio (the priest) passed away a few months ago. Best regardsI felt strongly called to my first camino in 2015, although I had, and have, no idea how I heard about the camino. On the November day that I passed through Sarria, I stopped for the night at an albergue just past the village of Barbadelo. After my shower, I walked over to the Igrexa de Santiago. The cemetery next to the church is walled, like many in Galicia, and the tombs were heavily decorated with flowers, placed on family tombs to honour family members at All Souls Day, the day after All Saints Day (Nov. 1). I walked briefly in the cemetery/garden, then left to go around to the front of the church and see if it was open. As I walked around, a voice from a man in the cemetery called out to me. I thought it was the gardener. I stopped and he went around to the church door with me and we went in together. I had my credencial to be stamped and noticed some coins in the box with the sello. A search in my skirt pocket did not yield my change purse, which was still in the pocket of my walking clothes, so I pulled out a bill from my wallet and put it in the box with the words, "por l'iglesia." I then went to sit in the front row of the church, while the man went out a side door at the front of the church. He returned a few minutes later and set up the altar for the mass. I was still thinking that he, in his simple garments, was a lay assistant. But I was not too surprised when he returned a few moments later in liturgical robes and I realized that he was about to offer mass, with me as the only member of his congregation. As my Spanish was very basic, he helped me with the responses. At some point during the service, Jesus spoke to me and said, "I love you enough to die for you." [No audible words]. I am sharing this with you on this Easter Day, because He has made it clear to me that these words are not just for me, but for all of you. This was not just my best camino moment, but the best moment of my life.
Thank you so much for letting me know. Antonio was a very special priest. On my second camino, the year after the incident which I describe above, I met a homeless woman who was walking south for the winter with her tent. She informed me that she had met him the previous year and he had ministered to her needs and helped her renew her spirit. We went together to the church when we arrived in Barbadelo, but he was not there and we were unable to see him at that time. He was a priest for whom I can use the old phrase, "He has gone to his reward." I thank God for him, and for his ministry to me and to other pilgrims.Hello, I am writing to you from Barbadelo, from the CASA BARBADELO hostel, unfortunately Antonio (the priest) passed away a few months ago. Best regards
Thank you for letting us know. He holds a precious place in my heartHello, I am writing to you from Barbadelo, from the CASA BARBADELO hostel, unfortunately Antonio (the priest) passed away a few months ago. Best regards
Jenny, my all time absolute best Camino moment for me happened on my first day in the Pyrenees. As I left SJPDD for Orisson's overflow gite, Kayola, it was sunny and pleasant, but less than an hour later the weather had turned cold, wet and very, very windy. To make matters worse, I had to wait an hour in the rain for the Orrison staff to open Kayola. I thought to myself, what a way to start my Camino. What made that day special were the 11 pilgrims who shared the accommodations at Kayola with me. Six were from France, two from Sweden, a couple from New Zealand, and another from Germany. Initially, language was an issue as several grumbled about who would get the beds vs. the bunkbeds, some with an air of entitlement. However, once we all settled into the common area, hung our wet clothes in front of the fire and shared a flask of pear brandy, the Camino began to work its magic. The grumbling was forgotten, my New Zealand friend translated for the group and used her humor to soften the tension over the bed assignments, and we all pitched in to keep the fire - and the pilgrim atmosphere -going. It was pure Camino magic.Over the past weeks, out walking in our sleepy South Coast, New South Wales town of Culburra Beach, my thoughts inevitably turned to the Camino and in particular to the countless wonderful experiences I’ve had whilst on camino.
Many experiences came to mind, so I examined those experiences in turn and drew up a shortlist of those Camino Moments which gave me utter joy. Here is the Camino Moment which eclipsed all others:
In 2015, after a bike fall prevented me from joining @Saint Mike II on a bike camino from Pamplona, I joined @David on one of his many first aid caminos. David did the diagnosis, carried out the first aid and we both chatted to the pilgrims as he worked.
One night, at the fantastic Santiago Apostol albergue at Puente La Reina, David carried out first aid treatments for hours. The albergue was packed - so many pilgrims staying - the noise from the dining room was something you just had to be there to hear and to appreciate - the pilgrim community at its best. Many pilgrims needed first aid help and a long line formed.
One of the pilgrims needing that help was Max, a young American pilgrim, who was super-enthusiastic about everything on the Camino. His enthusiasm had him racing out of the ‘barrier’ that is St Jean Pied de Port and each day he walked too far and too fast. He had blisters and very sore legs. David suspected he might be heading towards shin splints. After David treated the blisters and tried to teach him how to walk so he didn’t get shin splints, which is an hilarious story in itself!, he asked Max to wait for him while he disappeared for a couple of minutes, without telling him why. He returned with a staff he’d made - he makes one before each first aid camino to give to a pilgrim in need. It was a beautiful thing with a proper handgrip, a metal tip at the bottom of the staff and adorned with a small metal scallop shell. He presented it to Max, who was completely overwhelmed - he was profuse in his thanks to David.
Here’s my All Time, Absolute BEST Camino moment! When Max went inside and into the dining room, David turned his attention to the next pilgrim needing help. A moment later we heard a massive roar, cheering and applause. We looked up to see Max, holding the staff in the air like a Viking - every pilgrim cheering and clapping. Gosh - the feeling! My heart nearly burst with joy.
Without doubt, this is what the Camino is all about.
In a recent email, David told me he has a staff ready to give to another pilgrim in need. Who that pilgrim will be is unknown, as is the time when it will be gifted. My hope is that it won’t be too long.
Here are a few photos of the new staff - beautiful, isn’t it?
View attachment 72898
I’d love to hear the stories of your All Time, Absolute BEST Camino Moment - please share your stories.
Cheers and best wishes from Oz -
Jenny
Hi Paul - wow! No such thing as a coincidence on the Camino ... how wonderful it would have been to speak with Marie-Francois on the phone the year after you’d met.Hi Jenny and others tuning in!
Yes, I have contributed to this forum before but, during this period of isolation (and inevitable reflection on paths trod), another experience comes to mind.
On walking the Ruta de la Plata with my wife in 2004 we met up with a delightful French lass, Marie-Francoise. Sadly, she had to quit due to a leg problem. We bade our farewells.
The following year, walking the Camino Frances with my son, I met up with a French guy who explained that his wife had had to abandon the R de la P the previous year.
“Marie-Franciose?” I queried.
“You must be Paul!” came the response.
Moments later, having been handed his mobile phone, we were reconnected.
The spirit of the Camino manifests itself in many ways, I witnessed!
I hope that @Jimmy Smith doesn't read your derogatory comments about Spanish sheep, he will be quite upset.... Suddenly I found myself in a sea of THE ugliest scrawny, daggy, bell- bedecked sheep which were surging around me .....
I loved being "up close and personal" with the sheep on the Camino, whether dirty, bedraggled, or with matted "fur". It meant I was on an adventure far away from my home state of Illinois!I hope that @Jimmy Smith doesn't read your derogatory comments about Spanish sheep, he will be quite upset
Of course the fabulous merino was bred in Extremadura it’s just that this lot looked like no merino I ever saw !I hope that @Jimmy Smith doesn't read your derogatory comments about Spanish sheep, he will be quite upset
These ones are positive supermodels by comparison!I loved being "up close and personal" with the sheep on the Camino, whether dirty, bedraggled, or with matted "fur". It meant I was on an adventure far away from my home state of Illinois!
View attachment 91017
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