Have you ever seen…

A palm tree covered with English ivy?

Post by Wynette

Today we saw two different small plantations of palm trees. Charlie’s phone identified them to be Chinese windmill palms, native to Asia. They certainly are not native here, but we do see palm trees fairly often. They seem to do well here. We’re not sure whether these plantations serve any agricultural purpose.

A close-up Charlie used for identification

Plant identification

I am pretty hopeless when it comes to identifying plants. I know a few and have heard the names of more but I always forget them. But this trip I have been having fun identifying the plants we see. There are so many interesting ones.

The reason I have been doing it is the advent of plant identification software on my phone. For a while I was using google lens, which you invoke from google photos but I started using the one built into my iPhone camera because it is a little easier to invoke on my phone.

Years ago I got a few, easy-to-use identification keys. With them you went through a series of questions with two possible answers and finally got to the identification. They were fun but didn’t always work and were limited in the range of plants they worked on. I have always wished I had a magic way to identify any plant. Well, that magic is real now and easy to use. You take a photo and few taps later you are at the Wikipedia entry for the plant.

It is not always correct but probably more than 95% correct. It is based on billions of photos of plants with metadata about what they are. If lots of people are wrong about a plant then it will be wrong too. Or sometimes it comes up with something clearly wacky, kind of like the “hallucinations” of chatGPT.

I collected all my plant identification photos in an album. So if you want to see what we are seeing go there and fire up google lens on the photos.

Escargot

Post by Charlie and Wynette:

We were walking and came upon a pilgrim from Seville who was pointing to a plant like this. It turned out he was pointing to a snail like the one here. He said they are good with salsa de tomate (tomato sauce). He told Wynette the Spanish word for them is caracol.

We saw several snails in this bush. Can you find them?

The Swedish Couple

Post by Charlie and Wynette:

Now that we are on a real Camino we have started seeing people over and over again. This couple are walking about the same speed as we are so we have seen them 5-6 times over a few days. We chatted with them a day or two ago and but we saw them in a bar and spent more time with them. We told them about the restaurant where we were planning to have lunch and they met us there later. We had a very nice lunch getting to know each other.

Their names are Lars and Helena. We think they look a lot like Bernard and Ruth.
Here they are a little ahead of us as we are leaving the bar.

“Breakfast today” post, more thoughts

I wanted to say a little more about the place we had breakfast yesterday. She runs a bar and a little tienda.

The tienda is separated from the bar by this glass divider. You can see some of what she offers on the shelves, and the next photo shows the rest of the stock.

While we were there 10-15 people came to the tienda counter. Most bought baguettes of bread, one got bananas, one cigarettes, one a newspaper. As we were walking out the potato guy came in carrying a clear plastic bag of maybe 40 pounds of potatoes.

I note all this because, to me, this is a perfect example of how the capitalist economy should work. People at the top of the hill (it is a steep walk into town), mostly older people, need things like bread and the other things she sells. She gets deliveries from little vans that come by with bread, potatoes, etc. She then sells these things that people need at a small profit. She saw a need and filled it.

It was also somewhat of a social center. Some people got coffee. Most people stayed and chatted with the owner and each other for a while.

Spain is filled with these small, independent businesses filling people’s needs, The US was also filled with places like this 50 years ago.

Now Walmart and Amazon fill those needs but, obviously, it is not the same. It is a matter of opinion which is better, both have their good and bad points. We love to patronize and observe these small businesses and we are glad to we can go to Spain and do that.

Finding coffee

We like to get coffee along the way after we have walked for an hour or two. We depend on google maps to find the bars. We planned for the cafe-bar shown in the far right but it was closed. It our backup was a pandereia in the closer brown building.

It turned out to be a tiny place, maybe 10 by 20 feet with 29-30 loaves of bread. One of those little local places that make things easier for the people in the area. Basically a bread middleman or middleperson or middleshop. They didn’t have a place to sit, but they did have a little coffee machine. Every selection had sugar and it was a bit too sweet. And the machine allowed you to add extra sugar.