April 25: Travel and Walking Day, Santo Domingo to Belorado

Miles walked: 8.8

Cumulative miles walked: 131.3

Flights of stairs climbed: 15 (many more than that downhill)

We did the same today as yesterday to make our walk the length we enjoy, i.e., we took a taxi to cut the 13 miles to about 7.

Walked about 3 miles and came to one of the best bars ever, in Villamayor del Rio (“main village of the river”).

We loved the bar because: they made our fried eggs and toast with a smile, coffee was amazing, the bar appeared just when we really wanted to stop, it was decorated with flags reminding me of my dorky hobby of learning geography including country flags. Mostly it reminded me how many I’ve forgotten since I haven’t been doing my flashcards while on the Camino. Believe it or not, we stay too busy! Sometimes we are busy resting, but … It’s gotta be done.

When we were leaving the bar I told the people running the bar and kitchen how much we liked the coffee and they beamed and told us “it is Colombian coffee.” The cups said “Candelas” brand.

The walk itself? Well, there was maybe a mile that was quite nice. But all the rest was on a wide path that followed just feet from a busy, noisy highway. It was pretty country and beautiful weather, but that traffic noise is tiring, probably our least favorite walking day. (The part we missed in the taxi was along the highway, too. The true pilgrims endured that the full 13 miles.)

After we got into our place for the night in Belorado (Hostal Punto B), we went for lunch. The best meal we’ve had so far. More about that in a separate post!

Now, true to routine, we are in the bar across from our hotel blogging and listening to music. American blues mostly. Very nice.

Part of the walk today that was not along the busy highway
This, too, was nice.
But most was like this.
… And this.
The bar. A most welcome sight.
Inside the best bar ever: Albergue Bar Tienda Villamayor.
I was skeptical this would be a place for breakfast because it was called “Tienda” on Google maps. That means “store”. Turned out it was a store, too. This shelf was its entire stock. But enough to make dinner in an albergue kitchen.
Leaving the bar/tienda. Side entrance. The owners probably live upstairs.
A statue in Villamayor del Rio: Santo Domingo with the famous Santo Domingo chickens. Read about it here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santo_Domingo_de_la_Calzada_Cathedral Note: we tried to go into the cathedral yesterday, but it was temporarily closed. I’d love to see those chickens but probably never will.
Shortly before we arrived in Belorado we ran into this cheerful young pilgrim we had walked with briefly two or three days ago. He’s German. I asked him what city he was from and he said Leipzig and added that Leipzig was in eastern Germany and had been in East Germany when that existed. He then added that he was born 10 days after the wall came down. He said that when the wall came down, his mother was so pregnant with him that she wasn’t able to leave her house to celebrate and go to the other side. She was fearful it would not last and they’d be walled up again before she had a chance to cross.

4 thoughts on “April 25: Travel and Walking Day, Santo Domingo to Belorado”

    1. Bhutan does have a memorable flag! Is that where you were trekking, Henry? At one point not long before I left on this trip I could identify probably 80% of the flags. But since I haven’t reviewed for about 3 weeks it’s amazing how many I have forgotten. Very poor short-term memory. I’ve been studying with some flashcards (anki) that are supposed to ask you right when you are about to forget. I think it’s called spaced repetition. But if you don’t keep up with them then you start forgetting.

      1. My first trek in the Himalaya was in India to the base of Kanchenjunga, but I preceded that with a cultural tour of Bhutan.

  1. I had learned in my geography study that (as I’m sure you know) Kanchenjunga is the 3rd tallest mountain (after Everest and K2) and that, very interesting to me, few people have climbed it because a great number of those who have attempted to climb it died.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *