El Everest

The weather was cool and overcast with encouraging signs of blue appearing; ideal conditions for our approach to the mountains of Asturias. An easy ride brought us quickly to one of the most important junctions on our entire journey. At the tiny hamlet of Casquita there is an even tinier chapel dedicated to San Blas.

You will note that it provided an opportunity to self-stamp our credencials, as well as offering a registration book for pilgrims to record their passing. We dutifully did both, and then re-committed ourselves to our task for this is where we leave the Camino del Norte to begin the daunting task of travelling to Santiago on the Camino Primitivo, the original way.

Linda made sure I didn’t miss the turning although I suspect she would have preferred to remain on the Norte given some of the monumental ascents still to come.

In the entrance to the chapel someone had posted a poem addressed to us pilgrims. We would be enormously grateful to our Spanish-fluent friends for your assistance in translating this. We suspect it might be more of a prayer than a poem, but there again there is a great tradition of bawdiness and earthiness in pilgrim writing as we know from Carmina Burana and the Canterbury Tales!

As we moved inland away from Villaviciosa the scale of the terrain became more evident and the sense of the overwhelming providence of nature was palpable. The verges and hedgerows were humming with bees and we were only able to identify a fraction of the wild flowers growing in profusion including potentilla, aquilegia, hardheads (reminiscent of small thistles), saxifrage, veronica, and endless others that were beyond our botanical ability. Suffice to say that our gentle progress through this wonderland was pure joy.

And then we (i.e. me, your blog author) made a very poor decision. We had reached a junction and we had a choice. We could follow our official route which would take us to an ancient church and Cistercian monastery, or we could take a short link out to a provincial, numbered road and follow a reliably good surface to the alto marked on our map.

Both routes appeared from the mapping to have a similar character, and so we (i.e. I) opted for the monastery. Big mistake: huge!

The approach to the monastery was a steep descent on good surfaces into a deeply cut valley.

The gates to the monastery were locked – we were well before eleven when they offered tours, so I was only able to get a snatched photo through the fence. My navigational reputation descended into the basement, however , when the tarred road was swiftly replaced by a rough concrete road which then ascended aggressively to the col above. I hoped it might be just a few hundred metres of pushing but, at an estimated gradient well above 20%, we reckon we pushed the bikes for nearly two kilometres. It was immensely draining and both bikes were close to being dumped in the depths of the steep sided valley below! Linda’s failed attempt to muster a smile says it all and the photo gets nowhere near to capturing the steepness of the climb.

Eventually, we reached the Alto de la Campa and the main road. We were treated to a brilliantly engineered, smooth surfaced glide down into Pola de Siero where two coffees each were consumed to settle our frayed nerves. Pola was a great coffee stop but we could find little else to say in its favour. And lest you are thinking that all we do is cycle through wonderful pristine landscapes we have included a photo of some typical town landscape we had to negotiate on the outskirts of Pola.

Eventually, we freed ourselves from Pola’s urban constraints and commenced a complex and pretty back route into Oviedo without using the busy N-road. As we were nearing Oviedo we spotted this Casa cum restaurant and thought it might be trying to hint at something. Sure enough, by the time we had arrived at the portals of the Cathedral we had climbed 9698 metres, and travelled 530 kms since leaving Irun. We had climbed more than the total height of Everest from sea level! And it was beginning to feel like it!

Around 2pm we had our first view of the Oviedo skyline and we were relieved. Because of the pushing it had seemed to be one of our hardest days. Fortunately, we have our first rest day tomorrow before setting off into the highlands of Asturias.

Before we close for tonight we simply want to thank Judith and Tom McInally. We awoke this morning to a notification from the Hospice that they had made a generous donation to the Hospice on our site, and had posted a lovely message. Although we do not know you we are hugely appreciative of the support you have given. Along with the many other donations and comments we have received, it is this support that makes it possible to continue when we have days like today! Fortunately, Oviedo is proving to justify its reputation as one of Spain’s most beautiful cities. We hope to share with you a ‘postcard’, from our gentle wanderings tomorrow. Time for bed!

8 responses to “El Everest”

  1. Wow! This was an epic day, Mum and Dad! It’s nice to see the weather and other logistics issues have started to subside, even if Dad’s navigational decisions are still causing challenges! 😛 We are watching every entry, and Ellie loved to see the reference to her yesterday. Love, Rob, Sarah, and Ellie.

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  2. carolbrannigan Avatar
    carolbrannigan

    The flux and flow of your day just wondering what’s going to happen next when you know all your paper planning takes you only so far into reality! And how I felt for Linda ! The word I’m expecting to see tomorrow oft repeated is monumental! And your achievements every day are that. Wishing you strong fuel for your legs! Buen Camino!

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  3. Sounds like it was a very tough day but you both did well to come through it. I am sure nerves were frayed at times. Hope you slept well and today is a good day.

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  4. Hi Kevin and Linda I’m so glad you have a rest day tomorrow. You’ve both worked so hard and are so determined. You’ve had great highs and beautiful views but also overcome some really difficult obstacles . Wishing you a smoother way from now on❣️ Hoping you slept well and you can enjoy some more than well deserved relaxation 🥰 Sending lots of love and hugs Sheila 😘😘😘😘😘😘💛💛

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  5. howardandjennyjones Avatar
    howardandjennyjones

    That was quite a day – what a climb! Our admiration for your determination, resolve and sheer grit is beyond words. Very well done and we wish you a good rest day. We are really enjoying the photos (and of course the text). The description of that small church under restoration was so apt and we could picture the participants in full flow. One of us is very keen on carved stone work – often the more bizarre and ancient the better! We appreciated seeing your picnic – it took us back to our own attempts at the same in Spain – under very leisurely circumstances we hasten to add. We are so pleased you have made such progress and are on schedule. Take care and good luck when you pick up the pilgrimage again.

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  6. brian8652ec7a9d Avatar
    brian8652ec7a9d

    Pilgrim, Casquith and San Blas are on your Camino

    You are on your way to ‘la Villa’

    El Camino de Santiago has stream, rivers, woods and the pious

    And a place that is Casquita, a landmark destination

    Arrive here pilgrim in the morning, relaced and with great emotion

    For the steps taken, some large others short but always well-placed

    In the dust of the Camino and almost always with company

    It is here in Casquita that the farewells emerge and the emotions rise up

    This is an important place for taking decisions, some decide on the coast others inland.

    Behind these blocks of stone, silent and observing is our much loved San Blas

    An important pilgrim

    Buen Camino!

    Much love to you both

    Brian and Lizxx

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  7. The Loughborough Pilgrims Avatar
    The Loughborough Pilgrims

    Hi Kevin and Linda,

    We’ve really enjoyed following your adventures so far and re-living the Camino experience (both highs and lows)! Here is my interpretation of the San Blas poem which was written by one of the residents from the 8 families who live in the hamlet of Casquita and pride themselves on supporting the passing pilgrims.

    DEAR PILGRIM:

    CASQUITA AND SAN BLAS

    are on your Camino

    As it passes through La Villa

    THE CAMINO DE SANTIAGO

    has an estuary and it has rivers,

    it has woods, and meadows too

    and in a place called…

    CASQUITA

    a signposted destination.

    You arrive here, DEAR PILGRIM,

    in the morning, relaxed,

    with a great deal of emotion

    from the steps accumulated so far.

    Some steps long, others short

    but always steady and deliberate

    and in the dust of the CAMINO

    almost always accompanied.

    And it’s here, in CASQUITA

    where goodbyes come suddenly

    and emotions come to the surface,

    this being the landmark

    where decisions are made.

    Some of you… opt for the coast

    others… choose inland

    and behind these stone blocks,

    silent and observant, is…

    our beloved SAN BLAS

    as the greatest pilgrim.

    ¡BUEN CAMINO!

    Patty. La Furgaña de La Ría

    4/2/2017

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  8. Deeply impressed by that climb to the height of Everest! And you say there are harder ascents yet? I must say I’ve been hearing Robert Frost in my mind since reading this – The Road Not Taken – the last verse of which below: …I shall be telling this with a sigh Somewhere ages and ages hence: Two roads diverged in a wood and I – I took the one less travelled by, And that has made all the difference.

    Wonderful journeys yet to come no doubt. Very glad to hear you are taking a day of rest. With love Jan and Dave.

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