Celtic Camino – walking the Cliffs of Moher

Jen walking.1 Today was our second last day in Ireland, and our last day on the west coast.

Tomorrow we drive through to Dublin, where we overnight before hopping a flight back to Australia.

Ireland has been amazing. Apart from the countryside and landscapes being beautiful beyond words, and the pure inherent magic of the place, the Irish people have been so incredibly friendly.

I’ve not met one person who didn’t go out of their way to help or share a laugh.

Today once again was perfect weather. I know I harp on about this, but everyone is amazed there’s been such a long stretch of sunny days without rain. Highly unusual for this time of the year, they say.

I believe you can conjure up parking spaces, and you can conjure up the weather.

It’s a simple application of the Spiritual Laws of Attraction.

You might think I’m a total whacko, but that’s what I believe. And before I started this trip, when I thought of my time in Ireland, I thought of the weather being good. Same as I thought of our Camino Portuguese.

I never imagined rain.

Here’s something for you – before I left Australia, I did a small film for the Stockman’s Hall of Fame out of Longreach. Dick Smith asked me to do it.

Dick has been a supporter of mine ever since he financed my first two independent documentaries back in the early ’80s. We’ve stayed in touch ever since, we’ve remained friends, and when he asked me to do this film, I agreed. I owed him.

The film was to be shot out at Longreach, in the far west of Central Queensland. Longreach had been suffering from a devastating drought for the past 18 months. It had sent several cockies to the wall, with the banks moving in and taking over properties that had been in the family for generations.

Many more graziers were hand feeding their stock at considerable expense, knowing that this was unsustainable.

They desperately needed rain.

I arrived before the film crew and met one of the key graziers in the district, as part of my initial research. Over a cup of tea I laughed and said that the drought would soon break, as soon as my film crew arrived.

I said it always rains in the Outback when I start shooting.

The grazier looked at me ruefully, and smiled. Disbelieving.

The crew arrived Sunday. It started raining the day before, on the Saturday. After eighteen months, the drought had broken. The grazier I’d spoken to couldn’t believe it. That initial burst of rain didn’t do much good – they needed much more. And we needed dry weather for filming.

By the time we were ready for filming, the rain stopped. And shortly after we wrapped and flew back to Sydney, the rains came again – heavier, and they lasted. The drought well and truly broke.

What do I make of this?
I don’t really know.

But I do know that we create our world with our thought. Every aspect of our world.

Now, today –

Today Jennifer and I walked from our village of Doolin, following a coastal path that led us to the Cliffs of Moher. 10kms there, 10kms back. 20kms for the day.

It has to be one of the most spectacular walks I’ve ever done.

Again, my photography doesn’t do justice to the majesty of the landscapes, and the seascapes – but here are some shots…

Jen walking towards.1 castle on walk rock seat rock tower in sea.ws.2

rock tower in sea.1 Jen walking to cliffs.2

Note Jennifer below on the path centre left – barely visible.
That gives some idea of scale…

path up cliff.2 (with Jen)Jen coming down path me coming up path Jen on cliffs.2 cliffs.3

Celtic Camino – dark cliffs

My photography always lets me down.

It’s not possible for me – I don’t have the skill – to adequately convey the beauty that is Ireland.

I love this place.

I will do the best I can – and start off with my first image of the day – out my hotel bedroom window (a truck unloading fruit and veggies) – through to breakfast and black and white pudding, and the hotelier arriving with fresh eggs, through to a drive over the Connor Pass, which in no way captures the extraordinary breathtaking beauty of this way – then to a ferry trip across the Shannon River, then to the Cliffs of Moher, and finally to Doolin, and a track out of town as the sun was setting, and a bunch of cows that stared at me.

Went back and had a Guiness in a pub in Doolin, and a beautifully lyrical singer/guitarist played a special request for me – The Star of the County Down. I knew it from a track by Van Morrison and The Chieftans.

(Paddy Malone and the Chieftans did the score for a movie I did for Warners Bros.)

What an incredible day.

Tomorrow Jennifer and I are going to walk 18kms from Doolin along the Cliffs of Moher and back again. Should be amazing…

Here are today’s pics –

truck unloading Dingle breakfast Dingle eggs Dingle Connor Pass bollard smoke stacks lunch Cliffs of Moher2 Cliffs of Moher3 Cliffs of Moher birds.1 cliffs of moher.ws bird tower

Cows fence and cliff Guiness singer in doolin pub rocks and sunset

 

The Celtic Camino – The Saints’ Road

Today Jennifer and I walked one of the oldest pilgrim paths in Ireland – the Saints’ Road.

It starts in a beautiful little fishing village called Ventry west of Dingle, and ends at Mount Brandon. The full path is 18kms – we only walked a section – but it was spectacular.

It was great to get out on a pilgrim path again – the weather was perfect, unusual for this time of the year, and the air was clean and crisp. Early spring flowers were in bloom along the path.

We saw a few other walkers on the path – six in total – but it was largely deserted. And this on a gorgeous sunny Sunday.

Jennifer and I are starting to figure out a Celtic Camino, which would follow these ancient Irish pilgrim paths. They have their own particular way markers –

Here are some shots from today’s walk…

Plgrim marker.5*

jen walking away on path

Plgrim marker.5 wider Jen on track with bird Jen by castle tower boat by cliff

bike tractor

Horse

Plgrim marker.4 waymarked track

Plgrim marker.6

Jen walking back to car

The Celtic Camino – pt 2

There is magic in Ireland.

You can feel it.

You can see in in the moss covered rocks, in the swirling mist that sweeps off mountains that loom up beside the road. You can see it in the gnarled lichen crusted trees.

There are ancient energies simmering here, available to the poets, the seers, the sensitives, to those that open their hearts.

I feel at home here.

For some reason, I feel like I have come home.

That I was always here.

Green vale.2

Camino Portuguese – what I did right, what I did wrong.

I’ve been thinking back on my Camino, and trying to work out what I did right and what I did wrong.

I speak now as a pilgrim, not as a tour leader. It will be for others to determine what I did right and wrong in my capacity as a tour leader.

But as a pilgrim, here’s quick rundown of what I did right:

  1. I was relaxed. This is probably the biggest thing I did right. I went into the walk relaxed, and I remained relaxed. I believe this is why I didn’t have any real pain this Camino, as compared to the last. On the last one – the Camino Frances – I was tense and anxious. And I believe those negative energies manifested themselves in my body as extreme pain. This time, I knew that I could manage the distance, and so I kept relaxed.
  2. I gave in to The Way. I started out wearing a GPS watch with a chest strap on to monitor heartbeat, calories expended etc. At the end of the first day I took them off – everything – and I decided to wing it. I had digitised my guide books but I never referred to them. I never knew how far it was to the next town, or what the next town would be. I just walked, and I winged it.
  3. I got my injuries right. I wore a knee brace with black pantyhose underneath to prevent skin sores from the metal brace. The brace kept the bone-on-bone separated, and I had no pain. I had set out at the start to not use any painkillers – tablets or creams. And I didn’t. I didn’t need to.
  4. I got my boots right. Those Meindl boots, pure leather, were a joy to walk in each day. I’d broken them in sufficiently – about 600kms or so around Mudgee – and by the time I hit the Camino they had moulded into my feet.
  5. I got my blisters right. Even with these super duper well fitting German boots, I still got blisters, probably because the first week or so of walking the Camino Portuguese was on cobblestones. They were brutal. And on some sections, the Camino led you along busy roads with a sloping cobblestone shoulder, which acerbated the foot issues. This time though with blisters, and there were only a few small ones, I ignored them until I couldn’t ignore them anymore, then I lanced them with a pin, drained them unceremoniously, and then covered them with Betadine. That’s all. The Betadine dried them out, hardened the skin, and within a couple of days the blisters were gone.
  6. I did it right. I wore a backpack, I walked every mile, I never offloaded my pack on the van, and I never took a ride. I did the whole Camino as I’d set out to do it. There were a few days there when I was really knackered – like the day I did 37kms because I got lost, adding 6kms to a 31km day. That was tough. But no-one ever said the Camino was easy.
  7. I had fun. The last Camino had been intense. This Camino was intense at times too, but I also had a lot of fun with a bunch of people whose company I really enjoyed.

What I did wrong:

  1. Nothing.
  2. Just kidding. I did a lot wrong.
  3. I got my water totally wrong. I left myself dehydrated too many times. One time, after leaving Arcos, I walked nearly five hours without a drink, because I’d given my water bottle to my wife, who was sick. That was dumb. I should have picked up more water immediately.
  4. I didn’t do enough yoga in preparation. That was a big mistake. My back wasn’t as strong as it should have been, and my hamstrings were tight every morning. Next time I’ll make sure I include a very solid regime of yoga as part of my preparation for the Camino.
  5. I should have been more inclusive of other pilgrims. My focus on this Camino was on my group, and my wife, but I should have engaged more with pilgrims outside of the group. I did so with Cathy and Tim, the two lovely Americans from Virginia, but that was about all. You learn so much from talking with others, and you also give out too – equally important. I regret now that I didn’t give myself the time to do that more.
  6. I should have gone to Mass on Easter Sunday. I didn’t do this, figuring that I wouldn’t have gone to Mass if I’d been in Australia because I’m not a Catholic, why should I in Santiago? That was nonsense talk. I’m a pilgrim, I’ve walked the Camino, I should have gone to that Mass – and I deeply regret that now.
  7. I shouldn’t drink white port at 11am – three bottles of white port between the four of us – when I have another 15ms or so to walk. I regret that too. And yet we had the best time!
  8. Lastly, I regret not whupping the Landers Express at least on one occasion. The only time I did, I woke up three hours early and got the jump on them. That’s kind of cheating. I regret not having smashed them fair and square on the hill up to Rubiaes. But fact is, they were always going to leave me standing still…

Apart from my duties and obligations as a tour leader, this Camino for me was a test ground – I wanted to see if I could walk two weeks without pain, and I did. That’s given me enormous confidence now to start to plan something much longer. An epic pilgrimage…

boots

 

The Celtic Camino – pt 1

Sheep in field

Jennifer and I have come to Ireland for a number of reasons –

I’m researching a book.

But also I’ve been fascinated by the Celtic influence in Galicia, and wanted to explore more the Irish connection with Spain.

Celtic Cross

Jennifer and I have also been researching the pilgrim paths of Ireland, of which there are many. In fact we’ve discovered Ireland is full of sacred trails – some of them going back to early Christian times.

walking sign

Jennifer walking

Glendalough path

They pass through some truly spectacular countryside, particularly on the west coast.
And the thought has started to seed – of organising a Celtic Camino.

gravestones and trees Glendalough 1

It would involve walking the trails around possibly the Dingle or Kerry “rings,” and then connecting through to Ferrol and completing the “English” Camino.

This is how pilgrims came from Ireland and England – they walked from their homes and villages, and landed either in France or the north of Spain, then walked to Santiago.

Here are just a few pics of the country we’ve been walking and driving through these past few days-

white house house in rocks boats in distance

tussocks

Ireland – my PGS rocks!

I’m in Ireland now.

I’ll keep writing about The Portuguese Camino as things present themselves to me. But I just wanted to share with you an extraordinary example of how my PGS works.

This happened today.

Okay, first the backstory: Jennifer and I had gone two full days without coffee. Unbelievable, right? But true.

The coffee at one place we’d stayed at was totally undrinkable, so we had tea. The next morning we left early, skipped breakfast, and later couldn’t find a decent coffee place.

The last coffee we’d had was at the Cafe Agriamo in Santiago.

I’m a three-double-espresso-a-morning-before-I-can-function guy. So you can imagine the withdrawal I was going through. This morning, the need for coffee had become nothing less than hand-trembling desperate. I was slurring my speech and my vision was becoming impaired.

We were in Cork, a beautiful Irish town on the south coast of Ireland.

Cork riverOne of the reasons I’d come to Cork was because it has a very famous food and produce market – the English Market. The Lonely Planet Guide calls it a National Treasure. Rick Stein featured it in one of his tv shows. I really wanted to go to this market, and there was a cafe there called the Farmgate Cafe, reputed to be fantastic for breakfasts.

My plan was to have breakfast in this cafe and have a decent cup of coffee.

We were staying in a guest house about 2.5kms from the market, so we set off early to walk in. After about a kilometre, I saw a cafe.

Should we stop and have a quick coffee? I asked myself. My need for a coffee fix was verging on the pathetic.

No. There’s not that much further to walk, I said to myself. And you can have a great coffee at the Farmgate Cafe at the English Markets. It’ll be worth waiting for. 

We got to a lane which would lead us to the markets. There was another coffee shop on the corner of this lane. I had the same internal conversation. No, I said to myself. Wait. Have patience. The English Market is just up the lane and around the corner. You’ll get far better coffee there. 

I’d actually walked down this lane the previous night. Jennifer had decided to stay in and have an early night. I’d gone out alone looking for a meal, and discovered a terrific little restaurant. I very much wanted to show it to her.

But for some reason I walked right past – even though there was a sign up pointing towards the English Market.

I knew there was another lane running parallel, and for some reason this lane “called to me.”

I don’t know how I can describe my usage of PGS other than to say things “call to me.” Ways to go, paths to follow, things to do, people to talk to – sometimes they call to me, other times they don’t.

This parallel lane called to me. The two cafes we’d already passed hadn’t called to me. The English Markets were calling to me.

English Markets entrance

We walked up this lane. It was nondescript, and uninteresting. it seemed like it was a delivery lane for stores that had their shopfronts on the other lane I’d walked down last night. The more interesting lane, where the restaurant was.

But this lane called to me.

About 100m from the end of the lane, I saw a little cafe on the corner.

It called to me.

On impulse, I said to Jennifer: Let’s have coffee here.

She looked at me oddly. Why? she said. The English Markets are just around the corner.

And they were. We were probably no more than 250m from the English Markets, and from the Farmgate Cafe. The fabulous place to have breakfast.

Still this little coffee shop called to me.

Jennifer knows now not to argue with my PGS, so we walked inside.

The cafe was a tidy little place – not very crowded, with baskets of scones and cakes on the counters.

scones

We ordered coffees – she a latte, and me a cappuccino. Double strength.

latte cappucino

From the first sip I knew this was good coffee.

From the second sip I knew this was great coffee.

We had scones, and they were still warm. Freshly baked. With local butter and home-made jam, they were delicious.

We paid the bill, and we walked out. And then Jennnifer asked if I’d known.

Known what? I said.

Look – and she pointed to all these plaques outside the cafe attesting to it being an award winning coffee shop.

Idaho Cafe ext closer Idaho Cafe plaques

Curious, I went back inside. The owner was a bloke named Richard. I told him the coffee was great, and asked about the awards.

Richard

He told me they’d been winning awards since they first opened thirteen years ago, and just this year the Restauranteurs Association had voted the cafe the best coffee shop in all of Ireland.

Not Cork – Ireland.

I was stunned.

My PGS had led me to the best coffee shop in all of Ireland.

We walked into the English Markets, and the Farmgate Cafe was shut.

My PGS rocks!!

English Markets

 

 

 

Camino Portuguese 14 – What’s different this time?

This time last year, I walked the Camino Frances – alone.

It had a profound impact on me.

It pressed my RESET button.

I think, I hope, that the walk defaulted me to my true nature.

It certainly rid me of a lot of accumulated junk.

Before the walk I was like a sea creature trying to swim against the current of life, with weed and barnacles hanging off me.

The Camino stripped me clean.

It allowed me to swim freely, and with the current, not against it.

This year I walked the Camino Portuguese – leading a group of pilgrims. Some had walked the Camino before, some had not.

It was an entirely different experience for me.

For a start, I was relaxed this time. Because I’d walked the Camino Frances, I knew I could physically walk the Portuguese, even though I hadn’t trained as hard this time.

Last time I was tense and anxious – and fearful.

This time I had no fear.

I was relaxed.

I allowed myself to laugh, and have fun.

This time I focused on others, not myself.

I was less concerned about how I felt, what my problems were, and more concerned with making sure that everyone else was alright – that their issues and concerns were being dealt with – either by myself or Jennifer.

What this meant was that my journey, at times, was less inwards – and more outwards. 

That in itself provided some big lessons for me.

I learnt the need for patience, tolerance, acceptance.

I learnt that I’m not the most important person in the room. There are 11 others more important than me.

Last time, I walked the Camino Frances with pain. I did it on maximum dosages of Ibuprofen, and copious amounts of Voltaren.

I not only had bone-on-bone knee pain, and very painful shin splints, I also had huge blisters.

This time I had no pain.

I only took a tablet of Ibuprofen once, and that was for a blinding headache, induced I suspect by some white port.

This time I wore an elaborate knee brace, and it seemed to work. Only now, a week after completing the walk, is my knee giving me some issues. But the brace kept me pain free.

This time I wore a different pair of boots – full leather Meindl, from Germany.

Exquisite boots.

Only a couple of minor blisters, but more importantly, the boots were a joy to walk in.

This time I used poles.

Last time I had a foolish romantic notion that a true pilgrim used a wooden staff. I learnt very quickly that this was a complete nonsense – that walking poles helped you enormously.

These are the physical differences – the outward differences.

The biggest inward difference is that this Camino was a shared experience. And I discovered that a shared experience is no less powerful than a lone experience.

In some ways it’s more powerful, because you learn from others.

I witnessed their transformations, and perhaps Jennifer and I helped at times with those transformations – I don’t know – but irrespective, I shared that experience with them.

I saw what they were going through, what they were learning, and I saw relevance in my own life. It meant something to me.

Another thing I discovered – and this surprised me: you don’t need to walk 800kms to have the Camino work its magic on you. I saw transformative changes in some of our group after just 100kms of walking.

Perhaps that’s because the Camino Portuguese isn’t easy.

I’ve said it before: it’s a gnarly little walk. There are some very long sections – because there are simply no places to stay in between – and there are some very tough climbs.

But it’s not long distances and steep hills that do it – it’s the magic of the Camino.

The soul imprint.

That’s what seeps into you, and causes the transformative shifts.

I’m still going through a fairly massive internal “audit” of the walk. Of the tour. There are things inside which need to bubble to the surface, so I can examine them in the light.

That takes time.

But the thing I know, this pilgrimage was no less powerful than the previous one. If anything it was more powerful, because of the shared experience.

The multiplyer effect.

The Camino works in mysterious ways.

Bill in Ponte de Lima Ave

 

 

 

 

Camino Portuguese 14 – my favourite pics

Here are the few shots that I took that I quite like.

They’re not coffee table book shots. I have a real problem taking those shots. I’m not good at that kind of photography.

The shots below are not meant to represent the Camino we just completed. They’re just odd little pics that I took along the way that speak to me, and probably to no-one else.

Bom du Jesus snapper Cyclist looking at factories Washing line Sign walking down stairs

hydrant

Chairs on Camino

slippery slide

Steve posing Cranes girl with blue specs

chicken thru wire.3

man in pontevedra street freezer trio masked against wall

boy with cross in church

crossed legs

 

 

 

Camino Portuguese Day 15 – farewells pts 2+3

As I write this I’m in my hotel room waiting for a taxi to take Jennifer and me to the airport.

It’s all over.

I’m sad that it’s all over.

I found that I had tears in my eyes when I said goodbye to Marie this morning – Marie the beautiful Basque – and then Steve and Arlene.

Yesterday morning Jennifer and I walked the Landers Express down to the railway station and said goodbye to them.

Landers express leaving

I took a final photo of them, and it occurred to me that the railway tracks were like the railway tracks outside of our hotel in Matosinhos in Porto, that very first morning I took a group photo before we set off.

Landers express on platform

That first morning we had no idea what the next two weeks would hold for us. What truly memorable experiences we would share – what laughter we should share – what friendships would be formed.

We said our final farewells to Peter, Julie, Ken and Angela. It was sad too. Very sad. But I feel we’ll see them again soon. These bonds formed are too strong to be easily forgotten.

Jennifer and I then walked back to the hotel to find Greg and Donna waiting for their cab to take them to the airport. We said our goodbyes to them too – and again it as though we’d been with them for months. Two very beautiful people, who allowed Jennifer and me to share what I believe was an important part of their lives with them.

Greg and donna at cab Greg and donna at cab closer Greg and donna in cab_

Peter later called to say he’d left his credential behind – his Pilgrim’s Passport, with all his stamps in it from his journey. He and Julie had started further back, from Coimbra near Lisbon – and so it was something he treasured.

Jennifer and Marie and I went to the church where we’d all received our third Compostela – one prepared by the Franciscan monks to celebrate the 800 year anniversary of St.Francis of Assisi walking the Camino to Santiago.

The church was closed, but later Marie went back and ferreted out Peter’s credential – and we’ll post it back to him on our return to Australia.

We had dinner last night at a local restaurant outside of the historic quarter – Steve & Arlene, and also Tim & Cathy, from Virginia. They’ve become good friends, and it was inspiring to hear of Tim’s plans to cycle across America later this year.

Cathy each day writes a blog (he walks she strolls.wordpress.com) and keeps a wonderful record of their journey. Two amazing people.

 

Last night I slept nine hours. That’s why I didn’t blog. I was more tired than I realised. I woke at 9am – and that’s highly unusual for me.

Jennifer had arranged to meet Marie for breakfast, and again we had a tearful farewell. She said it was the best Camino she’s ever had, and told Jennifer that before the Camino, she saw the world through dirty glasses, and that she, Jennifer, had cleaned her glasses for her.

Marie and Jen with umbrellas

Jennifer and Marie became very close during the walk – and for Jennifer, Marie was a joy to walk with, because she learned so much from her, and because they laughed so much.

Marie is a healer, and she had offered to do a healing session with me – but I had always politely deflected. Over breakfast, she asked me why I had not taken up her offer.

I told her that I had wanted to walk this Camino without any help. Without any help from the van, from lightening my load with a day pack, without any painkillers or Voltaren for my aches and pains – I’d wanted to be self reliant.

She accepted this, but she said with a twinkle in her eye: “Bill, you are sometimes too hard on you. And you think too much with your brain.”

I laughed and said that my brain was really small, and laughing, she said: No no no Bill – it is too much like this…”  and she stretched her hands out wide either side of her head.

I think what she was saying is that I shouldn’t intellectualise too much. That I should just allow things to unfold without thinking.

I will have to think about this.

As we said our goodbyes to Marie, Steve and Arlene walked into the coffee shop. We sat and chatted and agreed that it had been an extraordinary time together, and that sometime soon, somehow, we would all meet up again.

Marie with Steve and Arlene

We took photos – Steve being particular with Arlene about “headroom,”

Jen and Arlene with cameras

And then we strolled back to the hotel.

My relationship with Steve has been very special. he has entered my life firmly and decisively, and I’m still not sure why. I just know that he has.

Steve & me

I told him that when I first met him, he surprised me with the mirth that lay within his face. You don’t get to his age and have a face full of mirth, unless you’ve lived a life full of mirth.

arm wrestle

Steve has had great tragedy in his life, and he’s had highs and lows that few of us will ever experience, but he’s now has reached a place of tranquility and peacefulness. A place many of us would want to reach.

We took photos and said goodbye. The photos are a ritual of severance, as if they protect ourselves from revealing our true feelings – of sadness, of hopefulness, of knowing that our spirits have co-joined in a shared history that will never be forgotten.

trio walking away 2