Thursday, January 25, 2018

Mogette Meets Karl...

 Click on pic to go to Karl & Mogette
Karl (80) & Mogette (43)...Click on photo for video clip...
Karl's Song click HERE

En septembre
2016
Mogette
Est partie
A la conquête
Des Pyrénées...

And there
Mogette
Met
Some pilgrim friends
En route
To Compostelle

Click on the photo
For a story
Mogette must tell...

...About Karl
Who
At 81 years of age
Was beginning...
His second Compostella
Pilgrimage...

Sunday, September 25, 2016

You Never Walk Alone...


AB, Juan-Luis & Oliver...Click on Mogette in photo for full story...
Oliver and José-Luis's song click HERE

Brothers Oliver and Juan-Luis are on their way to Santiago. And perhaps to the 2020 paralympics in Tokyo.
They paused at the top of El Perdon, near Pamplona, for a pic with your Camino Correspondent and with Mogette, our trusty 1973 Citroën 2CV...
Click on Mogette for their inspirational story.

Nota: The Welsh choir song is for to all of Mogette's friends -including Maximo from Buenos Aires, and two lads from South Wales- who helped the intrepid pair during the 2-hour ascent up the track towards the clouds and the wind turbines...

Tidy.

AB



Thursday, September 8, 2016

Angel y Las Huertas de Huarte

Angel on his way to his huerta in Huarte...


Click on photo for Angel's Popping Pilgrim song...


Angel is seventy-nine years old, and twice a week he walks seven kilometres through Pamplona's secret riverside park to buy vegetables from his favourite "Huerta" (market garden) in Huarte.

Then he walks the seven kilometres home.

Sometimes, although very rarely, Angel's path crosses that of a peregrino...

To discover why, and for Angel's full story, click HERE







Sunday, October 28, 2012

Rich's Pickings



Cliquez sur la photo pour le montage photo de Rich...

Riche, et...extra-ordinario...

Now, practise your English...

Salado the Stick took a rest next to this "Earth Sculpture" just after crossing his namesake, birthplace river near Lorca, Navarra.

Here at Popping Pilgrims, Salado was thrilled to hear today from our friend Rich, from the USA.

Rich's pickings are here, if you click on the pic. If his glorious photos don't inspire you to make your own Salado and to get camino-ing with a lightweight pack, then nothing will.

The music is called "No Pasaran".

Muchas Gracias, Amigo Rich.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Suzi's Quattro

The Estacion de Autobuses in Pamplona provided welcome shade one concrete level below the esplanade.

We, homeward bound after a week's walking, joined the newly-arrived, and mainly American, peregrinos. Their pristine walking-gear contrasted with our camino-worn garb.


We queued to buy 16 Euro's worth of one-way ticket in the wrong direction, back to St Jean Pied-de Port on the French side of the Pyrenees.


Considering the white-knuckle experience the next ninety minutes would provide, and the rising cost of fairground terror, the price was something of a bargain.

Suzi, five-foot three, lean and in her late twenties, parked her Harley-Davidson in front of the staff canteen. A perspex badge on her leather jacket informed us that she was in the employ of the bus company. The jacket matched the tight black trousers, which did little to mask Suzi's gender or the five euros in small change in her back pocket. Her Santiago boots, presently grinding a cigarette-end, may well have been a hushed tribute to the Camino. In any case, they set off her five visible body piercings nicely.

For Suzi's full story, click HERE...

For Suzi's Popping Pilgrim song, click HERE...if you are brave!


Thursday, January 5, 2012

Rich, Dave and The American Wave


Rich and Dave's song click HERE

September 10th, 2011...
Viskarret is baking in the late-morning sun. On the counter of the only bar, El Diario de Navarra tells of Las Torres de Nueva York: Hace 10 Años..."

Señora and her daughter, whose joys are concealed only by matching scowls, are doing brisk business. They are serving bocadillos, tortilla con atun and alarming measures of deliciously brain-curdling Paxaran liqueur to the peregrinos of the midday tsunami.

"Es siempre lo mismo, always the same" laments the landlady when I ask her if it is always so busy: "despues de la una, nadie, nobody after one o'clock"...

fuente de peregrinos, Viskarret Photo PP   

Peregrinos are like a wave, una onda, she says. Most will have left Roncesvalles at throw-out time, around 7 a.m. These are the stagglers...

There are walkers from Spain, France, Brazil, Korea and Australia gathered around a dozen plastic green and white Cerveza San Miguel tables. As if to make this an American day, we have fallen into happy conversation with Rich and Dave in front of the bar.

The rising caminante tide seeps from the loosely-designated drinking zone into public, and perhaps private, sectors of the Plaza Mayor.
Dave moves the chair, whose green legs are flexing disconcertingly in the direct sunlight, back into the receding margin of shade against the house next door to the bar.

With Paxaran-fuelled conversations clattering in the background, we learn that he and Rich are old pals, who, after high-responsibility careers in city government on the US West Coast, now walk long-distance paths in various parts of the globe. Their amiable, well-informed and gentlemanly manners engage us straight away.

We will meet them again, two days further along The Way; for now they don their backpacks, shake our hands, and amble westward.

Within minutes, we are the only clients left to give Señora and daughter a hand to stack the tables. The San Miguel van reverses up to the entrance. The bearded, beer-bellied driver carries two dozen crates inside, each time emerging with a cough and a crateful of empties. Then a red carton of Paxaran. He looks at his watch, lights a Ducado and disappears.

All noise ebbs from the square. As the sun hits the façades, the church tower bell clangs"La Una".

An amply-endowed lady of uncertain age appears in lilac night-time attire at the upstairs window. A man coughs loudly from the depths of the cavernous bedroom behind her. She through the Ducado haze which is emanating from within, then reaches out and pulls the shutter closed. This dislodges a fist-sized cast-iron bracket from the stonework, which makes its way to the ground. Its trajectory is obstructed only by Dave's plastic San Miguel chair.

The metallic meteorite punches a Paxaran bottle-shaped hole through the seat.

As we walk out of Viskarret, past the pilgrim fountain with its diminutive brass bird half an hour later, we spot the San Miguel van on the road below us, racing towards Pamplona.

A wisp of Ducado smoke escapes from the driver's window.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Uterga to Uluru with Elena

Une histoire en anglais...
Which starts in Navarra...
And ends in
Australia...

The setting moon sat low above the Navarran mountains as the sun's first rays lit up the forested slopes beneath it.

From our vantage point on the Camino ridge, just outside Uterga, the scene was nature's own Cinemascope: vines, almonds, sunflowers.

The day would be hot, but at this hour, the air was cool and still. Any caminante who stood long enough to breathe could hear a skylark and, by stretching an ear and the imagination, a strange yet familiar ringing...

In the evening, after a day of adventures, I am drinking cold, refreshing San Miguel twenty-five kilometres down the track with an antipodean companion at the albergue in Lorca.

The mercury has nudged 38° today. We both say that we have not known such temperatures since the Red Centre, down-under...

Dark-haired Elena is in conversation with Marisol, the owner, at the end of the bar. She smiles and tells us that she lives locally, and teaches yoga.

"I have always dream of Uluru, Ayers Rock, ever since I am a little girl", she confides when she learns of our Australian connections. " I have never been there, and perhaps will never be able to pay a journey there. But I know every feature of this rock. I feel its history and its place in the... cosmos".

She asks if we have a few minutes to spare while she goes out to her car, and returns with a neat, leather carrying-case. Quietly, and still with a smile, she opens it on the bar, and removes the two tuning-forks it contains.

"This is the earth's sound as it go round the sun".

She strikes the larger fork gently on the inside of her wrist, and holds it to our ears.

"...and this is the sound of the moon as it go round the earth..."

From Uterga to Uluru, from my earliest memory until this evening, I hear the familiar ring. Behind the eyes, rising upwards and outwards, backwards and forwards in time, down into the earth.

Elena smiles again, and then tends to Harald the Berliner's aching knee ligaments...

Click on the Navarran moonset panorama pic for best wishes from aboriginal rock band Yothu Yindi. Muchas Gracias Elena...May you always dream of Uluru.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Brazil, Blackberrys & Ways

Click on photo for Roncevaux info...
Une autre histoire interculturelle en anglais...

The steep track which descends from the Alto del Perdon is strewn with smooth riverstones, mostly the size of Easter eggs.

Sun and rain and a thousand years of passing pilgrims have washed out the dusty Navarran soil, leaving a shingly scar on the westerly slope. The mark is visible on Google Earth as well as from Puente La Reina, which is ten kilometres distant on the fertile plain of the Arga.
One stone, hidden on the very edge of the path, under an almond branch, is flatter and darker than the rest.

I pick up the object, wipe away the dust, and show my Australian brother-in-law the underside.

"Crikey. It's a blooming BlackBerry".

"Es el Camino, amigo. The owner will not be far away".

Pressing its on-button, we note the owner's name: Mirna.

Then we are overtaken by Harald, a Berliner with whom we'd shared chocolate and a yarn under the wind turbines back there on the summit.

"Harald, you'll see someone called Mirna up ahead. Tell her we have her 'phone, alles gut"

"Keine probleme", and off he strides on teutonic, sunburnt legs.

Click on family photo for a Brazilian memory,
as Mirna (centre) is reunited with her Blackberry...
Half an hour lower, our family foursome is sitting in a pool of olive treeshade, drinking tea from a thermos when a beaming Mirna turns up in her cycling helmet but without a bike. Though we have never met, she greets us like long-lost friends.

She explains in elegant, effortless English that she is from Brazil, and that her daughter works in London. "I will send you a 'photo when I reach Santiago".

A month later, an extract on the computer screen reveals that Roncesvalles, Orreaga in Basque, Roncevaux in French, translates as "Blackberry Valley "...

A jingle hails the arrival of an email from Sao Paulo.

One click shows a smiling Mirna in September Santiago. She sends kind words and best wishes.

The message closes with automatically generated Brasilero: "Enviado do meu BlackBerry".


Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Old Devils, New Details



Juan's song, Click HERE 
"Je t'aime, moi non plus"...(Merci The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain)...

The Farmacia in Pamplona is doing brisk business on this June Monday morning in Pamplona.

The sun was already warm as we'd walked in the shade of the ash trees along the river Arga, and over the Puente de la Magdalena.
We pause to admire the Catedral, and to buy some blister patches for our Copenhagen companion, Heidi.
An elderly gent on the bench, who introduces himself as Juan, informs us that he is waiting for his carer.
There is a mildly diabolic twinkle of anticipation in his eye, and a smile on his face as he says something about "mejor que Viagra"...
Ten minutes later, Heidi emerges with a small package and a smile.
We collect Salado the Stick, and take a snap of the Farmacia as a keepsake.
Back home in France in October, as the photos are loaded from our clever little mobile 'phone onto the computer, the ash leaves are rustling golden outside the office.
It is only now that I see the bigger picture.
And the reason for Juan's grin three months before.
Click on the Farmacia for elderly care solutions 1971, then on this little pic
if you didn't spot the 2011 Pamplona approach...





Saturday, October 1, 2011

Platforms and Souls

Click HERE for Elvis tribute, amigos!
Salado the Stick came across some unlikely peregrino footwear on the dusty western descent from the Alto del Perdon...Then two days later, he found a "lost sole", and spotted Elvis near Estella.




 

By The Way...

Reinhold is walking from St Jean Pied de Port to Roncesvalles. Again.
"Twenty-acht kilometres für der pleasure of it. When I haf walked here in April, it was snowing"

He is perhaps fifty-five years old, and has the bearded, weathered, lean, long-haired look of a lone long-distance pilgrim. He carries a compact light blue pack and tells us his story outside the Auberge d'Orisson as Patxi clears the table.
"I haf left my home in Bavaria in March. I walk to Santiago and now I walk home. My Mother died in my arms just before my leaving. Now there is just me."
"My father always told me one phrase when I was a boy: "Vorsicht auf deinem Weg. Take care on your Way"...
We ask him to write it for us, then we shake hands.
Alone on the asphalt, he looks back from the first bend on the uphill climb from the Auberge.
And waves towards us and the rising sun.
(Click on Reinholt's writing for an antipodean sunset.)

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Sunrise, Sunset...




Where the Eagles Fly...


This one is offered with affection to our Canadian friends we met along the Camino. Lindsay, Joanie and friends and all of the others...
Click on the Pyrenean dawn pic for your compatriote Buffy Sainte-Marie's unforgettable song about taking one step at a time, the Here and the Now, Time, and being up there with the eagles.
Eh.

In the Valley I Walked

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sn3-1h1xmaA
Walking alone into Roncesvalles, the beech trees were silent, and this Midnight Oils song played itself from memory.

This one is for mothers and fathers everywhere.

It is dedicated to all our Australian peregrino family and friends with whom we have walked and shared special Camino moments over the years. For Phyl, John, the Gibbsies, R and R and the others...

Thanks to the talents and pertinence of Peter G and the Oils. Onya guys.

Click HERE for downunder wonder unplugged treat.

Shadows and Sunrise Silhouette




Amazing Race





Ricardo's Cliff

click HERE for Ricardo's song...


Ricardo sits in the shade of a drinks machine, under the Riojan red cliff-face in Nàjera, and tells us in an Miami hispanic lilt that he has been asking himself a searching question all day.
"Like: why am I doing this walk anyways, and how come my pack is so goddam heavy?"

His olive complexion and raven hair reveal Mexican origins, and the whiteness of his teeth, along with botox-ed facial wrinkles tell of prolonged access to Floridan health care. He looks, and sounds, uncannily like Cliff Richard.

He smiles as he speaks, and although the botox restricts facial expression, we work out a strategy with him to reduce the weight in his pack. This involves a cardboard box from the Autoservicio on the Plaza Mayor, and some pleasant exchanges with locals as to the location and likely opening hours of the Correos.

Ricardo has a spring in his step as he sets off, away from the shadows, [Enough already. Ed] towards Santo Domingo.

(Click below the cliff for the pop song we hummed all the next day.)