Saturday, 1 October 2022

The scariest moment ...

 The scariest moment is always just before you start 

To be honest...

I'm never going to be Christopher Columbus: Setting off to discover America

Oh Ok; he was really looking for India !!

Nor Edmund Hillary and Sherpa Tenzing: Climbing  Everest

And certainly not Neil Armstrong: First Man


But whenever I am about to head off on Pilgrimage, there's always a feeling of anxiety.

Mixed with a spirit of adventure.

                                   One small step ... 

You may remember that this time it is the Camino dos Faros.


As First Man might have said: One Step at a time

The walk is about 120 miles / 195 kilometres over 8 days. Around 15 miles / 25 kilometres a day.

Did I mention the Ups & Downs ?

About 6,500 metres / 21,000 feet. Around 800 metres  / 2,500 feet a day.

I'm delighted that Jackie & Jeff, Jan & Mark, the Boy from t’ North – Roger & novitiate David will be joining me.

---

Preparations are pretty much done & dusted ...


The Essentials: the Flask, the Cicerone Guidebook, the Pilgrim's Pebble as a Memory of Home...

... and  - of course - the Wise Pilgrim always has an Ironed Shirt !!

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So it's an Early to Bed for a 03.15 hours departure from Merryfield to catch the 06.30 hours flight from Gatwick to A Coruna.

First day of walking is Monday 3rd: Malpica to Praia de Ninons.

14 miles / 22 kilometres

2,400 feet / 750 metres of ascent


Beach at the End !!

(The Swimming Trunks are packed)

Look out for the daily Blogs ...

So ...

Until we meet again,

May God hold you

Safe in the palm of His hand.

See you soon!!

AdiósRicardo 







Sunday, 4 September 2022

Sé un Faro Brillante delante de mí

May we enjoy Time Together: 

beside the wide sea,

beneath the far stars,

in the sun’s warm rays,

in the gentle rain.

 

And may God

Bless our Walking on the Good Earth. 

Adapted from a poem by Joy Mead

With thanks to Pilgrim Chris Goddard

 Hola Peregrinos !

The Pilgrims are beginning to gather …

We "set sail" on Sunday 2nd October.

Boots on the Ground: Monday 3rd October at 08.30 hours.

After a three year gap – “Events, dear boy, Events” – we are back Out Rambling in Europe.

Jackie & Jeff, Jan & Mark, the Boy from t’ North – Roger & novitiate David will be joining me.

This time it is the Camino dos Faros, out on the north-west coast of Spain – the infamous Costa da Morte !

One step at a time ... 

We start at Malpica and end late on the afternoon of Tuesday 11 October at Finisterre, the most Westerly point of Continental Europe.

Yes; I know. 

The Finisterre where I once said that - having strolled 550 miles across Spain  -


 I will Never Return !!!


For some days are never to be forgotten !!

The basic plan – who knew there even was a plan ??!! -  is to walk about 120 miles / 195 kilometres over 8 days. Around 15 miles / 25 kilometres a day.

Did I mention the Ups & Downs ?

About 6,500 metres / 21,000 feet. Around 800 metres  / 2,500 feet a day.

Like many coastal paths, the Camino dos Faros combines numerous ascents and descents with a route that never takes the straightest line between two points.


Are we nearly there yet ... ...

Of the eight days, six are spent along exposed stretches of coast whilst two head inland to navigate around relatively tranquil river estuaries. 

The six days along the coast are spent climbing headlands and walking along dramatic cliff edges. 

This is a landscape where large granite tors remind British walkers of the South West Coastal Path in Devon and Cornwall.

The views are constantly changing, but the noise from the sea and the wind is ever present. 

The Costa da Morte gets its name because there have been so many shipwrecks along its treacherous rocky shoreline.

(They do say) On sunny, early Autumnal days - if you look out to sea from high up on the cliffs - you can sometimes see The Black Pig.

Captain Pugwash himself.

Cabin Boy Tom.



And the Seaman … whose name I have wisely forgotten !!

As the Costa da Morte’s name suggests, there are Lighthouses aplenty.



Sé un Faro Brillante delante de mí

Be a Shining Beacon before me, O God

   

a guiding star above me.

Be a smooth path below me,

a kindly shepherd behind me

today, tonight, and for ever. 

The Prayer of St Columba of Iona

A particular feature of this Camino is the Beaches which promise to be AMAZING !

Look out for the photos of Ricardo in the Waves

Of course, there will be all the Regular Features of Pilgrimage.

Naturally - as we always do on Pilgrimage - back in the UK we will have The Reverend Susan on Statistics !!

The Daily Blog will be up & running.

Don’t worry: we Never let the Facts get in the way of What Really Happened !!!

The Food. The Galician region of Spain has a reputation for wonderful seafood.

The well-deserved Estrella Galicia (or two) at the end of the day.


The Café Bar Alborada, Corcubión

There will be  - how could it even possibly be otherwise - one of the famous Rest Days.

This time it will be in Muxia.

 

The Lavanderia has already been identified …

  

Lavanderia Autoservicio Muxia 

Rua Manuel Murguia, 20, 15125 Muxia 

# Always Remember #: 

No Wise Pilgrim ever travelled without  

an Ironed Shirt 

If we have enough breath, the Big Issues will be Discussed & Resolved

Brexit

Globalisation

Global Warming

The Economics of Deer Farming in New Zealand

  

What is Happiness ?

Well  Discussed anyway !!!

 How could I ever forget to tell you ... ...

 

Spain: “Best” ice creams in the World !!!

So,

Until we meet again,

May God hold you

Safe in the palm of His hand.

See you soon!!

AdiósRicardo 

 

PS

After dinner Captain Pugwash & the crew of The Black Pig swigged a tot (or two) of rum and sang The Pirates Song.

I've long liked the last verse:

This crew you can join

We'll take one and all

For Pirates are Pirates

Just  ... Answer the call

 As we say about Pilgrimage ...

As always, All welcome !!


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday, 2 August 2022

A Very Shadow

For our time is

A very shadow

That passeth away

Wisdom 2.5

 

It is one of my favourite Top Tales …

A few minutes after 10.30 on the morning of Sunday 27th July 1952 the Land Rover left Warrior Square in St Leonard’s on Sea and turned left along the Hastings seafront.

Soon passing the Pier, in the Old Town it followed the A259 up the Old London Road.

In Ore - and though Rye Road would have taken the direct route through Icklesham & Winchelsea - it was a right turn onto Fairlight Road.

I must have taken this journey with the two other people in the Land Rover 100s of times.

And every time we always took the Fairlight route. 

This is the route through Pett Level and along the Winchelsea Sea Wall.

For Mum & Dad this was “Their Road”.

As to why …

… well, “Yesterday, today, twisted like a rope” explains why !

http://lord-ric.blogspot.com/2021/06/yesterday-today-twisted-like-rope.html 

By 11.30 we had parked in the car park by Rye Cricket Ground.

Though I was only 6 weeks old that Sunday morning now long, long ago, I can tell you - with complete confidence - that Mum would have mentioned what had happened there on the night of 7th September 1940 when six high explosive German bombs destroyed the houses numbered 83 to 95, killing all the residents.

The car park is still there now, for the houses have never been re-built.


A footpath separated No.83 from No. 81 where Mum lived.

The gap saved her from certain death.

Mum would very often say that every day after that was a Bonus Day, for Life was to be cherished.

She knew well:

Let everything happen to you

Beauty and terror

Just keep going

No feeling is final

Go to the Limits of Your Longing by Rainer Marie Rilke

Once they had said hello to my Grandma Annie and had a cup of tea,

Dad suggested that Mum could have a rest & he would take me for a walk in the pram … ...

 

---

On Sunday 31st July 2022 – 70 years on – I made the same journey; walking from Hastings to Rye along the Saxon Shore Way.

I was delighted to be joined by Jeff & Jackie, Jeremy & Stanley 🐾🐾

And by the Golden Girl herself, Nicole.

Leaving Hastings Station, we reached the Shopping Centre; where for over 100 years Sussex regularly played at the Priory Meadow cricket ground.

 

Priory Meadow, Hastings in the early 1950s

In the Old Town I pointed out the Blue Dolphin.

Best Fish & Chips in the world !!

Though it was barely 10.30, by the side of the Hastings Contemporary gallery an Elvis tribute was already rockin’ & rollin’!!

The King is in the Old Town.

We walked up the steps to the top of East Hill.


On Rambling with Ric we do not take the funicular railway !!

Looking across the Old Town:

You can take the Boy out of Hastings

But not Hastings out of the Boy

The next hour or so of walking were testing – the Ups & Downs of cliff walking.

 


We paused at Hughie Pringle’s Bench of Awesomeness.


And then it was a gentle walk to Pett Level.

Picnic on the Beach

 

On by the side of the Royal Military Canal - built in the early 19th century as a defence against Napoleon.


And by Camber Castle – built in the 16th century in Henry VIII’s reign.

 


No sign of the cricket ground where Rye once played – before moving the current ground in … 1842 !!

Reaching Rye, we turned up Mermaid Street and into the Gun Garden.


Down the steps by the side of the Ypres Castle Inn, we walked along South Undercliff to arrive at the car park where the Land Rover had parked.

Standing outside 81 Fishmarket Road, I said we would follow the route that Dad had taken all those years ago … …

Landgate, East Hill, the High Street and left into East Street and then Market Street …

What was it that the Father so, so wanted to show to his Son ?

It was - how could it possibly be otherwise - the Story of All Our Lives.

 

I remembered those Sunday afternoon walks in the late ‘50s and early ‘60s with my Cousin Pat, when visiting my Grandma Annie.

Just as Pat & I always did, we stopped to look at the clock on St Mary’s Church.

Begun in 1515, the clock's construction was only completed 45 years later in 1560.Needing to be wound twice a day, it is the only clock in England, and possibly in the world, with its pendulum swinging through the roof into the body of the church.

And the text above the clock face …


From 6 Weeks to #70Up … I can sense the Shadow passing away; of course I can … …

 

I’d like to tell you that I thought of Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver

Maybe you can afford to wait.

Maybe for you there's a tomorrow.

Maybe for you there's one thousand tomorrows, or three thousand, or ten, so much time you can bathe in it, roll around it, let it slide like coins through your fingers.

So much time you can waste it.
But for some of us there's only today. 


And the truth is, you never really know.

And indeed I did think of it !!

 

But what I was really thinking of was … …

Plenty of Adventures still to come !!

With Love, Young Ric

♥♥♥


PS

After the clock – and just as Dad & I did – we went to The George

The first pub I ever went to, seven decades on it was good to be back !!


As we sat in the Courtyard having a well-deserved pint, it was time to tell a Top Tale or two …

Never in Doubt: the Charlie Morphy & Ray Gibson’s sister story.

  

You don’t know it ??!!

Come out on an Adventure with me & I’ll tell you WHAT REALLY DID HAPPEN !!!