El Camino – Day 2 (Neda to Pontedeume)

"Is this the way?" asked my sister when we briefly lost track of the yellow arrows. Wherever you are, that is the way -- to enlightenment or joy or whatever the goal. It isn't usually a straight line...at least not for me...and losing the path sometimes is part of the process. We left in the dark. … Continue reading El Camino – Day 2 (Neda to Pontedeume)

El Camino – Day 1 (Ferrol to Neda)

Our first day of serious walking on Camino Ingles, after barely beginning yesterday: 9.5 miles, and I'm loving it already in spite of challenges. (Noisy hostel, lack of sleep, an aching hip, miscommunication.) "Sisters walking" continues in photos and captions below. At our starting point in Ferrol yesterday, Ginny and I learned to identify the … Continue reading El Camino – Day 1 (Ferrol to Neda)

Starting El Camino (Ferrol)

Sisters, walking. That's what this is -- but so much more. The challenges of walking El Camino ("The Way") in Spain began even before our first step. So we got a head start on the "resilience" part. 😄 Now, with the start and first mile behind us, we look forward. One step at a time. … Continue reading Starting El Camino (Ferrol)

Spain – Day 2 (Alhambra)

All American students know what happened in 1492. "Columbus sailed the ocean blue!" (Do they still teach that song to kids?) Something else historically-significant happened that year. Spain's Catholic monarchs expelled the Moors/Muslims/Arabs (not interchangeable terms but often used that way) after living in peaceful coexistence for hundreds of years. The two groups believed in the … Continue reading Spain – Day 2 (Alhambra)

Arrival in Spain (Granada)

My oldest sister and I are here to hike El Camino in northern Spain. So what are we doing in Granada in southern Spain? It was my idea to meet here. I've been to Spain only once, briefly, to the U.S. Navy base at Gibraltar. You can't exactly call that a "visit." If you're going … Continue reading Arrival in Spain (Granada)

Walking For El Camino

In less than a week, I will be "on pilgrimage." That's what it's called when you walk El Camino. And I've been walking a lot to get ready. A pilgrimage is a journey to a holy place, during which personal transformation may take place. Christians, Jews, Muslims and Hindus have been doing this for centuries. … Continue reading Walking For El Camino

Home

When I arrive in Virginia, I hear "welcome home!" When I arrive in Michigan, I hear "welcome home!" Michigan's U.P. in the far-north is my original home--where I was born and raised, and returned as an adult to buy some land and create a camp. Northern Virginia became my adult home while working in and … Continue reading Home

Fixes

Houses and landscaping need maintenance, and sometimes fixes. Visions do, too. Also nations. While our nation argues (and argues!) about how to maintain its foundations and what needs fixing, here's a few examples from Camp Many Moons on Huron Bay - because visitors don't see the messy behind-the-scenes labor that produces the visual "wow." And … Continue reading Fixes

Weird Stuff

Herewith, a hodge-podge of odd, unusual, and interesting items from the far north in the past month, in  photos and captions. This 12-inch-diameter fungus -- also called mushroom, because "fungus" is a yucky word -- appeared on my sandy beach overnight. My plant identifier app calls it polyporaceae. (How to pronounce that??) Contains neurotoxins, yikes! … Continue reading Weird Stuff

Water Play

Many people live on the water, or wish they did, for the calm that it offers. They appreciate simply looking at it. It calms me, too -- but some of us need to experience it with more than our eyes. We want to feel it under us, and around us. We want to play with … Continue reading Water Play