Salamanca - and going home
Woke up as usual - 5h30 and had coffee in bed. Finally I got up at 6h30 and packed - had emptied and dried as best as I could the camel bag; so, with no more food supplies, no water, the rucksack was back to featherweight.
At 7h30 I went out for a walkabout - the sun was out, but it was very cold such that the fleece jacket plus anorak over my basic t-shirt was not too much.
What a splendid city this is! So many magificent buildings - churches and palaces - all built of yellow sandstone which gives it its golden
colour in the sun!
I ended up in front of a romanesque round church of San Marcos. It was closed; so I walked round a bit, took the photograph of a renaissance style petrol service station and found a tiny churreria (standing room only and take away) - very busy with lots of people picking up very big packages of churros while I was having my standup coffee.
By the time I had finished, the church was open - it is very simple and very beautiful. Since there was a service going on when I arrived, I just sat down and waited until the end - did me a lot of good, just sitting there, quietly, thinking over the last weeks...
Walking back to the Plaza Mayor I came in at a different "puerta" and noticed, through another one, a building which looked like a market hall. There I bought delicious "lomo iberico bellota" ham and old sheep's cheese (the cheese was old, not the sheep!) - this relieved my purse considerably and has loaded up my pack again! ----
Part of the decoration of the facade of the main university building is a skull with a frog (toad?) sitting on top - this is supposed to be a symbol of depravity(? looks strange!); however the students say it brings luck. It is very small and difficult to find. However while I had visited the little round church, Helmut and Joerg
had been to the university, met Jascha, another pilgrim we had walked with who knew where this skull was. So he showed them and they showed me.
And we walked about a bit more, fed on some tapas and said goodbye.
I had over an hour to kill before I could pick up my pack ( which I had left at the hostel) and go to the bus station. So I went back to the cathedral, paid once more my entrance fee (4 euros for senior citizens) and went round relaxed with all the time in the world unlike the evening before. There are so many details to take in! Almost too much! With all these buildings - you keep the impression of magnificence without remembering the details - with the exception of the skull with the frog of course!
Picked up my pack full of cheese and ham and lugged it to the "estacion de autobuses" where I sat and waited for over an hour without any other passengers showing up for this bus. Got quite worried and went to check at the guichet - am I the only passenger getting on this bus here? No, don't worry, you are waiting in the right place!
When I got back the bus had arrived and there was one more passenger getting on with me. There were a handfull of passengers already on the bus - all Portuguese - the bus came from Portugal. And I will not have to change bus in Bilbao, but this one will go straight through to Rennes!!! And I am sitting right at the back with nobody else - maybe I will be able to stretch myself out during the night - have my sleeping bag handy!
At the moment I am having dinner in a very big service station in ????? We have one hour, half an hour left to finish the chips which I am eating with my fingers while typing this, accompagnied by a small bottle of wine - who could have doubted that?! Not so small a bottle either - the ones on Brittany Ferries are smaller.
Will call off now and see if I can connect myself to send this off....
the house of shells la maison des coquilles |
the little round church la petite église ronde |
Amazing service sation étonnante station service |
Cloister in the university Le cloitre dans l'université |
Cloister of the house of shells le cloitre de la maison des coquilles |
Santiago as a pilgrim St Jacques en pèlerin |
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