Camino Primitivo, Day 7

Borres – Berducedo

 

The hike from Borris to Berducedo is considered the highlight of the Camino Primitivo. The path leads up to nearly 4000 feet and stays up in this height for about 18 miles. It is not recommended to walk it when the weather is bad – but I was lucky. The whole day was cloudless and clear with spectacular views.

 

 

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The route is called Ruta de los Hospitales because of the five Hospices, which served as shelter for the pilgrims during the Middle Ages. Now, there are only ruins left. The area is so remote that one could meet wild horses, eagles and foxes.

 

A herd of horses grazing
A herd of horses grazing

 

 

 

Ruinas del Hospital de Valparaiso
Ruinas del Hospital de Valparaiso

 

 

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A curious bull standing on my path – or I was on his?
A curious bull standing on my path – or I was on his?

 

 

A little lake on the roof of the Camino Primitivo
A little lake on the roof of the Camino Primitivo

 

After hours of walking, I passed the little mountain village Montefurado. It consists of several ancient stone houses, leftovers of former hospices. A single man inhabits this remote and peaceful place. He allowed me to fill up my nearly empty water bottle with fresh, cool water from his well.

 

 

Mountain village Montefurado
Mountain village Montefurado

 

 

Montefurado
Montefurado

 

 

At the first bar after the mountain pass, I met many of my pilgrim friends. We departed with the greeting of “See you in the next bar.” In the heat of the day, getting a cool drink is a real treat.

 

 

Café Serafin
Café Serafin

 

 

gwwien
gwwienhttps://simplyjustwalking.com
Born and raised in a village along the Danube in Austria, Traude Wild soon ventured out into the world. After a two-year program for tourism in Klesheim/Salzburg, she spent nearly a year in South Africa and Namibia. By returning back to Austria, she acquired a Master of Economics at the University of Vienna. After moving to the United States with her four children, she studied Art History at Arizona State University and stayed in the United States for fourteen years. Here, she was teaching Art History in several Universities like Webster University and University of Missouri-St. Louis. Now, she lives partially in Arizona and Vienna and works together with her husband for the University of South-Carolina, Moore School of business as Adjunct Professor organising and leading Study tours in Central Europe. She also teaches at the Sigmund Freud University in Vienna. Since 1999, she is practicing Zen meditation in the lineage of Katagiri Roshi. She loves to hike and to write and is a student of Natalie Goldberg. During her often many weeks long hikes she brings her awareness into the Here and Now, describing her experiences in an authentic way. She loves to walk pilgrimages. The longest hike so far was the 1,400 km long 88 Temple pilgrimage in Shikoku, Japan in 2016.

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