September 12 Pamplona Rest Day


This is Pamplona. Notice, there is no trash on the street. Recycling bins are actually used by pedestrians. Except for that beer bottle by the tree…
Mary and Papa Hemingway
Hanging out in the square
Hotel Tres Reyes
Hanging out with Papa. Hemingway that is. At the Café Iruña which is just on the north side of the Plaza del Castillo, Pamplona.
Cafe Iruña
I loved the open affection. Son and dad and mom.
Energy! Vibrant people.
And of course, a cathedral

September 11 Larrasoana to Pamplona 16.5 km / 10 miles

[Note: Some of these posts, including this one, are being edited by husband John back in Kansas City. Putting these things together in a meaningful way is somewhat difficult using only a phone. John has offered to serve as an editor as Mary continues to hike, take pictures, do laundry, eat, and all the rest… He is making an attempt to put the posts in chronological order, so you may see some new posts further down the page.]

The map to the right outlines the hike taken from Casa Elita, in Larrasoana, Spain to Pamplona, a little over 15 kilometers.

To convert kilometers to miles, multiply by 5/8ths – gets you close enough…

The plan is to spend a couple of days at the Hotel Tres Reyes (Three Kings) and do some sight seeing. This town was a hang-out of Ernest Hemingway in the early 1920s where he wrote, The Sun Also Rises.

The path to the hotel passes the Plaza de Toros de Pamplona where bulls fights still occur.

Leaving Larrasoaña
Esteribar The wall art is incredible all along the way.
Always a welcome sight! These folks along the path with refreshments for sale.
Up. Esteribar.
Villava

September 7 Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port to Orisson 7.5km / 4.7 miles

Off to the Camino!
Along the way. The path isn’t steep yet.
It’s good to turn around for the view behind us from time to time!
Harriet on the left. An 82 year old gentleman. Me. A short, but VERY steep hike up the mountain. Our alburgue and bed (Orisson) in the background.
On the deck at Orisson. Where we begin to meet our Camino families – pilgrims we will see off and on over the next six weeks across the Camino Frances.
Dinner with seventy of our closest friends.
Everyday, at the end of the day. Laundry. “Wear one, wash one.”

September 5 – 6: Paris, France to St Jean-Pied-de-Port, France (SJPP)

September 5th, Thursday

Paris Airport – EasyJet Gate

Backpacks and hiking boots galore! All heading to the Camino.

Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port

Arrived around dinner time after flights from Paris to Biarritz and then a one-hour van ride to the B&B where I stayed the first  night. Waved to the pony living on a small, triangular patch of grass and flowers across the street and walked a half mile up the hill to old town.Evening walk to Old Town

The walk down the driveway of the B&B on my way to explore the village for the first time. The Pyrenees mountains await in the distance. I will walk over those mountains in a couple of days.

This Entity watched me the entire time I ate dinner!

Tens of thousands of Pilgrims walk through these cobbled streets each year on their way to Santiago de Compostella.

Walk through the gateway to reach the path of the Camino Frances along the Camino de Santiago

Overlooking the village of Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port

September 4 – Paris

Stalking Hemingway 

Posting this entry while sitting near the window view of mountains, meadows, and silence is making it nearly impossible for me to relive the energy that kept me moving through miles of Paris city streets. I couldn’t get enough of the vibrancy- had to keep looking around the next corner. I’m grateful for the two days. We’ll return!
  • Another late start but still got in over eight hours of sightseeing and nine miles of walking. 
  • With only two days in Paris I decided to forego museums. Next trip! Instead, I wanted to walk the streets and alleys, take my breaks in the bistros frequented by  Hemingway and friends, and catch whatever standard tourist spots in my path. 

La Palette 

  • Lunch: tuna and toast. Red wine. 
  • La Palette began as a gathering place for fine arts students and was frequented by Cezanne, Picasso and that crowd. 

Les Deux Magots

  • Break: a glass of red wine 
  • Founded in 1812, is “A café synonymous, with literary and artistic life, (Wiki) and was frequented by the likes of Elsa Triolet, Louis Aragon, André Gide, Jean Giraudoux, Picasso, Fernand Léger, Prévert, Sartre, Beauvoir, and Hemingway.

Brassiere Lipp

  • Fancy dinner of pot roast and a glass of wine
  • Across the street from Les Deux Magots on the Boulevard Saint-Germain in the 6th arrondissement. 
  • Walked around for about an hour after my break before dinner. 
  • Another hang-out for the artist crowd. 
  • Next to Louis Vuitton where people were lined out the door to spend thousands for their handbags. 

Notre Dame

  • Cordoned off by police trucks and construction barriers. 
  • Small groups of military men with assault rifles walking through the tourist melee. 
  • Scaffolding up the cathedral walls. 
  • Can’t get close to the place since the fire.