Each person knows their own limitations, problems and what’s best for themselves – Cada uno sabe donde aprieta el zapato.
Date: 16th July, 2022
Section: Santoña to Güemes
Region: Cantabria

Distance: 26.5 km
Average temp: 33 degrees
Time walking: 5 hours
Ascent: 444m
Decent: 349m
Staying: Güemes
Albergue La Cabaña del Abuelo Peuto – Donativo, shared cabins.
Recommended for the experience.
Instagram: Link to extra photos and daily caption.
Today:

Standing at the top of the cliffs today and looking down I thought ‘WOW, the world really is so, so big’. Gosh a long walk in the outdoors is good for some perspective. While yesterday was hot, hard and sweaty today was a completely different day. Perhaps my body is easing into the long days and my mind is letting go a bit, decisions are getting easier. I think I am defragging! Trusting myself.
* Defragmentation organizes storage on your computer by consolidating files and other data saved on your hard drive. When there’s not enough space on your disk to store an entire file in one place, the file is broken down into smaller pieces called fragments. Defragmentation puts those pieces back together
The camino like any travel experience becomes a part of you. I am a little bit of this place and it is now a little bit of me. With every hour I spend hiking, alone in my head and crossing paths with people, nature and everyday life I am humbled. What a privilege to be able to experience a week of my life in this way, be it barefoot on the sand, scrambling up the rocks, admiring the heaving fig trees as I pass by, or simply the freedom to walk with no real urgency to arrive. I’m stronger for it and this is something I needed, because the more I walk the more I realise that I haven’t been lately.












Tonight I’m staying at Albergue La Cabaña del Abuelo Peuto. It is probably the most famous donativo (choose what you give) albergues along the Camino del Norte. You can read of its history here. In short, it exists because one person, Father Ernesto, dedicated his family home to creating an experience for others. Dinner and breakfast are prepared by volunteers and there is an expected attendance at a group gathering in the evening. ‘If we don’t do this society together, we’re going to sink’ Ernesto said at this meeting tonight. He also said he is happy to be an old man, even in a world where being old is hidden. I like thinking about that thought. I admire what he has created here, with his strong will and a desire for something different.
Check in was a lengthy procedure. I think there is a volunteer in training but there is lots of chatter, (the Spanish is too fast for me) and a lot of looking at the big sheet of room allocations. Gratefully I accepted the dring of cold water with orange slices and eventually I was allocated a room. I am sharing with an Irish mum who is walking with her 11 year old daughter. I am in awe of this little family, what an impressive undertaking. We have a bathroom in the cabin so we have one of the more private ones. I spend quite some time with Sunshine and her daughter chatting on our balcony.
Remember earlier in the day I was thinking the world was so, so BIG!?! Well, get this – they are from West Cork in Ireland. We spend 4 month living in East Cork a few years ago and we have 1 degree of separation. Her friend lived just 500 meters from us in the tiny Irish country village of Whitegate. What are the chances! As BIG as the world is, also it is so, so SMALL.



Dinner is a community affair. I sit with Sunshine, her daughter, Kate is here too and I also meet Eva from Slovakia. Eva, a Spanish translator has walked many a camino and is just oozing kindness and interest. She is open and easy to talk to and I feel an instant connection with her. Dinner with new friends from around the world, each with their own story and a deep love of the camino. How very ‘of’ the camino this kind of experience is. This does happens easier when you stay in shared accommodation, for me at least. Another pilgrim has been added to our cabin, but so far we haven’t seen much of him.
Highlight:
Lots today! The spectacular walking and the talking. Hearing the stories of others and how they travel, how different we all are and how we each walk our own way along the camino. And yet how very much the same we all are. Humanity.
Ho hum:
I realised today I am carrying more than I have in the past. Having teenagers is harder than having little ones. Worry is a heavy kind of backpack. Appreciate more, worry less … trust more.




















































