Departed Azofra at 7 am. It was cold, but the sky was clear, and there was an amazing sunrise. Met a nice German lady at breakfast.
It was going to be a long 37 km slog.
At around 10 km, we passed a golf club that looked operational, but nearby there were a few hundred houses that appeared pretty derelict — almost like a ghost town.
My legs were feeling it when I stopped for breakfast after 15 km.Met a cyclist who was really taking it easy. He was only starting his day and had set off three days earlier than me from SJPdP. I asked if he had been spending more days in the bigger cities.
I also met Pascal again, and the German lady whose name I, unfortunately, can’t remember.
The landscape changed from forests to crops. At one point, I even saw a micro glider overhead.
Had a huge salad for lunch in Grañón. About 5 km further on, we encountered the development of a major new road that dominated the Camino for the next 7–9 km.
I stopped at a bar, but they had no electricity, so no coffee — just a lemonade and an orange. Met four Irish ladies doing a week on the Camino; this was their third time doing a segment.
From the bar to the accommodation was another 5 km. That was the longest 5 km yet, as my legs dragged on a stony path under the hot sun.
When we checked in, all hell had broken loose because of the electricity outage; the owner didn’t know exactly how many people were booked in. Thankfully, I had my email confirmation to show her.
About 1 hour 30 minutes after I arrived, Mark and Ron turned up — they had covered 41 km. OMG!
The albergue was excellent, although it went from just two people in the room last night to close to 18 tonight.
I booked in for dinner, and the food was excellent
.
Tomorrow, I’m heading to Atapuerca — 30 km.
Stats
Today
Distance: 37 km
Elevation: 350m
Duration: 9h05
(Watch accidentally paused so the distance and elevation are estimated from Gronze.com)
Totals
Distance: 238.06 Km
Elevation: 5678
Duration: 55h47


















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