2022-07-23 ------------------------------------------------------------------ The walk to Fisterra was great. It may even have been the most beautiful part of the trip, although it is hard to compare as the beginning seems so far away. The biggest difference, and another motivating factor to take the walk, was the heat. It had gotten seriously hot by now, closing in on 40 degrees. I saw it as a nice challenge, and wanted to see how I would deal with that temperature. The last full day of walking I walked over 40 kilometres in that heat. After three in the afternoon when it feels the hottest, the only people walking were me and some Korean guy who I didn't share any language with. We were walking so that when the other took a break, the other would pass and wave, and this would repeat towards the night. I found an albergue, but he must have continued on, or maybe he camped in the bush. He reminded me of a Japanese man I once met, who sort of looked like a retired Samurai and also collected the Samurai weapons. It's almost a stereotype but it seems that these 'elderly warriors' exist. My second to last albergue was strange. It was sort of a strange location, being in the middle of nowhere somehow, even though the area was full of villages. It was an old monastary or church I think, run by volunteers, this time an old man who drew a picture of his home church for all the Walkers to take as a souvenir. As I got there quite late after being turned out from all albergues before, they were having a dinner. They saved me some food and wine as I showered. I got back to the table and it turns out there is a lady from my country that I have been hearing about basically since week two or something. There weren't many of us on the Camino, so when I met new people they were like 'oh, yes, I have met one of you people, a lady who is like this and that'. Of course I couldn't tell her this, since I just met her, it would have been creepy. In the table there was also a man who seriously creeped me out. I don't remember getting such a vibe from anyone except in situations that turned violent. He had this lazy but intense stare, chin pushed to the front, leaning on his arm with his head almost on the table. He talked to some lady with sort of aggressive dismissal in his voice. It was very strange. What is worse, I noticed myself somehow unconsciously challenging him, sort of by accident. And I realized that this tension started the moment I walked in. I think it may be that he was perceiving himself as the 'highest ranking' member in that table, but then some new guy walks in. The first thing he said (after the host said there is another person from my country) was "There's only room for one here, bugger off" which I took only as a joke, but later on it sort of seemed like it wasn't. All in all, I didn't meet almost anyone on the Camino that I didn't like. There were people who were stuck in routine patterns that keep them from enjoying themselves on the Camino, but that's not to say they weren't nice enough people. It was a shock to meet someone who I could imagine being an actual threat. He also had this look of a football hooligan. Well, in the end nothing came out of it, but it was a weird flavour for the end of the journey. As I was walking to the lighthouse, I bumped into my Partner and one of her teammates in the corner of the street. This is how it always seems to be on the Camino, you just happen to be in the same space at the same time. According to my calculation they should not even be here since I did over 40 yesterday. Turned out they took the bus since they had planes to catch. We exchanged some Camino gossip and agreed to meet later. They suggested I join them at their albergue after the lighthouse. I decided to book there immediately and dropped off the backpack to walk the last three kilometers without the weight. Even with the tourist buses the lighthouse was such a nice end for the trip. As I was taking a picture of the lighthouse, I realised I had captured the Korean guy in it! I congratulated him for making it. I felt especially good about being there to celebrate his Camino, since he must not have many Camino friends without either Spanish or English skills. Safety rails aren't a big thing in Spain, so I got to a ledge as far to the End of the World I dared to crawl. I sat there for a moment with seagulls flying far down over the waves and the rocks, a lone sail towards the west. It felt like it's just me and the End. I threw the dirty white stone over the edge of the world. Later I saw my Partner for a dinner. Unfortunately she had been trapped by the tide while on a beach (This had happened to me too earlier on the trip) so she was quite out of energy and probably rather dehydrated. The next day I took her to her bus and took another bus myself. I wonder what sort of a relationship this will be, if any kind. It might be that this sort of extreme mental union somehow burns itself out. Or maybe it cannot exist in the real world at all? Remains to be seen. At some point I asked my Partner if she thinks the Camino is basically a LARP. She said 'no'. ------------------------------------------------------------------