Day 21 2015) Belgioioso to Orio Litta

5th May 2015  Belgioso to Orio Litta  18.10km on foot and 10km by train

Fine, mostly overcast warm weather
Short version:
Great breakfast in hotel, set off along the route, followed signs faithfully but they varied from guide book (& strip maps) & ended up doing 5km more than planned so took a train at the end (common sense won out!) and then walked to the wonderful ostello in Orio Litta with a warm welcome & only two tiny blisters of no importance (in odd places) which don’t hinder me.  Delicious meal in the ostello with fellow pilgrim offered by the mayor’s wife as the trattoria closed on Tuesdays!  Tomorrow will cross the Po river by ferry and go to Piacenza.
Longer version:
There are some people who should go straight to Heaven when they die and the young woman in the hotel is one of them!  It turns out she is Romanian, in Italy for the last 12 years, is the “fiancée” of the hotel owner/cook, is 35 years old (but doesn’t know when she will get married…) and the older woman with her is her sick mother (has leukaemia) and they do all the work in the hotel with a very bright and generous outlook on the world.  She had set me up a royal breakfast with good cereal, a full array of fruits, biscottes, biscuits, jam, water, tea, then a coffee to finish off with.  All for a minimum cost and a lovely cheery manner.  When she took my passport she remarked that I would have my birthday this week which I’d not thought about.
I left the hotel and walked to Torre de Negri (literally the tower of the blacks) but no tower and when I asked a local man confirmed there was no tower (& “it’s always been like that”).
Walked through flat countryside of the Po valley again.
“All roads lead to Rome” so they say and I can confirm that there are several ways to cover the same territory…among those of my guide book, of the strip maps I have (with GPS coordinates, probably meant for technies or cyclists with GPS), and of the official way signage.    I followed the way with all the signs but realized when I reached the main road I wasn’t where the guide book (or the maps which had taken a completely different route…) said I should be.  As I couldn’t work out where I was and the official signs kept pointing onwards I followed them.  They took me by a very long and circuitous but pleasant route through fields on soft sandy paths and then I came finally to the river which the guide book said I would have to cross on a main road & I met a couple of men whom I think worked for the canal maintenance enterprise (there were many canals as I was back in rice paddies and corn fields) and I asked how far it was to the town of yesterday’s mechanic and was told I was on the way to Santa Cristina, the following town!  So I plodded on and finally got there after confirming with passers-by several times that I was on the right track (& at least I didn’t have to risk my life walking along a busy main road without footpaths as per the route of the guide book…) One group of 3 women in a very small place, seeing that I was walking through the fields alone, said I should be very careful (another just raised her eyes to the heavens) but on my way I only encountered farmers who were working their fields and all gave me a cheery wave.  When I arrived in Santa Cristina, I had done  4 km more than the guide book said I should – already 12 instead of 8 km – & promptly met one of the women I’d seen before (she’d said it was roughly 1.5km when it was in fact 3) as she’d come by car…  After a well-earned cappuccino I moved on to a 4km track beside the railway line with a dry canal between the two (as specified in the guide book).  Fine for a while then the track seemed to peter out with high grass and weeds ahead and the signs said to go away from it along a dirt road.  I did this for 500m but was going further away from the railway line so back-tracked and then had to fight my way through the metre-high grass but could see that the track has been used so was comforted but fearful of tripping up…and all the time the canal bed about 4 metres below me was dry and flat.  I had seen that there were some paved tracks down to it near little covered water channels which crossed over it and that tractors had been down there so at the next opportunity I took to the canal and then prayed that there would be another paved track up out of it further along as I knew I could not climb up its steep sides with my rucksack.  You can perhaps imagine my relief when I saw a path up out of it as I’d imagined I might be backtracking…  And when I got up again the track was much better.  To cut a long story short when I came to the railway station I had already done 17km and the guide book said I had another 11 to do!  As my mother always said that one of the best attributes to have in life was “good old garden common sense” (& which I think I am singularly lacking at times) I took stock of the situation with respect to my feet & when I went into the bar next to the station I asked about the next train (10 minutes later!) so I quickly bought a ticket for two stations and then that would have left me about 3km to walk.  So I jumped on the train which was mostly transporting secondary students homewards and when I was getting off I decided to jump on and go all the way!  It was just then that the conductor came along to check the ticket which I had to get out of a transparent pouch holding my maps around my neck but as I was fossicking to undo it he could see part of it folded through the plastic and said OK, so I didn’t have to show that I had gone a station further than I’d paid for (perhaps it would have been the same price)…  So I walked into the village of Orio Litta approx 1.5 km from the station  and was sitting down in a little piazza just about to eat a late lunch when a man came to show me to the ostello where a lady who does everything (like in my previous hotel) welcomed me and showed me around the truly magnificent building.  About 5pmthe mayor (& to whose wife we had spoken in the morning to reserve a bed) turned up in cycling clothes to stamp my “passport” & receive my donation for the night.  I spoke to him (who is also a primary school teacher) about cycling & about my nephew who would be riding in the Giro which starts this week so he asked for Michael’s name & insisted on a “selfie” with me as the relation of Michael!
Those who read me on the Via last year might remember the importance of the church declaring a holy or jubilee year…well this ostello dates from the 13th century and was almost completely fallen down but rebuilt and renovated in the year 2000, a jubilee year (when money must be available for such projects).  It is a truly beautiful place.  The mayor told me he’d see me at the trattoria where I intended having dinner and mentioned that he had met a Spanish pilgrim (while he was out cycling) who would be arriving for the night. He, Gonzalo, eventually arrived, a lovely young man from Madrid who had walked everywhere (from Madrid into France last year where he had an accident & he restarted this year and has been walking incredible distances to arrive here)!
Gonzalo, Pier-Liugi (the mayor) and me
Gonzalo, Pier-Liugi (the mayor) and me
I went out to the trattoria but, guess what, it’s closed on Tuesdays.  I met a woman in the street & asked her where I could eat & she said she’d show me to a pizzeria but took me via the mayor’s house & rang the bell & his wife came out & offered to make me a meal & I was embarrassed and said “no thanks” but she insisted so I said we’d be two (with the Spanish pilgrim) & so Pier-Liuigi (the mayor) turned up a little while later with a big dish of pasta with a tuna & tomato sauce, a mixed salad, 4 boiled eggs, bread, packets of biscuits & a bottle of wine!  Soooo generous!
A pilgrim's feast!
A pilgrim’s feast!
In the meantime he had also looked up Michael on the Internet and asked if Michael could send him an autograph(!) which I promised to arrange. I saw Gonzalo caring for enormous blisters which he said he pierced but he just had to be careful of infection – no Compeed for him…  So I had a delicious and interesting meal with Gonzalo (in a mixture of languages as I’ve lost so much of my Spanish since learning Italian), a real pilgrim who is searching for something, and who has limited resources (as he says, “money for eating but not for sleeping” – he’d slept in the street in Belgioioso as the priest would not let him into the hostel if he didn’t pay €20…).  While eating I asked him if he’d walked through the long grass and he said Yes, until he saw a snake when he quickly opted to walk along the railway line…gave me the shivers to think what I’d escaped but fortunately I had had long trousers on.   The mayor didn’t expect a donation from him to sleep the night and he is travelling with  nothing but the names of his stopping points written on a piece of paper (information gleaned from other pilgrims & when I expressed surprise he said that you always meet someone to help you…) as compared to me with guide book, maps, Garmin watch, etc!  The mayor also telephoned to Danilo the ferry-man to pick us up tomorrow morning to cross the Po – he’ll come for us at 9am.  Gonzalo didn’t know about the ferry & if he’d followed the signage he’d have done several more km…  Am off to bed in my room in the “torretta” (little tower) as we have to walk the 3km to the ferry for the 20 minute ride across the Po River.    What generosity of spirit and it certainly showed in the faces of both the mayor and his wife (who thanked the lady for bringing me to her!).  I will have a blessed sleep tonight.
Today’s highlights and things seen & learnt today
– Don’t trust guide books!
– Most vicious dogs are often in the poorest looking houses…
– Spring agricultural & gardening work well under way everywhere
– Am back in Juventus territory again with the team’s flag flying from many balconies as the team has just won the Italian championship…but Gonzalo was teasing the mayor as the Juve must have just lost a match to Real Madrid…
– Missed Corteolona so no chance to see the mechanic & a ride on his moto!
– Missing the snake in the grass…
– Such generous welcome in Orio Litta

Day 20 (2015) Pavia to Belgioioso

4th May 2015  Pavia to Belgioioso (which literally means beautifully joyful!)  19km (yes, it’s more than I should have done but I took a wrong turning in Pavia, extra 1.5km, and there was nowhere to sleep in between so had to come as far as Belgioioso…)

Good but overcast weather
Well, what a day of re-acclimatization to the Via!
Short version for those who can’t be bothered with all the following detail:
Still on the Po River plain so no hills.  Walked mostly on small bitumen roads and some dirt roads.  Pleasant scenery.   I got slightly lost leaving Pavia but got back on the trail, missed my morning cappuccino at the bar in the first village which was closed on Mondays, walked through flat fields to the second village and was disappointed to find the interesting little church with magnificent frescoes closed, walked on to this little town (first possibility to sleep), found hotel closed on Mondays but fortunately got in to sleep although no wifi, thankful that I have no blisters, came to bar to write these notes and have had a cappuccino, a tea, and will be having an aperitif before dinner and returning to hotel.  Skip to end of text if interested in photos!  Otherwise, arrivederci until tomorrow.
Long (perhaps too) version:
It took me a little longer than it should have to pack my rucksack but I’ll get used to knowing what should go in which of my 4 coloured waterproof bags and where they should go in my rucksack.  Went to the nearby bar for “breakfast”, if one can call it that, which has an arrangement with the hostel & the owner was most welcoming & sat me down comfortably.  I set off back over the covered bridge & into the town but missed a turning (not well-marked) & ended having to go back to find the beautiful St. Michael church which is in the 11th-12th century Lombard-Romanesque style similar to the UNESCO-listed Longobardo chapel cousin Liz and I saw at Cividale near Udine in Friuli province (near Trieste) last summer.  All missed turns were not for nothing as I was able to see some of the centre of the city with beautiful shops (most not open before 9h30… after a late Sunday night?), the spring fashions, and many lovely coffee bars and impressive bread/pastry shops.  I stopped in one and bought a fresh little focaccia which I asked the lady to put in the zipper pocket at the top of my pack.  When I took it out to eat for lunch the little receipt was with it, as one is obliged by law to keep receipts within several hundreds of metres of a shop as proof of payment if requested by someone in authority to see that a shopkeeper records the sale & is not cheating on his/her taxes.  As Pavia has an illustrious university, founded in the 14th century, there were students everywhere going to classes as the uni buildings must be spread over the centre of the city.  I smiled as I asked someone the way to a main street and he replied “I’m not from here” and the second person said “I don’t know”…so what’s new?
After leaving Pavia I walked through flat pleasant country with some big farms with fields of crops, quiet villages with mostly well-cared-for houses and gardens, very little industry, and no other pilgrims.
It is now 70 years since the end of WWII (VE day is 8th May and the anniversary of the liberation of Italy is 25th April) and I walked past some memorial plaques for the fallen of both wars as well as a commerative plaque for local resistance fighters who died just before the end of the WWII, with recently placed wreaths on them.   Very moving…
Memorials to WWI dead and to resistance fighters in WWII - wreath for 25April (liberation day)
Memorials to WWI dead and to resistance fighters in WWII – wreath for 25April (liberation day)
 When I finally arrived in Belgioioso the hotel was closed (of course it’s Monday…) but a young woman cleaning the rooms answered the bell and thankfully said I could stay the night & the first thing she did was to give me a bottle of cold water from the fridge!  After fearfully examining my feet it appears they have held up so far… The young woman left the very long wifi password for me on the front desk (said it only works in the entrance of the hotel) but she didn’t indicate the name of the network and I tried it with the 3 networks which popped up but no luck (she had left by then).  So I came to the centre of town to a decent looking bar and after a cappuccino (as the only client) and then a tea I may be obliged to have an aperitif as there are many plates of varied delicious-looking nibbles on the counter and as the sun is over the yard-arm (now 18h15) and the bar is now jumping both inside and at the tables on the footpath, why not, and I’ll drink to my feet holding up tomorrow.  I have to check out places to eat so may even end up eating here.  No sooner said than done, and I now have a Prosecco and the waitress has brought a plate of mixed goodies to eat (which our Zoe would die for so I shall think of her as I eat them and sip, and while she certainly doesn’t drink alcohol she is always asking if we can have an “aperitif” at home) so I may not need to find a restaurant!
Went to another restaurant for dinner but certainly not a gastronomic experience (perhaps because it’s Monday?) but this tiny town (big village?) has a beautiful furniture store, a shop with wedding attire to rival that of a big town, and at outlet shop, as well as two funeral directors in this street, among others…
So in all it’s been an interesting and positive experience so far…  Viva l’Italia et viva la Via!
Today’s lessons and highlights:
Most grateful for…
– I have walked longer than planned but so far my feet are in good shape!!  A couple of little pressure points but NO blisters.
Biggest disappointment
– I decided to wait to get to the bar in San Leonardo, 7 km away, for my morning cappuccino, even against my better judgement when I passed a beautiful cafe called The Art of Coffee as I left Pavia, but on arriving there it was closed on Mondays and a sad looking place it was…so in future I’ll not pass up an opportunity when it comes to a civilized coffee bar!  No, I am being futile as the real disappointment was not being able to go into the beautiful 15th century little church of San Giacomo Pellegrino (Saint James the Pilgrim) which has a magnificent series of frescoes (I’ve seen the photos) which was closed and the promise of “key available nearby” didn’t eventuate…AND after a detour!  However I do have my own little St James in a two- part metal shell which a friend brought back from Santiago de Compostela for me. Also I used the step on the side entrance door of the little church to sit down and have my delicious tomato and hard-boiled egg (from home) focaccia sandwich as there were no other possibilities to sit anywhere.
Business as usual
– I saw many people with nice-looking dogs on leads and NOT ONE barked so I was convinced that my days of vicious barking dogs was a thing of the past but as I got to the outskirts of the city there they were again.  Once I even passed 4 adjoining houses where there were 2 or 3 vicious dogs in each house and what a cacophony of sound they made.  Fortunately the gates were closed in each case.  Also many places and villages have signs that the area is under video-surveillance, but I still can’t work out why.
It’s spring!
– Spring flowers are everywhere and there are beautiful purple irises, azaleas, hydrangeas, rose buds, and many flowering trees and shrubs but the wisteria is finished (they are at their best in Geneva right now).  And the wild red poppies living out their brilliant, ephemeral and fragile existence on road-sides and in the fields of wheat which are a glorious green.  The corn is now about 10 to 20 cm high and I have even seen the first hay being cut (with its wonderful smell) & lying in winnows to dry out before being baled. Vegetable gardens are all tilled and prepared with new plantings and, out of the city, everyone has summer furniture in gardens or on terraces.  Haven’t seen any cherry trees yet (like last year) but I did see elderberry trees already in flower and thought of 3 friends who use the flowers to make delicious elderberry cordial.
Day 20 2
Beautiful poppies
 Most incredible sight!
– On the outskirts of Pavia at a road intersection (with an entry to the autostrada) I came across a thin young woman in a strapless black body-hugging mini dress, with 10cm stilettos and ear-phones, smiling and dancing on the road and enjoying herself as she tried to sell her charms to passing motorists…  She gave me a big smile and went on with her dancing (but of course I couldn’t take a photo) – I waved but didn’t speak to her (didn’t want to deprive her of the chance of business) but she is possibly from an Eastern European country and I can only surmise that she must get business…
Impressive builders
– two interesting examples caught my admiration and gave me a smile.  Men were building low concrete walls around a piece of garden and I noticed that at regular intervals there were plastic water bottles popping up in the cement  – which must be in the holes for fence posts! (Photo if you can see them).  Then in San Leonardo two men were re-cobbling the square in front of the church and their technique was extra-ordinary so I asked them if I could take a photo (& for the first time you can see live coverage from the Via!) – notice how the hands holding the hammer never stop while they reach for the next rounded stone, I suppose to keep the rhythm but I wonder at repetitive strain injury…  And when they spoke together they spoke Portuguese!  If you’ve been to Lisbon you will remember the beautiful black and while cobbled areas (specially if you were wearing high heels!).
Example of innovative construction (using plastic bottles!)
Example of innovative construction (using plastic bottles!)

Day 20 Video

Video of cobble-stone layers

As I arrived in the bar where I’m writing this I saw the woman from the bar with a broom trying to sweep out many many cigarette buts from the deep spaces between the deep-set cobbles on the edge of the road and when I said how hard it must be and I suggested she needed a vacuum cleaner, she nodded but said she didn’t have one…  When I asked about a wifi connection in the bar, she said “Yes, but it doesn’t work”.
Don’t know if this should fall under the “impressive builders” category, but after San Leonardo on a tiny bitumen country road with no cars there was a stretch of bitumen bicycle track for about 400 metres parallel to and slightly higher than the straight road. Why?
Lonely stretch of bike path which finishes before house in photo…
 Bike riders
– these come in two types, men in lycra with helmets who buzz by and older women without helmets out to do their shopping but who always smile and wave and wish you a good day (& many people also wish you Buon cammino as you pass them).
Telefoninos
– Italian drivers still have their mobiles to their ears as they drive…as do most people everywhere…
Best advice (?)
– I came across a mechanic who had come to the aid of a broken-down motorist on a country road and when his client drove off he asked me if I was on the Via.  When I replied affirmatively, he said that if I wanted to save myself 10km tomorrow I should go to “the”  traffic light in Belgioioso (is there only one?) and turn right and go straight to his village without taking the recommended route.  He even said he could give me a ride on his “moto”, but when I looked in my invaluable guide book the distance on the recommended route is only 5km ! (Perhaps there is another alternate route).

Day 19 (2015) Geveva to Pavia

3rd May 2015  Geneva to Pavia  By bus and trains & foot (1.8km)

Well I’m on the road again ( as the song says), on the Via Francigena towards Rome.  Let’s hope this venture continues well and my feet behave.  I have been treating them well so I hope they show their appreciation!
My versifying friend sent me the following lines before I set off so I hope they will ensure I walk safely for a long way…
Verily,
        Veteran vagabond
        Venture via villages
        View valley vistas
        Visit vineyard villas
        And 
        Valour will vanquish Via
I finally finished packing my rucksack about an hour before leaving (packing is one of my pet hates so I’m always packing as I walk out the door…) and was happily surprised to find it weighed  only just over 9kg – I had packed so many “essential” things that I feared it would be much more.  Will try to whittle it down as I walk by only carrying necessary food, etc.
I travelled in a special train from Geneva which was laid on because of the international Expo in Milan which opened its doors on 1st May (unfortunately all is not ready and building will continue for a few weeks yet although the Swiss have proudly announced that their pavilion is finished) and it was packed to over capacity with people without seat reservations sitting in the entry to each carriage. In Lausanne there was an announcement asking passengers to stations in Switzerland to take other trains (seat reservations are obligatory on the Italian section of the trip to Milan).
In Milan I bought a ticket to Pavia at a machine and the first message in the purchase process was “beware of pickpockets ” so I was checking all the pouches around my waist and neck while making my purchase (for an extra Euro I decided to travel 1st class!).
Arriving in Pavia I set out on foot to the hostel & as I walked over the beautiful covered bridge on the Ticino river** (see photo & history below) a man on a bike stopped and asked me if I was walking along the Via Francigena, where I had come from and whether I was walking to Rome.  I explained that I was restarting my walk and that it was my feet which would decide how far I would walk.  He replied that he had done the Via two years ago but “in bici, piu facile” meaning “by bicycle, much easier”… and gave me a warm handshake and wished me luck.  What an auspicious start!
I booked into the Santa Maria in Betlem hostel next to the impressive church and met a French pilgrim who had walked from his home in the beautiful Drome area in south-east France and who had been walking for 4 weeks (4 or 5 more weeks to Rome, he said…).  When I asked about feet problems he just said “old fractures” which must be giving him problems…but when I mentioned blisters he brushed away the suggestion with a “you just have to pierce them…”.  I then came to this restaurant for a “pilgrim’s cheap meal” (they have a special arrangement with the hostel for its guests).  I had forgotten how lively Italian restaurants and bars are on Sundays – while we Anglo-Saxons are at home getting ready to go to work on Monday morning the Italians are out with all the family and friends enjoying themselves!!
I’ll be having an early night tonight to be in form to stride out tomorrow…
Covered bridge
Covered bridge
**The previous bridge, dating from 1354 (itself a replacement for a Roman construction), was heavily damaged by Allied action in 1945. A debate on whether to fix or replace the bridge ended when the bridge partially collapsed in 1947, requiring new construction, which began in 1949. The new bridge is based on the previous one, which had seven arches to the current bridge’s five.