Cows are important, rain is ubiquitous
We are descending into the route to the coast. It is the point of all this wandering. It is a bit British in terms of small lanes and odd turns, We are on one of many of the camino routes for a bit of this. We will pass one of the many tiny bus shelters on these lanes. I think I got a clue as to the weather when walking into a cafe in Gijon and noticed an umbrella stand. Gijon gets 955mm of rain a year. Santiago gets 1855mm. London only gets 557mm.
We will pass nearby Iglesia de San Juan de Castromaior. I honour Pablo Pardo Lamela who gives it five stars for the reason ‘Because I live here’. The church was built in the 16th century on the site of an old fort. It has an 18th century baroque altarpiece.
We are now in Lugo province. Apparently these devout Christians remember the Celtic god Lugh in this name. The place has about a third of a million people living here. The population peaked in 1940 with over 540,000 people. It only has five towns of above 10,000 people and one [Lugo -98,000] above 20,000. Many migrated to Argentina and Uruguay. Wiki has articles about this place in 75 languages.
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