Provides hands-free lighting with adjustable beams and a red-light mode to preserve night vision. Offline GPS & Power Bank
So, if you find yourself in Lugo after midnight, turn off the navigation app. Ignore the highway. Search for the green sign that reads FU-10 – Vilalba . Turn off your music. Roll down your window to smell the wet granite. And start crawling. The night is long, the curves are patient, and Galicia is waiting for you in the fog. fu10 the galician night crawling
Hidden deep within the valleys and rural outskirts are furanchos (or loureiros ). These are private residential garages, cellars, and backyards permitted to sell surplus homemade wine directly to the public for only a few months a year. Finding an open furancho in the dark is the ultimate insider badge of honor for any night crawler. Coastal Villages and Verbena Stages Provides hands-free lighting with adjustable beams and a
This is where "crawling" becomes meditative. You slow to 30 km/h. The high beams bounce back in the fog, so you switch to low beams. You rely on the reflectors on the guardrails. Seasoned crawlers turn off the radio. The silence is heavy. You can hear the murmurio —the wind hissing through the eucalyptus, sounding like a crowd whispering in a language that predates Latin. Search for the green sign that reads FU-10 – Vilalba
The middle third of the route passes by several abandoned pallozas (circular thatched huts) and a forgotten medieval cemetery. Galician mythology is rich with the Santa Compaña (a procession of the dead). On the FU10 at 2:00 AM, you don’t need to believe in ghosts to see them; the fog shapes itself into processions.
Exorcise bad spirits with a flaming, mystical liquor ceremony. The incantation must be read aloud in the dark. Licor Café Descent