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Hey Tincatinker, thanks for the info. Appreciate it.Seriously, peak pilgrim season and you’ve not booked? Good on you!
Okay, you may find space at the municipal in St Jean. It’s likely that there’ll be room in the municipal in Valcarlos. You may even be able to book that. There may be space at Roncesvalles, worth trying to book that too though they keep some beds for walk-ins. After that till you get past Pamplona you’ll need a bit of luck. Buena suerte
Oh ok I am arriving tomorrow but I am staying in Saint Jean for the night and trekking to Roncesvalles on Wednesday. Hoping to hike my way to San Tiago. Is the accommodation options really going to be that bad? I presumed I would find albergues along the route even if I have to take or minus a few KM off my daily walks to find a bed.It’s best that you arrive hopefully as you are arriving at the busiest time of the year.
You have no chance whatsoever of intermediate accommodation on the Napoleon route before Roncesvalles - and it’ll be a zoo there - so the shuttle (which there’s hardly time to tell you about) or the valcarlos route are the only vaguely viable options. Unless you want to meet an enthusiastic new friend from another thead and walk to Roncesvalles in one day, starting after lunch.
Time spent in the next few hours researching options through to Pamplona would be well spent, although potentially depressing. I’d start with gronze.com and go from there, but also ask why you’re starting in St Jean? Pamplona would be a significantly better option.
Did you do any research at all?
In your position in early September, I’d just hit the beach for a couple of weeks and start from Sarria.
https://files.fm/u/kc2hs5kvhcIt’s best that you arrive hopefully as you are arriving at the busiest time of the year.
You have no chance whatsoever of intermediate accommodation on the Napoleon route before Roncesvalles - and it’ll be a zoo there - so the shuttle (which there’s hardly time to tell you about) or the valcarlos route are the only vaguely viable options. Unless you want to meet an enthusiastic new friend from another thead and walk to Roncesvalles in one day, starting after lunch.
Time spent in the next few hours researching options through to Pamplona would be well spent, although potentially depressing. I’d start with gronze.com and go from there, but also ask why you’re starting in St Jean? Pamplona would be a significantly better option.
Did you do any research at all?
In your position in early September, I’d just hit the beach for a couple of weeks and start from Sarria.
There’s not likely to be much available. The Camino will provide what it can but what it can provide by way of beds is limited. And just now, everybody who has carefully planned their September Camino and everybody who hasn’t is heading for St Jean.Hey Tincatinker, thanks for the info. Appreciate it.
Yes I am going in first time absolutely dry of bookings. Maybe not the smartest but hoping that the Camino will provide. I didn’t want to get too presumptuous on what I can and can’t do the first few days so go with what’s available and haul ass best I can.
The first three days will be a serious challenge from an accommodation pov. There is limited capacity at the best of times through to Pamplona and - seriously - you’re turning up in St Jean in the busiest couple of weeks of the year.Oh ok I am arriving tomorrow but I am staying in Saint Jean for the night and trekking to Roncesvalles on Wednesday. Hoping to hike my way to San Tiago. Is the accommodation options really going to be that bad? I presumed I would find albergues along the route even if I have to take or minus a few KM off my daily walks to find a bed.
We really don't know, so please let us know!Is the accommodation options really going to be that bad?
Best of luck! I arrive in two weeks and just booked my first night accommodation but no joy for an intermediate stop.Hey All, I arrive hopefully tomorrow to SJPDP. I have no accommodation booked for the first few days. Are places available ? What are the best app to book or is it possible to arrive and ask at the door?
But the overwhelming majority do get a bed each night...somewhere.often with more pilgrims on the trail than available beds.
Thank you great tip. Will check this out.You could check with Gite Beilari in SJPDP. I was there a few nights ago and they had walk in spots available both nights. Great place.
I will need to draw on the “luck of the Irish” thanks for your detailed reply. I will post in the next few days how my adventures went.OK, you now realise you have hit peak season.
It is what it is......
I would just say, be prepared to be flexible up until Pamplona.
The beds during those first days from St Jean often fill up quickly.
Roncesvalles and Zubiri are choke points in peak season, often with more Pilgrims that beds.
Buy hey, you might get lucky.
Also consider intermediate villages rather than popular places.
After Roncesvalles for example you have Burguette, Espinal, Biskereta.
Be prepared if all the beds are gone to move on to the next village, get a bus, taxi or whatever.
The crowds disperse a bit after Pamplona.
If you need to break up the first day, you can book the Mountain Shuttle close to the Pilgrim's office.
I hope you prove us all wrong and find a bed OK
I’ll post back as I get a bedWe really don't know, so please let us know!
The first 3 days might be a problem, but hopefully you'll be lucky. After Pamplona it should be fine if you are flexible and willing to sleep in albergues, not needing private rooms.
Wow! Thank you.Hola
Well.. I think you are brave to start your Camino without a plan!
Will it create problems for you?
Maybe.
It all depends on who you are and what you expect.
As the other posts show, you will be starting with a lot of other people. Many who have planned their Camoino for months if not years.
Some will have their whole Camino booked with places to sleep. Most will have a plan for the first 3-5-7 days after which they will adjust their planning to 1 or 2 days ahead.
And then there will be a few who will be camping out or roughing it (if thats a word?..).
One thing that brings options and sollutions.. as it sometimes is in our world.. is how much funding you have. The more you have the more options you will have.
A lot of pilgrims wants to stay at the budget Albergues (hostals for pilgrims) which cost around 5-12 Euros.
But you have private albergues that charge around 12-20 Euros and of course a lot of hostals and hotels.
Look here at this Spanish site to get an idea about what options there are in the towns and what they cost.
www.gronze.com
Anyhow.
Your first 3-4 days might be hectic where you have to be creative with finding a place to stay.
A lot of pilgrims, strangers to each others, share a room at hotels - 2,3,4,5 persons - be openminded and I believe you will find your way.
So prepare yourself to be adventurous and keep your spirit high.
If you are not a young person then pull out the youth in you
And remember:
Everything flows
Flow with it.
Buen Camino
Lettinggo
PS
Oh yes.
It is not a race you are entering unless you make it a race yourself.
Don't listen to much to the people who creates a lot of stress in you by booking far ahead.
There is a lot of stress inducing talk on the Camino.
Thanks Anhalter, you definitely lowered my panic levels yesterday evening. I am super excited to embrace all that it brings the good the bad the ugly. Check out what happened to me on my plane journey over… spilled coffee all over me. A quick stop to the loo in Bordeaux meant I could change shirts and I am now down to 1 clean top left already ha!Don't understand you guys... theres beds in albergues available in SJPDP tomorrow, theres beds in Espinal available the day after,there is a bed in at 50€ in Zubirithe day later. Thats only from bookingcom and I'd guess situation at location might be better. I know it is a busy week, but it is not the weekend, so i guess theres some chance the OP won't sleep under some bridge.
edit: strike the 50€ bed in Zubiri, Palo de Avellano even lists more than a dozen available beds for the 12th...
Very ambitious, I hope you are up to the challenge especially given the terrain conditions and having not secured accommodations. Buen Caminohttps://files.fm/u/kc2hs5kvhc
This was my thought process around first few days and securing accommodation on foot.
All part of the experience, do not fret about it ... you will see many of us the worse for wear. If that is all that happens to you on this camino, you are golden. Buen CaminoThanks Anhalter, you definitely lowered my panic levels yesterday evening. I am super excited to embrace all that it brings the good the bad the ugly. Check out what happened to me on my plane journey over… spilled coffee all over me. A quick stop to the loo in Bordeaux meant I could change shirts and I am now down to 1 clean top left already ha!
Not true for all municipal albergues.Remember that municipal Albergues don’t take bookings
check with Beiari, they have bunks for those pilgrims that did not have enough time to reserve. here is their info,Hey All, I arrive hopefully tomorrow to SJPDP. I have no accommodation booked for the first few days. Are places available ? What are the best app to book or is it possible to arrive and ask at the door?
All I'm going to say is that I LOOOOOVE the almost 32km thought process on Day 1 going over the Pyrenees.https://files.fm/u/kc2hs5kvhc
This was my thought process around first few days and securing accommodation on foot.
The second half of September should be much quieter than the first two weeks. But I would probably still book the first few nights, and if you want to split the stage between SJPdP and Roncesvalles you will need to book at Orisson or Borda. Or you can book the Mountain Shuttle from Express Bourricot.I'm worried now. I'm starting in SJPdP on the 24th of September (hopefully). I thought that still busy I could forego booking ahead.
Thinking heavy pilgrim trains only from Sarria in September...
Should I book ahead? Makes no sense farther than 2 days though, has things happen on the trail, not always as you expect...
" Palo de Avellano even lists more than a dozen available beds for the 12th..."Don't understand you guys... theres beds in albergues available in SJPDP tomorrow, theres beds in Espinal available the day after,there is a bed in at 50€ in Zubirithe day later. Thats only from bookingcom and I'd guess situation at location might be better. I know it is a busy week, but it is not the weekend, so i guess theres some chance the OP won't sleep under some bridge.
edit: strike the 50€ bed in Zubiri, Palo de Avellano even lists more than a dozen available beds for the 12th...
I use it cause it seems to be the only albergue in Zubiri showing their capacities on their website, the others might list some on booking, but usually not all. Palo has their own booking page and afaik they list every bed there.Yep. I've always thought of El Palo Avellano as the bellwether for what's happening before Pamplona and a good indication for what will be happening after Pamplona. The sky is not falling.
That's how you do it!Hey all, I booked into beilari first night in St. Jean no problems. Got accommodation in Roncesvalles while drinking a beer in st Jean day before. Got a bed in zubiri while in Roncesvalles and sharing an apartment with 4 pilgrims this evening in Pamplona