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Growing number of winter pilgrims

Bradypus

Migratory hermit
Time of past OR future Camino
Too many and too often!
In one of my searches for recent news items about the Caminos and pilgrimage a few minutes ago I came across two articles side-by-side in the Google results. One from El Correo Gallego about a small but noticeable growth in numbers of pilgrims choosing to walk in the winter months. The next result from the search was from a Navarra website noting that the National Police serving the Roncesvalles and Valcarlos area have been kept pretty busy with pilgrims struggling in cold weather and short days - sometimes found tired and cold still walking the road after dark. Having walked from SJPDP in January myself I know that it can be a beautiful and joyous experience but it does have its challenges above and beyond those of a main season walk. I wonder if some of those who find themselves in difficulties have a mistaken stereotypical mental image of Spain as being largely heat and dust and sunshine rather than the very varied climate and terrain of the northern regions? My own preconceived notions of what Spain would be like certainly did not match what I found on my first Camino!


 
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We will walk from Roncesvalles to Grañón this year in early March. We've walked some cooler months in various stretches before. In January I walked from Sarria with a group. Phil has walked a couple of different years in November and December to and from albergue volunteer assignments and we both walked a bit together in December 2018 away from a volunteer assignment. Helps us remember what pilgrims really need when we transition to and from hospitalero roles.

I am used to colder climates and winter has its own special beauty. Winter is Spain isn't really that cold compared to what I am used to and it's nice to walk a less crowded path. There's fewer coffee stops open and it does seem to rain more, but I can adapt.

I will say that in Santiago in January, the cathedral was almost completely empty for pilgrim mass and we had no trouble getting rooms for a group at San Martin Pinario.
 
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I will say that in Santiago in January, the cathedral was almost completely empty for pilgrim mass and we had no trouble getting rooms for a group at San Martin Pinario.
In terms of numbers of fellow pilgrims and the infrastructure available my Camino Frances in January 2023 felt remarkably similar to walking in summer 2001. Much colder though!

IMG_20230128_093650.webp
 
When I worked elsewhere, and had more of a choice, I always chose to walk in winter. Since leaving Spain in 2006, I've worked exclusively in roasting hot countries, and I always loved the change. Now, I'm working in a country where my only possibilities for getting a sizeable chunk of time off fall in winter - early spring, so I can carry on with what I prefer.

I don't doubt that winter pilgrim numbers are up a bit, since there are people with time flexibility seeking to avoid the masses, but I don't think it will ever reach significant numbers. I know there are a few people on this forum who did their first camino earlier than I did, but in 1998, in Nov-Dec, I met 14 pilgrims in total, when I was either going to, or returning from SdC. There may be more now - I'm sure there are - but I don't think there will ever be enough to put me off. I've only ever walked once in 'high season', and I was doing the Norte before it became super-popular. Everything went well until the very last couple of stages, and the American pilgrim I'd met up with along the way, with whom I met up every night, told me before the final stage, where we had to join the CF - 'you are going to have the shock of your life'. She was right. That final day on the CF was horrific, and not to be repeated. Viva el invierno, say I, and may it not become toooo popular!
 
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Wherever you do plan to walk in winter do keep these thoughts in mind.
In addition to the Valcarlos alternate to Roncesvalles difficult CF stretches after winter storms could be across the Montes de Oca from Villafranca, Najera to Santo Domingo de la Calzada, Monte Irago and, of course, to and from O Cebreiro. Be prepared.

For any winter camino I stress this bit of info re: carrying food supplies.

Whenever you do walk keep warm, stay safe and Buen camino!
 
To opine on Bradypus's speculation, I see again and again that people who are unfamiliar with mountain weather patterns (!?) , high deserts, and geography in general ( not just in Spain) regularly underestimate/ mistake the efforts, preparations, and training required to complete a distance under unpredictable and adverse conditions. Take a look at rescue statistics for any of the popular trails/ parks in the US.

And yes, people whose only knowledge of Spain is the south ( and who don't come from higher latitudes (?)) have *no* idea what winter can be like in the north, or how quickly it gets dark.
 
What I found over the course of my last very long Camino spanning a few years and all seasons is that three manners of foot pilgrimage, previously rare and unusual, are becoming more common.

1) The pilgrimage from home. I used to be one in a minority number of oddball freaks doing this, Spaniards and Portuguese always excepted of course, but in recent years I would encounter several in any given week on the Francès. There have always been the Dutch of course, but it is becoming a normal manner of pilgrimage projects throughout the whole of Western Europe.

2) A Winter Camino. I had been wanting to do one since the early 1990s, so I'm glad I finally got that personal itch scratched, but as to this one, mostly I think that it's less vocational and more the consequence of a squeeze from the previously less populous Spring and Autumn becoming ever more populated over the decades. Once Spring, and Summer, and Autumn have all become too crowded for those who prefer a quieter hike, then Winter it is.

3) Home to Home. I finished my own this year, but I met dozens of other pilgrims in 2024 doing the same. This is a more recent development than the other two ; in 2021 and 2022 I did meet a few others, more than in previous decades, but nothing like the number I encountered this year.
 
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I love walking on camino in winter - I dislike too much heat. I loved arrived in SdeC on a January midmorning and getting a free ticket to see the restored Portico of Gloria.

But it does mean you need to be prepared. Weather can widely vary - appropriate clothing for cold and wet conditions. You need to carry food. You need some emergency funds in case of needing a taxi or private room. The short days means having a headtorch and reflective gear as you are walking in darker conditions.

But that first day from SJPDP to Roncesvalles via Valcarlos is a tough day even in good weather. I know I split it at Valcarlos. And it's a tough start to a winter camino beginning with crossing mountains
 
We are currently on our seventh winter Camino and there are a few more people walking than in the past but not many. In the past we could walk for a week and see no one.

This year we started in Pontraveda and the first two days we didn’t see any other pilgrims. The last few days we have seen 3-5 people walking each day but that’s about it. The few people we talked to started in St Jean and are planning to arrive in Santiago on or before Christmas Eve. We are walking at a bit more leisurely pace (~20 km/day).
 
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This is strictly anecdotal but I served last December as a hospi in Najera and am here this year as well. I've noticed a definite decrease in the number of peregrinos from a year ago, especially Spanish people and to a certain extent Korean's. We'll see how the rest of the winter goes. Ultreya!
 
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