I just commented this on a reddit thread, and thought it would also be good to post here! I was reading a lot about “bed racing” before I left and was quite nervous. Now that I’ve spent 1,5weeks on the camino, I have some thoughts I would like to share
I am on the Norte (Bilbao right now) and I am not at all experiencing a bed race. The only times when it’s good to plan ahead and book something, is when you’re in a bigger city in the weekend (e.g. Zarautz, Bilbao so far). In the weekend, surfers/general vacationers also come to these cities, so it’s a little more difficult to just show up and find a place. I have always found a spot in municipal albergues, where you cannot reserve, even when I arrived quite late (17:30) for an albergue with only 11 beds in Larrabetzu.
Note that I do not care about where I sleep as long as I have a bed. Don’t know the situation for private rooms. I do know some pilgrims who book ahead 1-2 days and they complain that everything is booked sometimes. One friend wanted to book a bed in the same hostel as me via booking.com and it was noted as full. However, I slept in the hostel, and we were 3 people in a 12 spot bedroom!! So booking.com is FOR SURE not always accurate.
I stayed in a hotel once and I was sad and lonely. Yes it is more comfortable to have ones own shower and no snoring people in the bedroom, but the €65 vs €10 cost in a municipal albergue, was not worth it for me. Plus I missed having some time with fellow pilgrims to share stories of the day! Now I try to stay in hostels or pilgrims albergues always. However, others swear by private rooms!
The hostel owner where I am sleeping now gave me a great tip. No one goes for the bigger rooms in hostels (12, 20, 40). Everyone thinks: yeahh let’s sleep in a 4-6 person room. He suggests booking the big room as you will have a lot more space because fewer people than the capacity of the room usually stay there
A final note that for the municipal in Deba, the lady checked if you hadn’t taken the train to Deba. I think this is because the albergue is conveniently located on the trainstation, so she gets a lot of people who just take a train. She sent away about 20 people the day I stayed there! You can prove this by getting a stamp in Itziar, or just taking some photo’s of the scenery between Zumaia and Deba along the way I loved that she checked this, as she sent train people away around 15:30, and then when some of my friends arrived at 18:15 having walked the grueling coastal alternative (grueling because of the rainfall), they still had a spot!
That’s my take!
For those planning to walk in summer, june-august, considered high season, I think it will be similar as my post describes. July/august is actually high season for the LAST 100kms of the camino! For first 740km of the camino, May/Sept are high season! I do think you need to plan ahead better when staying in famous surfing coastal towns like Zarautz. But there’s also a lot of pilgrims hostels that are closed now, but open the 1st of June, so in the end I think your experience will be similar.
I am on the Norte (Bilbao right now) and I am not at all experiencing a bed race. The only times when it’s good to plan ahead and book something, is when you’re in a bigger city in the weekend (e.g. Zarautz, Bilbao so far). In the weekend, surfers/general vacationers also come to these cities, so it’s a little more difficult to just show up and find a place. I have always found a spot in municipal albergues, where you cannot reserve, even when I arrived quite late (17:30) for an albergue with only 11 beds in Larrabetzu.
Note that I do not care about where I sleep as long as I have a bed. Don’t know the situation for private rooms. I do know some pilgrims who book ahead 1-2 days and they complain that everything is booked sometimes. One friend wanted to book a bed in the same hostel as me via booking.com and it was noted as full. However, I slept in the hostel, and we were 3 people in a 12 spot bedroom!! So booking.com is FOR SURE not always accurate.
I stayed in a hotel once and I was sad and lonely. Yes it is more comfortable to have ones own shower and no snoring people in the bedroom, but the €65 vs €10 cost in a municipal albergue, was not worth it for me. Plus I missed having some time with fellow pilgrims to share stories of the day! Now I try to stay in hostels or pilgrims albergues always. However, others swear by private rooms!
The hostel owner where I am sleeping now gave me a great tip. No one goes for the bigger rooms in hostels (12, 20, 40). Everyone thinks: yeahh let’s sleep in a 4-6 person room. He suggests booking the big room as you will have a lot more space because fewer people than the capacity of the room usually stay there
A final note that for the municipal in Deba, the lady checked if you hadn’t taken the train to Deba. I think this is because the albergue is conveniently located on the trainstation, so she gets a lot of people who just take a train. She sent away about 20 people the day I stayed there! You can prove this by getting a stamp in Itziar, or just taking some photo’s of the scenery between Zumaia and Deba along the way I loved that she checked this, as she sent train people away around 15:30, and then when some of my friends arrived at 18:15 having walked the grueling coastal alternative (grueling because of the rainfall), they still had a spot!
That’s my take!
For those planning to walk in summer, june-august, considered high season, I think it will be similar as my post describes. July/august is actually high season for the LAST 100kms of the camino! For first 740km of the camino, May/Sept are high season! I do think you need to plan ahead better when staying in famous surfing coastal towns like Zarautz. But there’s also a lot of pilgrims hostels that are closed now, but open the 1st of June, so in the end I think your experience will be similar.