MickMac
Veteran Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Frances 2013
Frances 2016
Frances 2017
Frances 2018
Frances 2018
Ponferrada-Santiago
July 2019
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Like Everest, the Camino is now commercialized. It's no longer about it's original purpose. It's instead a trendy "thing" to do and it's rapidly losing the last vestiges of it's original identity.
In 2009 before the Holy Year in 2010, there was under 150,000 compostelas/pilgrims. Can you imagine the bed rush if no infrastructure had been added for the 277,854 pilgrims last year? I think we should be grateful for the "commercialization." When there are as many t-shirt shops on the Camino as albergues, it will be time to become concerned...the Camino is now commercialized
The market is the market - John Brierely and Ivar make their entire living out of the Camino, do we grudge them this? No we appreciate the service they provide and we're prepared to pay for it. It is the way of the world and it was ever thus on the Camino!
It does not feel like that to me at all, and I have walked all the routes into Santiago. Maybe it is just a difference in perception and attitude. I found it easy to avoid the McDonalds and Burger King in Santiago, and never saw another one, though I did see ads for them in some of the big cities.If the Frances feels like the interstate with franchise food and chain hotels
Whenever I think of the commercial exploitation of the Camino, I also think about Jon Krakauer's book Into Thin Air in which he chronicles a famous disaster on the slopes of Mount Everest. One of the reasons why so many people died on that fateful day is that there was an amateur on the mountain. A very wealthy woman, who had started a television network, had paid an enormous sum of money to be literally drug up the mountain by two Sherpas just so she could claim on the New York and Los Angeles cocktail circuits that she had summited the mountain. She became a huge liability in a devastating storm because she had no training and no business being on the mountain.
Like Everest, the Camino is now commercialized. It's no longer about it's original purpose. It's instead a trendy "thing" to do and it's rapidly losing the last vestiges of it's original identity.
There is still someone doing Caminos for hire, a man from Portugal.I have read that even in the old days when walking the Camino was given as a punishment for sins or crimes there was a thriving business for "pilgrims for hire" to do the walking for the guilty parties. Obviously this was in the days before photo IDs.
I'm in Foncebadón right now, and there are some new buildings under construction.I am delighted to see prosperity in the villages along the Camino Frances. The first time I walked through Foncebadón it really was abandoned. For the pleasure I get I am more than happy to make a contribution to Spain's economy and to improving the lives of the people along the route.
I agree and no I don't begrudge them either. For those who are "put off" by the trend toward commercialization, just don't buy anything! You should include all restaurants, too, and make sure your food continues to be purchased only from tiendas!The market is the market - John Brierely and Ivar make their entire living out of the Camino, do we grudge them this? No we appreciate the service they provide and we're prepared to pay for it. It is the way of the world and it was ever thus on the Camino!
I couldn't agree more.Many local Spaniards in rural Spain have been greatly helped by pilgrims needing bars, cafés, hostals. Supply and demand etc.
In 2001 Foncebadón was an abandoned village of crumbling stone buildings. The church had recently fallen in on itself. I couldn't stay there because there was nothing.I'm in Foncebadón right now, and there are some new buildings under construction.
Whenever I think of the commercial exploitation of the Camino, I also think about Jon Krakauer's book Into Thin Air in which he chronicles a famous disaster on the slopes of Mount Everest. One of the reasons why so many people died on that fateful day is that there was an amateur on the mountain. A very wealthy woman, who had started a television network, had paid an enormous sum of money to be literally drug up the mountain by two Sherpas just so she could claim on the New York and Los Angeles cocktail circuits that she had summited the mountain. She became a huge liability in a devastating storm because she had no training and no business being on the mountain.
Like Everest, the Camino is now commercialized. It's no longer about it's original purpose. It's instead a trendy "thing" to do and it's rapidly losing the last vestiges of it's original identity.
While agreeing in essence with all the above posts @MickMac was making a point about commercialisation and tourism, not the thriving of Spanish businesses and revitalisation of communities brought about by increased numbers of pilgrims walking the Camino. The distinction, for me anyway, is an important one. We should rejoice in the how the Camino has done recently what it has done historically, which is to bring increased prosperity to areas living on the edge of economic survival. As others have noted, Spain is a poor country and job opportunities scarce for young people in rural areas, and if you lose your young people, you lose your community. Spending money with those offering services or goods along the road to SdC is not to partake in the commercialisation of the Camino, it is the time-honoured activity of trade. On the other hand, I do consider that companies who parachute in temporary personnel while operating outside the geographical parameters of Spain/Portugal are curtailing opportunities for employment in those countries and are taking from, rather than giving to those countries' economies. I will, bearing in mind @William Marques recent and wise post, keep silent for once on the related matters of marketisation and pilgrimage.
But Spain still has a very high unemployment rate - around 18%Spain is not a poor country.
It is the 4th Economy in the Eurozone, the 5th Economy in the EU and the 14th in the World in terms of GDP.
The GDP is growing 3,5% annual and 650.000 jobs have been created in the last 12 months.
A 10% increase already! I wonder - they can't all be tourists/trendfollowers, and so what if they are. I believe everyone gets something important from their Camino in some way, and many change along the way, realise they have embarked upon something special and it touches them. Also - today's world has been taken-over by monster corporations telling us what we must have/ need/ can't live without, workworkwork for it all or you're a loser. Perhaps the increase in numbers - even more so with the state of world affairs as they are and where we're heading with it all, is also to do with people wanting out from all that, a chance to breathe and do something for themselves, an escape if only for weeks rather than their life. Hopefully they go back to their lives with new, fresh inspiration and perspectives after a Camino, a seach for tangible meaning to life rather than consumerism. I don't care who does the Camino, how many, I believe we're all guided, even shoved, onto the Way. And for the first time in my life, I've studied the Book of James - after my last Camino - well worth reading and contemplating ;-) Love, Light and Nature to you all, Pilgrims of life.I heard on Spanish news a few weeks ago that this year, first trimester, there had been an 10 % increase of pilgrims compared to the same period last year!
Recent job advert shows Camino is changing and been exploited as a tourism opportunity ! not its original pilgrims journey. Is it just another tourist destination !!?
Really?Spain is a poor country ...
Going through an economic crisis does not make a country poor. Was the US a poor country post 2008? Those who had taken on mortagages they could not afford certainly became poorer, but the country didn't become poor.But Spain still has a very high unemployment rate - around 18%
Going through an economic crisis does not make a country poor. Was the US a poor country post 2008? Those who had taken on mortagages they could not afford certainly became poorer, but the country didn't become poor.
It seems that turists have taken over, especially the Camino Frances where it is a big queue all the way.
And the pilgrimsmass is so much filled with turist so pilgrimage couldn't get in to the mass.
Maybe you would be recognized as a pilgrim in your hiking boots and as a tourist in your nice dress?Just wondering how you know who's a pilgrim and who's a tourist?
Ive been in the cathedral both in hiking boots as well as in a nice dress, with washed hair and a camera around my neck.
Who's to decide if I'm more legitimate than some other person just by my looks?
hear hear! Totally agree. And others above have said, things always change.I am delighted to see prosperity in the villages along the Camino Frances. The first time I walked through Foncebadón it really was abandoned. For the pleasure I get I am more than happy to make a contribution to Spain's economy and to improving the lives of the people along the route.
Yes good point, the 'circular economy' in action. And 'shopping local' en route benefits many.Many local Spaniards in rural Spain have been greatly helped by pilgrims needing bars, cafés, hostals. Supply and demand etc.
Note to moderators: please delete if you feel this post strays too much into the banned area of politics.
The UK certainly became poorer after the Banking Crash and middle income and poor families are still paying for the financial bail out; the result is a squeeze on governement spending on education and the funding of hospitals here. There are many ways of measuring or hiding poverty, and it is usually politically expedient to hide its effects on individuals and groups be that in the UK or Spain. What I know is that many, many young Spanish workers are employed in the British hospitality and catering sectors, thus alleviating the home country's unemployment figures. I have often had conversations with some of those I have met who said they came to work in the UK because of the lack of employment back home.
Since the screening of the movie "The Way" particularly....the Camino has become a destination. People want the experience but don't have the time necessarily- so hallo "Tourist Pilgrim"!!!Recent job advert shows Camino is changing and been exploited as a tourism opportunity ! not its original pilgrims journey. Is it just another tourist destination !!?
Going through an economic crisis does not make a country poor. Was the US a poor country post 2008? Those who had taken on mortagages they could not afford certainly became poorer, but the country didn't become poor.
I don't think @Tigger was necessarily benchmarking Spain to its neighbours when she said Spain was a poor country.Perhaps, but Spain compares itself, not to a global index of poverty, rather to the European context...
But you miss alot, especially working through baggage...I always walk alone, but I have to say it's quicker by bus
And interesting data it is with Sweden coming in as having 16% of its population being poor or socially excluded. If Sweden has 16% imagine the rest of the world. I for one would love to see these numbers for Canada, the US and down under. (Netherlands 16.4% and finland 16.8%). I guess it is all relative...The discussion here over whether or not rural Spain is "poor" or "rich" seems to me to be based more on impressions than data. Not surprisingly, the EU has some real data!
You will if your expectations are not too exact or too demanding! You can spoil it by letting others frustrate you, or by hoping that the camino will change to conform to you. As long as you conform to it, you will do fine. If you have to stop by 2 p.m. to easily find a bed, then get up early and stop early. It is no fun walking in the hot midday, anyway. You might as well stop, do your laundry, grab a beer, and kick back! It is mostly about the other people, so enjoy them even in the heat of the day (but in the shade). The bed race has been around for a long time. Capacity has more than doubled, so it really is no worse than when there was 150,000 annual pilgrims. A lot of it is in your mind, though a lot of it is in being flexible as well.I hope I will still be able to find what I am hoping for on the way
That ship as sailed off the Frances I'm afraid.With a little luck, I too, years from now, will be able to look back on the good old days of my first Camino in 2017.
A lot of it is in your mind, though a lot of it is in being flexible as well.
That ship as sailed off the Frances I'm afraid.
Caminoways has been at this for a while-- looking at: a) the few international Camino businesses, b) the mom & pop operations along the way, and c) the authors and other facilitators, and comparing them with the huge pilgrim movement machines to Fatima, Lourdes, and Mecca, I won't use the term big business. Perhaps when Walmart opens a Camino office??
Well, considering the whole reason behind this pilgrimage is to get to the cathedral and the relics, I certainly would not consider contributing to the construction of the cathedral as Camino business exploitation. In fact, jist about every religious building in the world has been build with monies from the faithful.People are speaking of the big business on The Camino as it were new. Read your history: Business and exploitation have always been part of the Camino. It is now catching up to the 21st century. Pilgrims paid for the Cathedral.
Not always. Certainly there was a great deal of exploitation during the medieval pilgrimage boom. And undeniably there is a lot now too. But it was not true of the early part of the modern Camino revival in the 1980s and 1990s which was very much driven by the personal dedication and commitment of enthusiastic individuals and small local confraternities. I walked my first Camino from St Jean to Santiago in summer 1990. At that time the vast majority of pilgrim refugios were small and run by local councils, churches and confraternities. I cannot recall a single private commercial refugio. The majority were donativo and some even had a strict policy of refusing all donations because they saw their work as an act of service. That included the relatively large municipal albergue in Burgos which provided bed and meals but would accept no payment. On a number of occasions I stopped in a bar or restaurant for food and drink and found on leaving that payment was refused: sometimes "on the house" because I was a pilgrim and at other times quietly and anonymously already paid for by a generous fellow customer. This was quite embarrassing at first until I learned to accept gracefully with thanks. Such generosity and altruism was possible when the number of pilgrims was very small and we were frankly a novelty and a curiosity to local people. Even with the best of intentions it could not continue with the numbers walking today.People are speaking of the big business on The Camino as it were new. Read your history: Business and exploitation have always been part of the Camino. It is now catching up to the 21st century. Pilgrims paid for the Cathedral.
Still happening on less walked Caminos frequently. Sometimes receiving is harder than giving... On a number of occasions I stopped in a bar or restaurant for food and drink and found on leaving that payment was refused: sometimes "on the house" because I was a pilgrim and at other times quietly and anonymously already paid for by a generous fellow customer. This was quite embarrassing at first until I learned to accept gracefully with thanks. Such generosity and altruism was possible when the number of pilgrims was very small and we were frankly a novelty and a curiosity to local people. Even with the best of intentions it could not continue with the numbers walking today.
I'm puzzled by some of this discussion. Ivar started and runs this Forum, the on line shop and luggage storage as a business to make money. And we love these services. John Brierley by his own admission spotted a gap in the market and as he was unemployed started writing and publishing guides - as a business to make money. And every year makes more. This is the way the market works. If we don't like the style or quality of some businesses that's OK too but it is their right to produce their services and try to sell them. It is our decision to buy. 'Twas ever thus.
This is (I think) the first time I have had to disagree with you @JohnnieWalker but the original post was about exploitation not pilgrim-related small-scale businesses such as the ones you mention...I have no problems with people making a living by making a profit from their dealings with pilgrims if John Brierley is now rich, i am pleased for him. But cynical exploitation of the Camino by big businesses owned by those who have not walked it and therefore have no understanding of its significance for others, is quite a different matter.
I agree, what big business? I think tours are a bit exploitive; they charge a very high fee for a fairly unnecessary service, and may actually make the pilgrimage harder. However, if folks want to pay, it does keep the economy running. I do not think I have ever seen a "big business" catering to pilgrims. I see the usual big city chain stores, but I am pretty sure they are for the local residents. McDonalds et al are virtually nonexistent. You cannot find a Starbucks in Spain except in Madrid, Barcelona, and San Sebastian. Who is going to pay 5E in a Starbucks for something any local cafe/bar will sell for 1E? The only businesses I have seen are capacity expansions to provide for the large number of pilgrims, virtually all owner-operated (OK, Albergue Ferramenteiro is overkill, but it is clean).As for "cynical exploitation of the Camino by big business" you don't give any examples whatsoever. I also think there is an issue of perception - what you see as "exploitation" without defining what you mean others may see as providing services which customers are free to buy or not, thus creating wealth and jobs which every country needs to thrive.
I don't know what he makes, but he is #2 in Travel and Religion books, #8 Spain General books, and #10 Excursions books on Amazon. I find that pretty good sales!he is also not making a huge markup, as any author will tell you
I don't know what he makes, but he is #2 in Travel and Religion books, #8 Spain General books, and #10 Excursions books on Amazon. I find that pretty good sales!
I have no idea either, but I have a friend who has 9 detective novels in print (and has sold the film rights to one of them three times), and he told me that was well-advised to keep his day job.
My sister in law, multi award novelist is still taking ridiculous writing jobs to pay her rent. Being top ranked in a tiny niche doen't necessarily equate with great revenue. She makes 3$ per copy sold, off a book retailing at 12 times that.
July... 47k walkers got a Compostela, of whom 27k are Spaniards, not buying Brierley. In fact only 3500 were from the US, UK and Ireland. I don't know how many more people from English Canada, Oz and New Zeland make up the rest of the anglo speaking walkers, but small enough numbers not to be singled out in the PO stats.
Then there are repeat offenders not buying a guide again, those walking non Brierly routes, or buying another author. Add to those people walking together sharing one guide, and those making photocopies for their "clients".
I'm sure it's a nice extra retierment income, and a great excuse to get out of the house every year to walk these routes, but doubt it makes anyone rich.
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That Falcon may want to rethink writing Camino guidebooks as a job that will make one rich.And you wanted to say what, Anemone?
As for "cynical exploitation of the Camino by big business" you don't give any examples whatsoever. I also think there is an issue of perception - what you see as "exploitation" without defining what you mean others may see as providing services which customers are free to buy or not, thus creating wealth and jobs which every country needs to thrive.
I agree, what big business? I think tours are a bit exploitive; they charge a very high fee for a fairly unnecessary service, and may actually make the pilgrimage harder. However, if folks want to pay, it does keep the economy running. I do not think I have ever seen a "big business" catering to pilgrims.
Read your history: Business and exploitation have always been part of the Camino...Pilgrims paid for the Cathedral.
A telephone works for accomplishing that!needing at least the reassurance of a bed for the night that is within their budget