Luka
Veteran Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Next: Camino Sanabrés (May 2024)
In 2015 I combined several Caminos. Starting in solitude from the Morvan to Le Puy en Velay, then Via Podiensis, then Francés, then Invierno from Ponferrada and then back to the Francés from Sarria (as I couldn't get over my fear of dogs). I recall it was always a big change.
1. First from walking solo to walking with the French (and struggling with my French) on the Via Podiensis.
2. Then in SJPdP a big change from a French Camino to an international one. At dinner in Beilari we were with 9 different nationalities and using English as a lingua franca. One of the French pilgrims was rather upset about it: 'Nous sommes en France et nous parlons Français ici!' (we are in France and we speak French here).
3. In Ponferrada I went from the Francés crowds to solitude and from albergue life to (more anonymous) hostals. It wasn't that easy to get used to that again (loose dogs didn't help).
4. And then from solitude to Sarria. However I was prepared, it was still a culture shock. The good thing though: when I walked out of Sarria the next morning, I met my Camino family from Beilari again. They were with the 6 of them and had sticked all the way together (I lost them because of having to recover from an injury in Pamplona). So I actually really enjoyed my last 5 days to Santiago.
I was pondering about this because I would like to walk from Madrid to Oviedo next spring (combining the Camino de Madrid, Camino Francés and Camino del Salvador).
Have you combined different Caminos? From where to where did you walk? And how was the transition from one Camino to the next?
1. First from walking solo to walking with the French (and struggling with my French) on the Via Podiensis.
2. Then in SJPdP a big change from a French Camino to an international one. At dinner in Beilari we were with 9 different nationalities and using English as a lingua franca. One of the French pilgrims was rather upset about it: 'Nous sommes en France et nous parlons Français ici!' (we are in France and we speak French here).
3. In Ponferrada I went from the Francés crowds to solitude and from albergue life to (more anonymous) hostals. It wasn't that easy to get used to that again (loose dogs didn't help).
4. And then from solitude to Sarria. However I was prepared, it was still a culture shock. The good thing though: when I walked out of Sarria the next morning, I met my Camino family from Beilari again. They were with the 6 of them and had sticked all the way together (I lost them because of having to recover from an injury in Pamplona). So I actually really enjoyed my last 5 days to Santiago.
I was pondering about this because I would like to walk from Madrid to Oviedo next spring (combining the Camino de Madrid, Camino Francés and Camino del Salvador).
Have you combined different Caminos? From where to where did you walk? And how was the transition from one Camino to the next?