I met one pilgrim in either 2021 or 2022 who was using an e-bike because his disability prevented him from doing the Camino any other way. He said he felt that he was cheating and said he deliberately wouldn't get a Compostela. I did tell him about the exception to the normal rule against motorised assistance, for the disabled, but I'm not sure I convinced him. He seemed like a pilgrim to me anyway ...
My introductory posting.
I rode the Portugese Central Route from Porto to Santiago in September 2022.
My wife and daughter walked it. When they told me they wanted to walk the Camino for vacation I was a little dismayed—because I thought they would have to do it alone. My wife suggested I do it with them, but with me on a bicycle because…
Fifteen years ago I broke my back and suffered a traumatic spinal cord injury. I was extremely fortunate that I regained the ability to walk again but I am impaired, my left leg has only about 60% of the strength of my right leg (which is also not 100% of my pre-injury strength). I walk unassisted, albeit slower than a normal walk, and I have stability issues due to very, very, weak plantar flexion in my left leg/foot and weak plantar flexion in my right foot, I also have weak hip muscles on the left side. On rough terrain or for extended walks I use walking poles and they work quite well, I use the walking poles in a very physical way. I can walk 5 miles (8 kilometers) or so but I am pretty done after that. Multiple days of that would probably result in some othopedic injury. When I was relearning to walk after my injury, I stress fractured my right foot (my better leg) because of all the compensation going on to compensate for the marked left leg weakness. And that was doing 1-2 mile “walks”.
I only tell you the above because, I can ride a bicycle pretty well and it is my primary source for recreational fitness, as it was pre-injury, although I am a lot slower and must always pedal seated due to my loss of plantar flexion. I also use flat pedals because I’m physically unable to use clips or clipless, my foot has to be pretty far forward on the pedal because of the plantar flexion issue. Walking the Camino, even just 250km, was simply not a possibility for me. When my wife suggested a bicycle, I looked into the possibility of renting a bike and was delighted to find the extensive availability of suitable bicycle rentals. I ended up selecting a gravel bike instead of a mountain bike because I ride a gravel bike here at home, that was a big mistake, the gearing was inadequate. I would joke along the way that I was riding the Camino, but walking (pushing my bike) —on only the very hardest parts. I still would have had to push a mountain bike up some very rugged and steep parts, but a mountain bike would have had me riding up some steeeper inclines.
I had been warned that hikers were not very warm to bike riders but I found that to be untrue, probably because I took extreme care always to warn hikers I was approaching and
always slowing to a speed barely faster than a walking pace as I passed them with a friendly Bom Camino as I passed. I was thanked more than once for my technique. And when they saw me pushing my bike up a steep path, sweating and struggling because I insisted on following the hiking path (with only 1 deviation), I probably earned their respect as well. But honestly, I wasn’t trying to earn their respect, I was just sticking to the path stubbornly
for me. I did use luggage transport because due to the spinal cord injury, I have an ongoing need for medical suppplies (thanks spinal cord injury…) that take up room and weight. I need about 125-150 grams of supplies per day and I was quite worried about always making sure I had adequate supplies. They are vital.
I never considered using an e-bike. But I can understand that some people might not have any alternative, and I also understand that probably most use e-bikes when they really don’t need to. I am less concerned that they are not doing the Camino
my way but lament that they are missing an essential part of the Camino, at least as I understand it.
My Camino was wonderful and my wife, daughter and I met people we still keep in touch with today for they were part of the experience we treasured.
I retire in about 9 months and am planning to ride the French way by myself (wife and daughter still working…) I am definitely renting a mountain bike for that, carrying all my own gear but using luggage transport to preposition medical supplies and my suitcase for the trip home. I plan to follow the hiking route and expect I will still be pushing the bike up more than a few hills, especially on the first days and near the end.