I am loathe to re-enter this debate as it was the reason for me to stop reading this forum, such was the level of vitriol displayed by some, towards cyclists. (Darn that email with the top 25 topics of June!
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Here are some points:
Why does a cyclist want to follow the same path as those walking? For this cyclist it was because that is where the people are! It is simply a better experience, more social, more meaningful.
Meeting someone sheltering from the pouring rain or struggling up a hill or basking in the sunshine is far superior to talking to that same person later about those experiences.
From my experience there are four types of cyclist on the Camino routes:
- The local recreational rider, either solo or in a group: He/she is riding on his local route. It behooves us to remember that fact.
- The local utility cyclist:He/she is riding on his local route, possibly to check you in at your Albergue. It behooves us to remember that fact.
- The “Camino Package” cyclist: Probably using a baggage service, light, unencumbered and can be of various skill levels from quite experienced to total amateur. In my experience the most troublesome because the journey tends to be viewed as a biking trip as opposed to a Pilgrimage and the experienced tend to want to go fast and the inexperienced are lacking skills and etiquette. Similarly, it may be members of a club from far away who are seeking a new adventure. It behooves them to adapt their behaviour to fit their environment.
- Finally, there’s the Pilgrim on a bike. Their goals are probably the same as yours, with the possibility that they can go a bit faster or a bit longer. Their rights and obligations are the same as any other pilgrim, whether on foot, with a donkey or any other method.
I understand people not wanting to share their hiking paths with cyclists. I’d question if we’re actually talking about hiking paths. I think we’re looking a local roads, routes, paths that have been used by locals for who knows how long with who knows what method of transport.
If I start with the idea that this is a hiking path, automatically anyone not hiking becomes an invader. If I start with the idea that I am on a multi-use path, the attitude is different.
I don’t like sharing my cycle paths with pedestrians. However, I know that irrespective of any rules or laws that I will encounter pedestrians. I have the choice of getting myself wound up about it or learning to let it go. I know which I find to be the best.
I dislike the introduction of legalities into the discussion. First of all, only local laws apply. Secondly, laws are open to interpretation. Thirdly, to a certain extent, it doesn’t matter what the law says, I am still responsible for my own safety and behaviour.
Perception of danger is different to actual danger. For good or bad, it seems that these days “feelings” outweigh facts. Without meaning to belittle anyone’s experiences, just because you felt in danger, does not mean that you were in actual danger.
As a person on a bike if I hit you I’m also likely to hurt myself. Believe me, I’m very well aware of that fact and it is not my intention to put myself into a risky situation, especially if far away from home.
For some perspective, I fell off my bike at about 8-10 kph. There was no-one around for kilometers in either direction (my pride was thankful!). Result? I lost a load of skin on my right arm, leg and palms of my hands. My helmet cracked. My right shoulder was dislocated and I bruised three ribs. I had severe discomfort for several weeks after. I have no intention of increasing the risk of such an incident again.
I think anyone advocating a boycott of cyclists on any of the Camino routes should tread very carefully.
Unless you’re local to the actual route, I think you should avoid such a position.
Imagine, if you will, foreign people advocating that you, in your local place, be banned from doing something in your own local area. Something as innocuous as cycling a bike!
People should remember that this is an international forum and the attitudes of your homeplace, while perfectly normal to you may not be perfectly normal to someone from somewhere else, or indeed in Spain or Portugal. Those of us who live in places where bikes are integrated into a normal transport system will view bike traffic differently to those where bikes are very much an outlier.
I can’t believe I have to say this, but cyclists are not all the same. Sorry, let me rephrase that, people who ride bikes are not all the same. Humans are not all alike.
As a person on a bike, I too have had negative interactions with other humans on bikes. Even on the Camino. There most certainly are some complete plonkers on bikes. However, there were also some complete plonkers on foot, too.
Not every person who rides a bike wears lycra!
Solutions?
It is very difficult. First of all, depending on where we come from, we have preconceived attitudes to cycling, rules, laws, etiquette.
If you doubt that assertion just think of some of the behaviour you no doubt witnessed in Albergues.
I have no doubt that the commercialisation of the Camino(s) is a huge factor. For a lot of people this is just a trip to take, whether on foot, by bike, by bus. Education for these people is an absolute necessity, but I can see no way how to effectively do it apart from limiting these companies. And that is unpalatable to me.
Education, generally would be a big help. As was suggested upthread (and I believe I suggested something similar before) an information booklet with every credencia would perhaps be helpful. Not everyone researched everything to the nth detail. Some, genuinely have no idea outside their own bubble. This would be useful for lots of things, not just biking.
Signs for people on foot as well as people on bikes at certain pinch points would be helpful. These could advocate, for example walking in single file or biking in single file, minimum distances or times between people on a bike. The dangers of earpods in especially high risk places. Perhaps highlight speed limits on certain sections. I'd have no problems with walking only sections for people on a bike. The reality is, that if you're toting your own gear there's every probability that you will be walking sections, anyway.
Etiquette flyers, multilingual, of course, could be distributed at Albergues/hotels for the appropriate groups, mainly for people on bikes. As a pilgrim, if you witnessed poor form from a person on a bike you could hand over one of these to the offender rather than fuming internally or exploding externally.
(By the way, such flyers could also explain the rights of people on a bike too!)
I’d have no problem with a rule that said a bike had to have a bell, for example, to stay in an Albergue. Of course, that mandates a bell, it does not mandate using the thing.
Perhaps a humorous and incentivising thing to do for people on a bike to do would be to acquire signatures from other Pilgrims along the way attesting to the carrier’s good biking etiquette. I don’t imagine the Pilgrim’s office would be interested in such a thing, but an online campaign on Facebook, or the like, could be a fun way of getting a point across. Definitely something for the Companies providing these tours to consider.
But, I believe, the most important factor in reducing the impact of this issue is to look at our packs (or panniers). What are we carrying with us on this trip that is going to weigh us down? What can we really do without, leave at home? Maybe, just maybe, along with that super heavy toothbrush, we can leave some of our attitudes at home or at least exchange them for some lighter ones.
In any case, once certain groups begin to be excluded from the Camino, then the Camino is no longer the Camino.