Smallest_Sparrow
Life is rarely what you expect or believe it to be
- Time of past OR future Camino
- 2012: most of some, all of a few, a bit of others
Since I believe there are more than a few members living in North America and a few other places that are not Europe, I'd like to start with a boring story. ahem....
I began walking the Frances in SJPdP in mid-April, and had noticed a few signs posted along the way, especially between Pamplona and Irache (where I turned to walk the Norte).
walking through cities like Gernika and Bilbao (and the Norte roads between them) I noticed they were often marked in both Spanish and Euskara...and that the Spanish was not infrequently scratched out or sprayed over with black paintoccasionally this made following my guide a tiny bit challenging
so what does this have to do with Labor Day? April 30 and May 1 were my days in Bilbao. On the 30th, a Monday as I recall, I ran some errands including picking up my care package at the Correos, and had asked when they would be open on Tuesday so I could return to re-mail my package forward. So at 8 am Tuesday I walked to the post office. Locked. what?!? Well, sometime opening times are just a suggestion...I decided to get breakfast, but this bustling tourist town had all it's shops and cafes closed--even ones that had posted opening times of 7 am. My hotel was just down the street from the cathedral and the square...triple checking my watch, I walked there, and everything was closed. At 9:00 everything was quiet, except a few men were hanging Basque flags all over the square and from balconies, one with a loudspeaker tucked under his arm, and police were gathered on several street corners just watching them. This is it, I thought, I'm in the middle of a Basque revolution.
As it turns out, it was nothing that exciting. But it did seriously impact my getting things done, and if I'd been in a smaller town, I might not have eventually found food. In the US, Labor Day is the first Monday in September, noted for last day of summer BBQs and back to school sales. It's the same I think in a few other countries. In Spain, however, and I believe quite a few European countries, Labor Day is the first of May. And they seem to take the taking-the-day-off thing pretty seriously. Since it seems a lot of walkers are planning to avoid the summer by walking in April/May, I thought you might want to know. Or maybe I'm the only clueless American. Be sure you have food, and make sure if there is something you really want to see that you don't go on 1 May, or check if it will be open that day. I also would not be surprised if there was limited/holiday schedule public transportation on that day.
I began walking the Frances in SJPdP in mid-April, and had noticed a few signs posted along the way, especially between Pamplona and Irache (where I turned to walk the Norte).
walking through cities like Gernika and Bilbao (and the Norte roads between them) I noticed they were often marked in both Spanish and Euskara...and that the Spanish was not infrequently scratched out or sprayed over with black paintoccasionally this made following my guide a tiny bit challenging
so what does this have to do with Labor Day? April 30 and May 1 were my days in Bilbao. On the 30th, a Monday as I recall, I ran some errands including picking up my care package at the Correos, and had asked when they would be open on Tuesday so I could return to re-mail my package forward. So at 8 am Tuesday I walked to the post office. Locked. what?!? Well, sometime opening times are just a suggestion...I decided to get breakfast, but this bustling tourist town had all it's shops and cafes closed--even ones that had posted opening times of 7 am. My hotel was just down the street from the cathedral and the square...triple checking my watch, I walked there, and everything was closed. At 9:00 everything was quiet, except a few men were hanging Basque flags all over the square and from balconies, one with a loudspeaker tucked under his arm, and police were gathered on several street corners just watching them. This is it, I thought, I'm in the middle of a Basque revolution.
As it turns out, it was nothing that exciting. But it did seriously impact my getting things done, and if I'd been in a smaller town, I might not have eventually found food. In the US, Labor Day is the first Monday in September, noted for last day of summer BBQs and back to school sales. It's the same I think in a few other countries. In Spain, however, and I believe quite a few European countries, Labor Day is the first of May. And they seem to take the taking-the-day-off thing pretty seriously. Since it seems a lot of walkers are planning to avoid the summer by walking in April/May, I thought you might want to know. Or maybe I'm the only clueless American. Be sure you have food, and make sure if there is something you really want to see that you don't go on 1 May, or check if it will be open that day. I also would not be surprised if there was limited/holiday schedule public transportation on that day.