jsalt
Jill
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Portugués, Francés, LePuy, Rota Vicentina, Norte, Madrid, C2C, Salvador, Primitivo, Aragonés, Inglés
Do you find, when you get back from your camino, and after your friends have asked “How was your trip?”, you start telling them, but very quickly their eyes glaze over, and they soon lose interest?
Not so with my friends in The Lowveld Rambling Club!
The first Saturday hike after I get back, they really want to hear all about it. They would love to go too, they tell me; “just couldn’t afford it”, says another; “my husband would never let me go away on my own”; “I’ve never been out of the country, let alone go to Spain”; “I would never go away on my own in a million years”; “Jill, you are so blessed to be able to do the camino”; and so it goes on . . . .
And all the while I’m thinking, but you can do it, all and every one of you.
So I started thinking, I wonder if they would go, if I planned and organized it all for them?
It could only be for a limited time, as most of them have jobs, so 3 weeks maximum. The weather would have to be good – don’t want to put them off the camino if it’s too hot, or too cold. We’d have to stay in albergues - wages are pretty low around here, hundreds of miles from the big cities, so they will be on very limited budgets. I’d have to book ahead, being peak season, as I couldn’t risk turning up with a group of people, only to find no beds. And then I’d have to choose the days and mileages very carefully, so that all fitness levels were catered for.
So just for the fun of it, I worked out an itinerary for 3 weeks, and costed it. I still had to factor in the airfares, and getting to and from the big city. But, amazingly, I came up with a very affordable cost price, and ran it by the club’s committee members. They agreed to put it in the club’s program for this year, and I started emailing a few private albergues (in Spanish, using Google Translate).
I was hoping that I would get 6 or 7 people interested . . . I never envisaged that 15 altogether would sign up!
Once they started buying their own return flights (on Iberian Airlines, departing Johannesburg on 8 Sep, and returning from Santiago via Madrid on 29 Sep), I knew we were good to go. I’ve organized for a charter bus to get us to Jo’burg airport and back, and booked us all on the Alsa bus to León when we arrive in Madrid. It has been so much fun putting this trip together, and being able to put something worthwhile back into the club after so many years of happy hiking with them.
So this upcoming camino will be a very different one for me, and I am so looking forward to it. After years of telling everyone they should go alone if they really want to experience the camino in all its glory, I now have my “camino family” readymade right from the start! I will be hoping, as the days progress, they will see just how easy it really is . . . . and then one day, when they feel the camino calling again, be brave enough to go it alone.
Jill
Not so with my friends in The Lowveld Rambling Club!
The first Saturday hike after I get back, they really want to hear all about it. They would love to go too, they tell me; “just couldn’t afford it”, says another; “my husband would never let me go away on my own”; “I’ve never been out of the country, let alone go to Spain”; “I would never go away on my own in a million years”; “Jill, you are so blessed to be able to do the camino”; and so it goes on . . . .
And all the while I’m thinking, but you can do it, all and every one of you.
So I started thinking, I wonder if they would go, if I planned and organized it all for them?
It could only be for a limited time, as most of them have jobs, so 3 weeks maximum. The weather would have to be good – don’t want to put them off the camino if it’s too hot, or too cold. We’d have to stay in albergues - wages are pretty low around here, hundreds of miles from the big cities, so they will be on very limited budgets. I’d have to book ahead, being peak season, as I couldn’t risk turning up with a group of people, only to find no beds. And then I’d have to choose the days and mileages very carefully, so that all fitness levels were catered for.
So just for the fun of it, I worked out an itinerary for 3 weeks, and costed it. I still had to factor in the airfares, and getting to and from the big city. But, amazingly, I came up with a very affordable cost price, and ran it by the club’s committee members. They agreed to put it in the club’s program for this year, and I started emailing a few private albergues (in Spanish, using Google Translate).
I was hoping that I would get 6 or 7 people interested . . . I never envisaged that 15 altogether would sign up!
Once they started buying their own return flights (on Iberian Airlines, departing Johannesburg on 8 Sep, and returning from Santiago via Madrid on 29 Sep), I knew we were good to go. I’ve organized for a charter bus to get us to Jo’burg airport and back, and booked us all on the Alsa bus to León when we arrive in Madrid. It has been so much fun putting this trip together, and being able to put something worthwhile back into the club after so many years of happy hiking with them.
So this upcoming camino will be a very different one for me, and I am so looking forward to it. After years of telling everyone they should go alone if they really want to experience the camino in all its glory, I now have my “camino family” readymade right from the start! I will be hoping, as the days progress, they will see just how easy it really is . . . . and then one day, when they feel the camino calling again, be brave enough to go it alone.
Jill