You know what's a little weird? Expecting pilgrims on the Camino to call you by your trail name from the Appalachian Trail or the Pacific Crest Trail. Those names are generally specific to those trails and are bestowed upon people by their fellow hikers. You can't choose your own trail name. I met one guy this year who told me that "people call him xyz" ( I'm not going to say the real trail name here). When he told me that he was from Pennsylvania I asked him if that was his Appalachian Trail name, and he said yes. I later met some other pilgrims who thought that it was a little off-putting to be using a trail name from the US when you are on the Camino.
I also walked for several days with a young woman who had hiked most of the Appalachian Trail, and she didn't ask to be called by her trail name.
While I respect what you are saying, I do have to respectfully disagree for the most part. I have well over 50K miles on the major long distance trails in the US & New Zealand and the vast majority of folks using trail names do so with quite a bit of pride. I fully understand the Camino is not a wilderness trail or even remotely similar to walking any other long distance trail, but it is still considered a trail. Rather well groomed and an excessive amount of road walking, but still a trail. With that basic understanding, a trail name or nickname seems much less "weird" or "off-putting" since the Camino is a trail and trail names are certainly not restricted to long distance trails in the US.
If you were on the Frances last year in March and met an off-putting guy carrying an ultralight backpack introduce himself as 1-8T (pronounced one-eighty), then you likely were weirded out by me. My apologies for causing such disturbance
I introduce myself by my trail name on every long trail, pretty much the same as every other person fortunate enough to be able to walk a various long trails more than once - except the Camino evidently. My trail name is my identity when I am hiking/backpacking. It (1-8T) was bestowed upon me by my son (Data) after about a week or two (200 miles or so) into our first long hike together. We were walking down the trail (AT) in a thick evergreen forest in Grayson Highlands just chatting away about all the stuff dads wish they could talk to their 12 year old kids about without any drama. He stopped and turned to me (he always led) and said, "you know dad, this is awesome. You seem so relaxed out here and are 180 degrees different than when you are at home and stressed out from work and traveling. I feel like we can talk about everything." At that moment, I learned that hiking with my son would be the most important thing I would do with my life as a parent. That night we were building a fire ring and he said he wanted to call me 1-8T. We woke up the next morning, hiked for a few hours, ran into Lone Wolf on the trail outside of Damascus and my son introduced me as 1-8T. I have been called that for the next 35K miles or so.
My original trail name was Data, because I had a habit of remembering all of the info from the early trail guides and distances to landmarks, water sources, and road crossings (if any) before I set out each day. That way I never had to break out AWOL's or anything similar to find out how far to water or something. I just knew and everyone began to realize that I always knew the info and they started calling me "Data".
My son inherited the name from other hikers when they learned he did the exact same thing once he started spending weeks in the woods as well.
As a last note on reasoning for the introduction by my trail name...
I was diagnosed with Parkinson's in 2018. After almost 3 decades of long distance trails, I was suddenly now forbidden to go on long hikes again from family and doctors because I had been falling a lot and had several serious head injuries and finally a big fall, resulting in a TBI & permanent damage. My trail life had come to an end right when I was getting ready to move to the big mountains of Colorado and have so much in front of me. Finally in 2021, I learned to get my balance a little better and walk without falling backwards (trekking poles or cane) and convinced my family to let me hike the
Camino Frances. My justification / reasoning was that it is a rather tame walk in comparison to everything else I have completed and I will be around lots of other people quite often. Add in that I can sleep in a bed every night, I am not carrying seven days of food and a tent on my back, and I am rarely (if ever) more than 10 kilometers from a village, then it is likely the safest long trail in the world. All that and I casually said I won't be the person that sits around scared to live.
So I remain 1-8T, even on the Camino, because it is the only long trail I am allowed to hike...
The JMT happens to be my son's favorite long distance trail in the US. He returned so excited several years ago and tried to convince mom to join him and go a second time, but I knew my limits and the hardships. Those incredibly beautiful views did not sway me...in addition to my bear phobia
Definitely give the JMT a go, even if for only a few days. Easily the most beautiful trail I have completed. I linked up the JMT with my PCT hike at Whitney Portal and then hitched back to the Portal after reaching Happy Isles so not to skip any PCT miles that do not overlap. An extra 180 miles or so, but covering those overlapping miles on the JMT again were quite worth it.
Plus, they are just black bears.
Just bear vault your food or use an Ursack and tie it securely to a tree away from camp. A couple of long mileage days and you will be too tired to worry about bears anyway.
~ Said from the comfort of my desk chair ~
Other people have shared information. It is magical and so amazingly beautiful. But different than the Camino. Not quite the long haul of the triple crown but sort of hard core. It basically covers the most rigorous part of the PCT... or so I'm told... will find out!
Definitely not the most rigorous, but certainly the most beautiful. Hope you enjoy it when you get there.
There is no law that says you can't choose your own trail name; generally, on the U.S. trails they are given you, but no rule against it. I named myself backpack45 years ago because I was near that age and not seeing many other women -- especially over age 45) on the trails (John Muir/PCT). Why it would be considered "off putting" to use whatever name you want to use on the Camino? I generally use my given name, but much of my social media connections are as backpack45 because I am proud of supporting women of any age on trails of the Camino and elsewhere.
Agreed and love it that you are getting out into the mountains backpacker45. While I rarely provide my given name because I am incredibly private, I seldom notice it being said when people use it in a social setting. Not sure why, it is often simply missed. Probably selective hearing on my part...
Always remember, Hike Your Own Hike
1-8T