Aurigny
Active Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Francés; Português Central; Português Interior; Primitivo; Português da Costa; Invierno; Gebennensis
It's practically a year to the day since I was out on pilgrimage, on a route that began in Geneva and reached SJPP in January 2022. My intention was always, having reached this point, to make my way across to Hendaye and proceed via the Norte to SdC. Originally I'd hoped to do so by following the arduous but spectacular GR 10 across the Pyrenees, which was the programme for this summer. But a combination of work and family responsibilities ruled out any travelling at that time. Now that I've managed to get a couple of weeks to myself, a small change of plan is in order. The GR 10 not being suitable for winter travel, I'm going to try the low-level alternative, the Voie Nive Bidassoa, and pick up the Norte at its starting-point as previously intended.
I'm also coming a little better equipped than I was on the last section of the Podiensis a year ago. On that occasion, I found myself sleeping in a church doorway in a village a long way from anywhere when a gîte d'étape that was supposed to be open, wasn't. The night was foul, with high winds, sheets of rain, and temperatures of around 2C. It wasn't my favourite experience, and bearing in mind that I'm now heading out on an even more remote trail at the same time of year, it seems wise to take action to prevent a recurrence. So I've acquired a tent that weighs only about 1.5 kg but by all accounts provides very effective shelter from the elements. It takes up surprisingly little space in my backpack, and provides me with a fallback option if all else fails.
SJPP, when I arrived last night, was even quieter than when I was last here. In these post-coronavirus days, eating options in the town during winter are almost non-existent. My hopes were raised by an automated pizza machine at the side of the Place Charles de Gaulle; regrettably, it was empty, as was a baguette-making equivalent at the rue d'Espagne. Éric Viotte, the congenial host of the Gîte le Chemin vers l'Étoile (EUR 35, including self-service breakfast) at which I was staying, confirmed that the only restaurant open was the Pizza Ka establishment on the road out of town past the Place Floquet. It looked OK from outside, but I wasn't in the mood for a meal consisting almost entirely of starch, and instead retired to bed, chewing healthily if boringly on a handful of walnuts I'd brought with me.
This morning dawned clear and cold. I dropped in at the Pilgrims' Office to obtain a new credencial, the one with which I'd begun in Geneva being practically full. The volunteer staff were charming and helpful, as always. I didn't ask them about the Voie Nive Bidassoa because there were only two people on staff and one of them was preoccupied with training the other, whose first day it was. Perhaps I ought to have. But I'd had a long conversation on the subject with a gentleman there a year ago, who was only able to tell me that it passed through Bidarray and Espelette, and that the former might make a logical night-stop.
On the way out of town, other pedestrians and I had a bit of difficulty making our way past the municipal employees who were completely blocking the street with a cherry-picker they were using to take down the overhead Christmas decorations. This involved swinging the enormous fake sapins de Noël back and forth across the street at the end of a chain in an effort to deposit them safely on a flat-bed truck close at hand. A couple of old-age pensioners and I, attracted by the opportunities presented by this unconventional adventure sport, picked our moment to scuttle past on one of the upswings, the pensioners exchanging raucous commentary with the operatives who responded jovially in kind.
The Voie Nive Bidassoa is a relatively recent addition to the route network, though many pilgrims undoubtedly travelled along what is now known by that name. Information about it on the internet is extremely limited, the state of the art seeming to be a 2015 route description in French that, although detailed, requires the wayfarer to recognise turning-points whose appearance on the ground eight years later may be hard to reconcile with the word-picture provided. In what follows, I describe what appears to me to be a possible and viable VNB, without any guarantee that I have been proceeding along the "authentic" route, if such a thing exists.
One thing seems certain. There are no distinctive VNB-waymarkers on the way out of SJPP or, if there are, they're so inconspicuous as to be easily missed by someone looking carefully for them. I didn't have great expectations in this regard, and resolved to make my own way in the approximately correct direction and see what happened. The first step, then, was to get onto the Route d'Ascarat, which runs south of the village of the same name. This is easily done. One leaves SJPP as though one were starting the Francés. Instead of taking the turn-off toward Roncesvalles, though, one keeps on the Route de Bayonne and has the option of either bearing left a couple of hundred metres past the new Lidl supermarket (not open, alas, until 09:00) or taking the well-marked D 403 which brings one on a loop via Lasse. The result is the same in either case: one winds up on the D 15 heading in a more or less northwesterly direction. The paved footpath runs out a little beyond Ascarat, but there's quite a wide grass verge that is easily walked, and the road itself is not heavily trafficked. For the experienced pilgrim, proceeding along it should cause little concern, even at night provided that one is suitably equipped.
A pair of radar-gun-wielding gendarmes had set up a speed trap at the long straight stretch on the approach to Irouléguy. One of them, mistaking me for a Francés-traveller, considerately let me know that I was heading in the wrong direction. I explained that this time I was proceeding to SdC via Hendaye, something that interested but perplexed him and his colleague: a testament to the lack of local knowledge of the VNB that continues to prevail. Abeam the Citroën dealership just before Irouléguy, though, I spotted a small and inconspicuous shell-marker on the back of a yield-right-of-way sign. It didn't identify the VNB as such, but I reasoned that it couldn't be signifying anything else, so I peeled off to the right in the way it suggested. Before long it was followed by another, this one including the magic word "Hendaye." Clearly I was where I was supposed to be.
For the next fifteen kilometres or so, the route-marking was not at all bad. The symbols are small, consisting of scallop-shell adhesive stickers some of which are the approximate dimensions of a standard postage stamp. The point of convergence is nearly always oriented in the direction toward which one is supposed to go. Spotting them definitely requires paying attention, but in daylight at least, making one's way by means of their guidance is not a difficult task. As the name of the route implies, one is initially following the branch of the river known as the Nive des Aldudes, which in these parts is a mere stream. Keeping it on one's left as far as the fish-farm at the Pont d'Eyheralde – a landmark impossible to miss -- makes it difficult to get off track. From time to time some ambiguity does creep into the waymarking thereafter: it would be helpful, for example, to have confirmation that on striking the main road after Eyheralde one is supposed to turn right. But the possession of a compass and even a rudimentary topographical map will not allow one to go wrong for very long. The correct route heads north or north-west with almost no deviation; if one is going anywhere else for more than a hundred metres, one is certainly off track.
The countryside along this stretch is picturesque, reminding me of the first couple of days of the Invierno. The ridges on either side loom intimidatingly high, resulting in the experience familiar to Alpinists of the sun having "set" behind the mountains at noontime. But the trail nearly always manages to find a soft spot between them. It's road-walking the entire way, on narrow asphalted country lanes that usually aren't more than a couple of metres wide. Vehicular traffic, happily, is almost non-existent.
So are amenities. There are public toilets and a water-source at Irouléguy, behind and to the left of the village hall, but the first and, indeed, only open commercial establishment I passed the entire day was the Manexnea hotel-restaurant, about 15 km along. It's a good idea to get something cool and wet here, because it's followed a couple of kilometres later by the only real climb of the day, the uphill haul into the village of Bidarray. The gradient is by no means impossible, but it'll certainly keep one's pulse elevated in a manner that one's cardiologist will appreciate.
Bidarray itself, at around the 22-km mark, would be a nice stopping-point in the summer, featuring as it does a couple of auberges, several bar-restaurants, and a railway station with regular services back to SJPP for the benefit of day-trippers and those who decide that the VNB is not for them. At this time of year, however, it makes SJPP look like a hive of activity. I sat down outside one of the closed bars to eat some of the road food I'd brought down from Bayonne in anticipation of such a situation. After ten minutes, though, I had to move the scene of operations across the road to the village church (regrettably, closed) when no fewer than three passing cars pulled up, interpreting my presence as an indication that the establishment was open for business. As there were only about three hours to sunset, I didn't stay too long, but continued on my second leg to Espelette.
The navigation on this 18-km stretch was a good deal easier, at least for the first two-thirds, because it consists of road-walking the D 349 as far as the Pas de Roland. The starting-point is reached by crossing the Nive and the railway line by the Pont Noblia, a local landmark to which anyone will direct you, and spending just a hundred metres on the extremely busy D 918 before heading off to the west. The D 349, another modest road 12 km in length that becomes narrower the further one proceeds along it, runs to the left of the Nive, the single-track railway line along which a single-carriage toy train runs back and forth, and the D 918 itself. The countryside seems less visually appealing along this section, but bearing in mind that night had fallen before I was a couple of kilometres in, that didn't make much of a difference to me. It does, though, carry a surprising amount of evening traffic in both directions, and the pilgrim has to remain alert to avoid being put in danger by vehicles, some of them taking up the entire carriageway, coming around fairly sharp bends at speed. Crossing the road to remain on the "wide" side of these bends is a sensible practice, and I must have done so twenty times in the course of my journey.
The VNB takes a counter-intuitive loop just past the enormous Ondoria hotel-restaurant, set on a high rise a little north of the Pas de Roland. The latter is not suitable for pedestrians, so the marked trail sends wayfarers in a southwesterly direction along the Chemin du Col de Légarré, and then northward again via the Chemin du Col d'Arharri, to rejoin the main road in the vicinity of the village of Itxassou. There are plenty of commerces here, but a nice woman walking her dog, when asked at 19:30 which of them might be open, laughed and said that my best bet was probably Cambo-les-Bains. I dismissed from my mind, then, any possibility of dinner, or even a cup of hot coffee.
The trail-marking was either inadequate at this stage or, in the darkness, I was missing the ones that existed, so I compass-read my way along the D 249 for the remaining four kilometres into Espelette. It was the same story there: tons of businesses, all of them closed. So I retraced my steps to a forest clearing of which I'd taken note on the way into town and set up my tent there for a night's sleep. After a forty-kilometre day, I was much in need of it.
I'm also coming a little better equipped than I was on the last section of the Podiensis a year ago. On that occasion, I found myself sleeping in a church doorway in a village a long way from anywhere when a gîte d'étape that was supposed to be open, wasn't. The night was foul, with high winds, sheets of rain, and temperatures of around 2C. It wasn't my favourite experience, and bearing in mind that I'm now heading out on an even more remote trail at the same time of year, it seems wise to take action to prevent a recurrence. So I've acquired a tent that weighs only about 1.5 kg but by all accounts provides very effective shelter from the elements. It takes up surprisingly little space in my backpack, and provides me with a fallback option if all else fails.
SJPP, when I arrived last night, was even quieter than when I was last here. In these post-coronavirus days, eating options in the town during winter are almost non-existent. My hopes were raised by an automated pizza machine at the side of the Place Charles de Gaulle; regrettably, it was empty, as was a baguette-making equivalent at the rue d'Espagne. Éric Viotte, the congenial host of the Gîte le Chemin vers l'Étoile (EUR 35, including self-service breakfast) at which I was staying, confirmed that the only restaurant open was the Pizza Ka establishment on the road out of town past the Place Floquet. It looked OK from outside, but I wasn't in the mood for a meal consisting almost entirely of starch, and instead retired to bed, chewing healthily if boringly on a handful of walnuts I'd brought with me.
This morning dawned clear and cold. I dropped in at the Pilgrims' Office to obtain a new credencial, the one with which I'd begun in Geneva being practically full. The volunteer staff were charming and helpful, as always. I didn't ask them about the Voie Nive Bidassoa because there were only two people on staff and one of them was preoccupied with training the other, whose first day it was. Perhaps I ought to have. But I'd had a long conversation on the subject with a gentleman there a year ago, who was only able to tell me that it passed through Bidarray and Espelette, and that the former might make a logical night-stop.
On the way out of town, other pedestrians and I had a bit of difficulty making our way past the municipal employees who were completely blocking the street with a cherry-picker they were using to take down the overhead Christmas decorations. This involved swinging the enormous fake sapins de Noël back and forth across the street at the end of a chain in an effort to deposit them safely on a flat-bed truck close at hand. A couple of old-age pensioners and I, attracted by the opportunities presented by this unconventional adventure sport, picked our moment to scuttle past on one of the upswings, the pensioners exchanging raucous commentary with the operatives who responded jovially in kind.
The Voie Nive Bidassoa is a relatively recent addition to the route network, though many pilgrims undoubtedly travelled along what is now known by that name. Information about it on the internet is extremely limited, the state of the art seeming to be a 2015 route description in French that, although detailed, requires the wayfarer to recognise turning-points whose appearance on the ground eight years later may be hard to reconcile with the word-picture provided. In what follows, I describe what appears to me to be a possible and viable VNB, without any guarantee that I have been proceeding along the "authentic" route, if such a thing exists.
One thing seems certain. There are no distinctive VNB-waymarkers on the way out of SJPP or, if there are, they're so inconspicuous as to be easily missed by someone looking carefully for them. I didn't have great expectations in this regard, and resolved to make my own way in the approximately correct direction and see what happened. The first step, then, was to get onto the Route d'Ascarat, which runs south of the village of the same name. This is easily done. One leaves SJPP as though one were starting the Francés. Instead of taking the turn-off toward Roncesvalles, though, one keeps on the Route de Bayonne and has the option of either bearing left a couple of hundred metres past the new Lidl supermarket (not open, alas, until 09:00) or taking the well-marked D 403 which brings one on a loop via Lasse. The result is the same in either case: one winds up on the D 15 heading in a more or less northwesterly direction. The paved footpath runs out a little beyond Ascarat, but there's quite a wide grass verge that is easily walked, and the road itself is not heavily trafficked. For the experienced pilgrim, proceeding along it should cause little concern, even at night provided that one is suitably equipped.
A pair of radar-gun-wielding gendarmes had set up a speed trap at the long straight stretch on the approach to Irouléguy. One of them, mistaking me for a Francés-traveller, considerately let me know that I was heading in the wrong direction. I explained that this time I was proceeding to SdC via Hendaye, something that interested but perplexed him and his colleague: a testament to the lack of local knowledge of the VNB that continues to prevail. Abeam the Citroën dealership just before Irouléguy, though, I spotted a small and inconspicuous shell-marker on the back of a yield-right-of-way sign. It didn't identify the VNB as such, but I reasoned that it couldn't be signifying anything else, so I peeled off to the right in the way it suggested. Before long it was followed by another, this one including the magic word "Hendaye." Clearly I was where I was supposed to be.
For the next fifteen kilometres or so, the route-marking was not at all bad. The symbols are small, consisting of scallop-shell adhesive stickers some of which are the approximate dimensions of a standard postage stamp. The point of convergence is nearly always oriented in the direction toward which one is supposed to go. Spotting them definitely requires paying attention, but in daylight at least, making one's way by means of their guidance is not a difficult task. As the name of the route implies, one is initially following the branch of the river known as the Nive des Aldudes, which in these parts is a mere stream. Keeping it on one's left as far as the fish-farm at the Pont d'Eyheralde – a landmark impossible to miss -- makes it difficult to get off track. From time to time some ambiguity does creep into the waymarking thereafter: it would be helpful, for example, to have confirmation that on striking the main road after Eyheralde one is supposed to turn right. But the possession of a compass and even a rudimentary topographical map will not allow one to go wrong for very long. The correct route heads north or north-west with almost no deviation; if one is going anywhere else for more than a hundred metres, one is certainly off track.
The countryside along this stretch is picturesque, reminding me of the first couple of days of the Invierno. The ridges on either side loom intimidatingly high, resulting in the experience familiar to Alpinists of the sun having "set" behind the mountains at noontime. But the trail nearly always manages to find a soft spot between them. It's road-walking the entire way, on narrow asphalted country lanes that usually aren't more than a couple of metres wide. Vehicular traffic, happily, is almost non-existent.
So are amenities. There are public toilets and a water-source at Irouléguy, behind and to the left of the village hall, but the first and, indeed, only open commercial establishment I passed the entire day was the Manexnea hotel-restaurant, about 15 km along. It's a good idea to get something cool and wet here, because it's followed a couple of kilometres later by the only real climb of the day, the uphill haul into the village of Bidarray. The gradient is by no means impossible, but it'll certainly keep one's pulse elevated in a manner that one's cardiologist will appreciate.
Bidarray itself, at around the 22-km mark, would be a nice stopping-point in the summer, featuring as it does a couple of auberges, several bar-restaurants, and a railway station with regular services back to SJPP for the benefit of day-trippers and those who decide that the VNB is not for them. At this time of year, however, it makes SJPP look like a hive of activity. I sat down outside one of the closed bars to eat some of the road food I'd brought down from Bayonne in anticipation of such a situation. After ten minutes, though, I had to move the scene of operations across the road to the village church (regrettably, closed) when no fewer than three passing cars pulled up, interpreting my presence as an indication that the establishment was open for business. As there were only about three hours to sunset, I didn't stay too long, but continued on my second leg to Espelette.
The navigation on this 18-km stretch was a good deal easier, at least for the first two-thirds, because it consists of road-walking the D 349 as far as the Pas de Roland. The starting-point is reached by crossing the Nive and the railway line by the Pont Noblia, a local landmark to which anyone will direct you, and spending just a hundred metres on the extremely busy D 918 before heading off to the west. The D 349, another modest road 12 km in length that becomes narrower the further one proceeds along it, runs to the left of the Nive, the single-track railway line along which a single-carriage toy train runs back and forth, and the D 918 itself. The countryside seems less visually appealing along this section, but bearing in mind that night had fallen before I was a couple of kilometres in, that didn't make much of a difference to me. It does, though, carry a surprising amount of evening traffic in both directions, and the pilgrim has to remain alert to avoid being put in danger by vehicles, some of them taking up the entire carriageway, coming around fairly sharp bends at speed. Crossing the road to remain on the "wide" side of these bends is a sensible practice, and I must have done so twenty times in the course of my journey.
The VNB takes a counter-intuitive loop just past the enormous Ondoria hotel-restaurant, set on a high rise a little north of the Pas de Roland. The latter is not suitable for pedestrians, so the marked trail sends wayfarers in a southwesterly direction along the Chemin du Col de Légarré, and then northward again via the Chemin du Col d'Arharri, to rejoin the main road in the vicinity of the village of Itxassou. There are plenty of commerces here, but a nice woman walking her dog, when asked at 19:30 which of them might be open, laughed and said that my best bet was probably Cambo-les-Bains. I dismissed from my mind, then, any possibility of dinner, or even a cup of hot coffee.
The trail-marking was either inadequate at this stage or, in the darkness, I was missing the ones that existed, so I compass-read my way along the D 249 for the remaining four kilometres into Espelette. It was the same story there: tons of businesses, all of them closed. So I retraced my steps to a forest clearing of which I'd taken note on the way into town and set up my tent there for a night's sleep. After a forty-kilometre day, I was much in need of it.