HumanistHiker
Active Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Camino Portugues September-October 2023
I must have forgotten how much my feet ached when I walked the Hadrian's Wall trail in 2021 as I'm getting itchy feet for a Camino trip. (Family members saying "What's next, Santiago?" after I finished Hadrians Wall must have planted the idea in my head).
So why a Camino when I’m not religious? I’ve never been to Portugal, so a long walk would be a good way to discover somewhere new. I’m drawn by the idea of walking the same route trodden by pilgrims for hundreds of years. I love the idea of making progress from A to B across a country (or 2 in this case) to a grand destination, collecting the little passport/credencial stamps along the way.
I love solo travel (for the freedom & wonderful encounters with other people you get when voyaging alone). Having initially dismissed as "hippie nonsense" the idea referred to by many adventure travel writers that "the road will provide" I've had enough timely morale boosting moments on solo European motorcycle tours, to conclude that serendipity smiles on the well prepared solo traveller. I have a feeling that the Camino may well deliver.
As a control freak who normally pre-books every aspect of a trip, part of me wonders whether the Camino might provide the perfect opportunity to try and let go, go with the flow, and not pre-book everything. The inner romantic thinks carrying my own kit and seeing where I get to each day would be the truest way to do the Camino.
The inner practical pessimist remembers how glad I was of baggage transport services on my Hadrians Wall hike, how I wouldn’t want to find myself without somewhere to stay and having to walk another 10km to the next town in the hope of finding a bed for the night. My little legs are good for 20km a day but 25km days were not fun. As a snorer-intolerant snorer myself, I would want to stay in a single room in a hotel or guesthouse, not a dormitory in an albergue. I'd need to book a return flight from Spain so the trip couldn't be truly open ended which would limit how many short days/days off I could afford to take
I haven’t got a definite date for a Camino trip but am hoping I might have an opportunity in September or October this year, depending on work, which doesn’t give me long to prepare.
If September/October are a go, how practical would it be to wing it (and not book every night of a trek)? Is this busy season on the Camino Portugues so I’d need to pre-book every night to be sure of having a bed (especially a non-dormitory bed) for every night?
So why a Camino when I’m not religious? I’ve never been to Portugal, so a long walk would be a good way to discover somewhere new. I’m drawn by the idea of walking the same route trodden by pilgrims for hundreds of years. I love the idea of making progress from A to B across a country (or 2 in this case) to a grand destination, collecting the little passport/credencial stamps along the way.
I love solo travel (for the freedom & wonderful encounters with other people you get when voyaging alone). Having initially dismissed as "hippie nonsense" the idea referred to by many adventure travel writers that "the road will provide" I've had enough timely morale boosting moments on solo European motorcycle tours, to conclude that serendipity smiles on the well prepared solo traveller. I have a feeling that the Camino may well deliver.
As a control freak who normally pre-books every aspect of a trip, part of me wonders whether the Camino might provide the perfect opportunity to try and let go, go with the flow, and not pre-book everything. The inner romantic thinks carrying my own kit and seeing where I get to each day would be the truest way to do the Camino.
The inner practical pessimist remembers how glad I was of baggage transport services on my Hadrians Wall hike, how I wouldn’t want to find myself without somewhere to stay and having to walk another 10km to the next town in the hope of finding a bed for the night. My little legs are good for 20km a day but 25km days were not fun. As a snorer-intolerant snorer myself, I would want to stay in a single room in a hotel or guesthouse, not a dormitory in an albergue. I'd need to book a return flight from Spain so the trip couldn't be truly open ended which would limit how many short days/days off I could afford to take
I haven’t got a definite date for a Camino trip but am hoping I might have an opportunity in September or October this year, depending on work, which doesn’t give me long to prepare.
If September/October are a go, how practical would it be to wing it (and not book every night of a trek)? Is this busy season on the Camino Portugues so I’d need to pre-book every night to be sure of having a bed (especially a non-dormitory bed) for every night?