mochilaverde
Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Portuguese 2023, Ingles 2024
Has anyone tried refusing disposable sheets in albergues? (Or thought about it?)
Eucalyptus isn't native to Spain and growing eucalyptus requires a lot of water and wrecks the soil for indigenous trees in Galicia. Eucalyptus forests are also a huge fire hazard. (see https://www.eoi.es/blogs/imsd/the-eucalyptus-in-galicia-and-its-impacts/ )
I didn't bring a sleeping bag on my most recent Camino, but next time I would like to bring a sleeping bag (or half sheet, half sleeping bag) and try refusing disposable sheets. I don't use the albergue pillows at all (they are too plump for a front sleeper) and I usually just sleep with my head on my fleece sweater. edit to add: with a sleeping bag or half sheet, half sleeping bag, none of my body is in contact with the mattress. I also wanted to clarify that the mattresses I have in mind have a rubberized cover (which the disposable cover goes on top of). I'm not proposing to sleep sans sheet on a mattress without a rubberized cover.
edit 2 to add:
Thanks to everyone for commenting. I tried to find out some more information:
For me, part of the Camino experience is contemplating what I truly need and considering the impact that I have on the world around me. Seeing invasive eucalyptus prompted me to consider the environmental costs of manufacturing and disposing of sheets. Of course, laundering bedding has environmental costs as well, but as a general rule, manufacturing an item only to throw it away after a single use creates more harm than manufacturing a single durable item and cleaning it.
Eucalyptus isn't native to Spain and growing eucalyptus requires a lot of water and wrecks the soil for indigenous trees in Galicia. Eucalyptus forests are also a huge fire hazard. (see https://www.eoi.es/blogs/imsd/the-eucalyptus-in-galicia-and-its-impacts/ )
I didn't bring a sleeping bag on my most recent Camino, but next time I would like to bring a sleeping bag (or half sheet, half sleeping bag) and try refusing disposable sheets. I don't use the albergue pillows at all (they are too plump for a front sleeper) and I usually just sleep with my head on my fleece sweater. edit to add: with a sleeping bag or half sheet, half sleeping bag, none of my body is in contact with the mattress. I also wanted to clarify that the mattresses I have in mind have a rubberized cover (which the disposable cover goes on top of). I'm not proposing to sleep sans sheet on a mattress without a rubberized cover.
edit 2 to add:
Thanks to everyone for commenting. I tried to find out some more information:
- is there was a health code requirement for albergues in Spain to provide a fitted sheet (and mandate their use?) I didn't find any such requirement, but perhaps someone else with better Spanish might.... On my last Camino I walked without a sleeping bag and I borrowed synthetic blankets from albergues for two cold nights. My impression is that these blankets are not washed....
- what are albergue disposable sheets made of and where are they manufactured? I found disposable sheets for sale on Temu and Amazon, so there is a good chance that disposable sheets in albergues aren't even made in Spain. (And in that case, the content and origin of the fibres in the sheets might be pretty opaque.) Perhaps someone volunteering as a hospitaliero can find more information about the manufacturer on a box of sheets?
For me, part of the Camino experience is contemplating what I truly need and considering the impact that I have on the world around me. Seeing invasive eucalyptus prompted me to consider the environmental costs of manufacturing and disposing of sheets. Of course, laundering bedding has environmental costs as well, but as a general rule, manufacturing an item only to throw it away after a single use creates more harm than manufacturing a single durable item and cleaning it.
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