Hi all. I have been asked to share my experience as a hospitalero in the Navarra section of the Camino; sorry if I keep it short, but I am pretty exhausted after a 12 hour work day... and it's not like I expect it to be different any day soon, so I may as well write today... I have not read the whole thread, only to about post #100, sorry but I am just so exhausted I couldn't go on...
Yes, this year there are exceptionally more pilgrims in this section of the Camino than any of the last four years which is what I can compare to: I first run my albergue in 2019 and although I had nothing to compare it against, I know it was higher in number of pilgrims than any year before that, as that had been the general trend year after year for quite some time up until then. Then 2020 we were closed because of covid; in 2021 we opened and it was a very slow year; 2022 was better but still 20-30% under the figures of 2019 I would say. But this 2023 is being really something out of this world!
In my past experience here in Navarra April had been the warming-up month: we used to open our season about a week before the start of Easter week and, with the exception of a couple of days during the actual Easter week, March-April did not use to be very busy at all, and we never had a full house; then May, along with September, was the busiest month of the whole year. However, this year we've had a month of April with nearly as many pilgrims staying as we had in May 2019, including about 10-15 days of full house. Yesterday and today (first two days of May) also a full house.
What amazed us the most, and confirmed that this was really a thing, is the email we got from the Tourism Office in Estella last weekend, which I paste next:
Buenas tardes:
Les informamos de que hoy en Pamplona han tenido una entrada masiva de peregrinos y que probablemente llegue entre uno o dos días para que no os pille por sorpresa.
Saludos,
Oficina de Turismo de Estella-Lizarra
Lizarrako Turismo Bulegoa
+34 848 42 04 85
Plaza San Martín, 4
31200 Estella-Lizarra
www.visitnavarra.es
In English it says "
We inform you that today in Pamplona there has been a massive arrival of pilgrims that will likely arrive to you in one or two days, so you are warned" (the office that sent the email informs the albergues situated between shortly after Puente la Reina and Viana).
However and with all that said, I have had many days with vacancies, and the days I did have a full house I hardly had to turn down a few pilgrims each day, some days even no pilgrim at all; those I had to turn down from my doorstep I had no difficulty in finding them another accomodation in the first or second upcoming towns, and they either walked on or asked me to call them a taxi. No sky fell over no one's head, and except one couple who just happened to be very exhausted at the time and were not expecting the setback, everyone took it just fine.
As it's been said already by some, planning a little ahead and staying out of the standard stages does help a lot. Also starting in Pamplona can take out the stress of those first 2-3 days, especially with the bottleneck of Zubiri.
Another good advice has also already been mentioned in this thread: don't just trust booking(dot)com for availability: a lot of us do not open all our beds/rooms on booking(dot)com: also check the website of the albergue (if it has one) for availability, or directly call/email the albergue requesting; 2-3 days ahead better than 1-2 days ahead. I know this lessens the freedom of your day to day, but it also gives peace of mind, so it's up to you to find the balance between both ends.
Lastly, I would like every newby to be informed that
the high season in the first section of the CF is not the Summer at all: the high season are May and September, while the Summer (August and especially July) are the low season; it's not like that at all in the last section of the CF (Galicia), where the Summer months are the busiest ones.
So someone starting in SJPP or in Roncesvalles-Pamplona in mid May is bound to get the worst of both ends: the busy May in Navarra and the pretty busy mid-late June in Galicia. While starting in April makes for a lot of a less stressful Camino: the quietness of April in Navarra and the relative quietness of May (at least compared to July-August) in Galicia. Starting in early June makes for a relatively free-of-bed-race full Camino. At least that's how it was until this (crazy, unexpected) year!