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Walking back

Time of past OR future Camino
Camino Frances
May/June (2014)
April-June 2023
My husband, Jim, and I have walked the Camino Frances twice from SJPP to Santiago, in 2014 and 2023. We are now retired in our mid-60's and would like to pilgrimage again in 2026. However, this time we are seriously thinking about going in reverse: beginning in Santiago and ending in southern France. We realize that by pilgrimaging this way, we will miss out on the Camino Family aspect of the walk. But we love the idea, not only of the different perspective of a familiar route, but of completion, of "returning home". If you have walked the Camino Frances heading East instead of West, I'd love to hear your perspective and advice!
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
I've walked contrariwise on a few Camino routes over the years. Never for long. If you're seriously planning to walk the Frances against the tide I think you'll need to plan carefully. You'll need to carry your packs as there's no reverse luggage transport. You'll need a large placard bearing the slogan "No we're not! We're walking home": preferably translated into all known Camino languages and Klingon just in case.

If you want to use any of the Municipal, Paroquial and other exotic Albergues you'll need copies of your Compostela.

Apart from that.... It'll be a great opportunity to get a suntan on the other side of your face ;)
 
If you want to use any of the Municipal, Paroquial and other exotic Albergues you'll need copies of your Compostela.
Which presumably first you would have to obtain by walking at least 100 kilometers towards Santiago. I doubt they would consider a Compostela from 2023 appropriate.

Oh, if you want to translate "we're going Home" into Klingon, there's the 'learn Klingon' group on Facebook:


😉
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
I thought about this today. If you are walking in reverse in high season, don't ask to stay at the traditional pilgrim albergues. If you are not walking to Santiago, you are not a pilgrim any more. Leave the low-cost beds for the people on their Way. (If there are plenty of spare beds, no problem..)
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
Which presumably first you would have to obtain by walking at least 100 kilometers towards Santiago. I doubt they would consider a Compostela from 2023 appropriate.

Oh, if you want to translate "we're going Home" into Klingon, there's the 'learn Klingon' group on Facebook:


😉
So this is where I get to say that for a brief period of time I dated a linguist who was the founder and Director of the Klingon Language Institute, and was instrumental in the development of Klingon as a real language.

I’ve known many really smart people in my life, but only two truly brilliant ones. He was in the later category.
 
Read the book Clear Waters Rising by Nicholas Crane. He walked from Finisterre to Istanbul, a remarkable journey along the chain of mountain ranges in the early 1990's. The Camino was not so well populated in those days. It's one of the best travel books I've ever read.
 
I thought about this today. If you are walking in reverse in high season, don't ask to stay at the traditional pilgrim albergues. If you are not walking to Santiago, you are not a pilgrim any more. Leave the low-cost beds for the people on their Way. (If there are plenty of spare beds, no problem..)
Just wondering WHY you wrote that walking the other way, precludes you from being a pilgrim?
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
The first edition came out in 2003 and has become the go-to-guide for many pilgrims over the years. It is shipping with a Pilgrim Passport (Credential) from the cathedral in Santiago de Compostela.
I thought about this today. If you are walking in reverse in high season, don't ask to stay at the traditional pilgrim albergues. If you are not walking to Santiago, you are not a pilgrim any more. Leave the low-cost beds for the people on their Way. (If there are plenty of spare beds, no problem..)
Rebekah, please explain your thought process a bit more. Don't pilgrims have to return home? If someone chooses to walk for only a week or two without actually arriving in Santiago (say, from Pamplona to Burgos), does that mean they are not a pilgrim? I take The Way quite seriously, never treating it as simply a "walking vacation" but as a time to connect with God. Please help me understand why walking back from Santiago might make me less than a pilgrim than those walking west?
 
I think you'll need to plan carefully. You'll need to carry your packs as there's no reverse luggage transport. You'll need a large placard bearing the slogan "No we're not! We're walking home": preferably translated into all known Camino languages and Klingon just in case.
Not a problem! We have always carried our own packs. I thought about having t-shirts made saying "We're walking home!" but I hadn't thought of Klingon. 😉
 
Rebekah, please explain your thought process a bit more. Don't pilgrims have to return home? If someone chooses to walk for only a week or two without actually arriving in Santiago (say, from Pamplona to Burgos), does that mean they are not a pilgrim? I take The Way quite seriously, never treating it as simply a "walking vacation" but as a time to connect with God. Please help me understand why walking back from Santiago might make me less than a pilgrim than those walking west?
Reb's well able to respond and may. Meanwhile I'll shove my opinion in. It is true indeed that way back in the good old days, and this year too, pilgrims walked from their front-door to Santiago and then they turned around and walked home. Right up until the Wright brothers; Richard Trevithick and Carl Benz walking, or sitting on an horse, was how every body got about.

You are not actually walking home are you. You are planning to utilise the pilgrim network to have a bit of an adventure in Spain.

I'm fine with that. I've used and abused the pilgrim network for decades (Pagans on Camino :eek:). Many hikers and adventurers and curious holidaymakers use and abuse it every year. More so than ever every year that passes. The possibilities even get advertised in the international press https://www.caminodesantiago.me/community/threads/the-guardian-discovers-the-de-la-plata.89307/

And all that said, I wish you well. Enjoy your venture. Onimac Neub
 
The 2025 edition of the Lightfoot Guide to the via Podiensis is now available
@pastorsharon , at the risk of breaking rule three I personally consider somebody who seeks the tomb of Saint James by bus, plane, train or automobile more of a pilgrim than I.

However as I understand it the Municipal and Donativo Albergues are set up to serve those pilgrims who walk towards Santiago, although they also (quite rightly) welcome the handful of pilgrims who have received their Compostela and are returning home.

As I mentioned in post#3 above, I doubt they would consider a Compostela from 3 years prior appropriate. As a Hospitalero myself, in your situation whilst I would like to welcome you it would depend very much on the rules of the individual Albergue I was serving in at the time, and the availability of beds.
Without a recent Compostela, should bed availability be low I fear I would be forced to turn you away in favor of somebody walking in the direction of Santiago.

Naturally you will not have this issue with private Albergues, hotels etc.

I wish you well.
 
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My husband, Jim, and I have walked the Camino Frances twice from SJPP to Santiago, in 2014 and 2023. We are now retired in our mid-60's and would like to pilgrimage again in 2026. However, this time we are seriously thinking about going in reverse: beginning in Santiago and ending in southern France. We realize that by pilgrimaging this way, we will miss out on the Camino Family aspect of the walk. But we love the idea, not only of the different perspective of a familiar route, but of completion, of "returning home". If you have walked the Camino Frances heading East instead of West, I'd love to hear your perspective and advice!
It will be a new walk for you.
 

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