- Time of past OR future Camino
- Yes
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jennysa said:My journal that had covered more than half of my Camino
Some property, lost on the routes, finds its way to the Pilgrim's Office in Santiago. If you haven't already tried, it may be worth dropping them a note with details of the camera to see if it has turned up there. There is a contact page on the website at http://peregrinossantiago.es/eng/pilgri ... ontact-us/ .pinewport said:I lost my camera near to Navarette, tried everyone for a while and the police but no success. What happens to lost property on the Camino? Where do people take it? I lived in hope for the whole camino, its really just the photos of the first week or so.
Ahhh but you did have another 'temporary' loss and gain, when one daughter broke her arm. Having done the same I know she would have felt a certain 'loss' of 'firmness' in the limb.... and then of course she gained something temporary to hold things together in the healing period. Hope she is doing ok now...Kiwi-family said:The 6-year-old lost the plot and we wished we could lose her!
Apart from that we had no losses and only one near loss.
miguel_gp said:Some property, lost on the routes, finds its way to the Pilgrim's Office in Santiago. If you haven't already tried, it may be worth dropping them a note with details of the camera to see if it has turned up there. There is a contact page on the website at http://peregrinossantiago.es/eng/pilgri ... ontact-us/ .pinewport said:I lost my camera near to Navarette, tried everyone for a while and the police but no success. What happens to lost property on the Camino? Where do people take it? I lived in hope for the whole camino, its really just the photos of the first week or so.
You never know your luck!
Mig.
Yet ANOTHER reason I love the Dutch so much! I am incredibly happy about this and totally shocked. I had Chinese food for lunch today with my friend for her birthday. We chose fortune cookies, "A small lucky package is on its way to you soon."LTfit said:Hola Simeon,
Glad to finally find you cause I've got some good news...I HAVE IT!!!
I remember reading your post before leaving for Spain at the end of June. On one of my first days as a hospitalera in Grañón I found a plastic bag in the closet with your surong (indeed not a towel) and a note that it had come from Viana - but without a name or telephone number. I guess that you had already passed by. As I recalled that it was special to you I took it with me when I left Grañón to walk a bit of the Camino. When I got come at the end of July I did a Forum search but couldn't find your original post.
So yes, I still have it safe in my closet in Holland. PM me to let me know how to get it back to its owner :wink: .
KiwiNomad06 said:Ahhh but you did have another 'temporary' loss and gain, when one daughter broke her arm. Having done the same I know she would have felt a certain 'loss' of 'firmness' in the limb.... and then of course she gained something temporary to hold things together in the healing period. Hope she is doing ok now...Kiwi-family said:The 6-year-old lost the plot and we wished we could lose her!
Apart from that we had no losses and only one near loss.
Margaret
Yet ANOTHER reason I love the Dutch so much! I am incredibly happy about this and totally shocked. I had Chinese food for lunch today with my friend for her birthday. We chose fortune cookies, "A small lucky package is on its way to you soon."
Labtails said:Interesting question. I was rather methodical about packing. Everything had its specific place so as to fit in. It made it easier to keep track of things. The only thing I know I lost was the mini maglite I kept for nights in strange dark places. One morning it did not make it back into my bag. My travel partner had a decent light so I did without for the remainder of the journey.
Thought I would lose weight, but to be honest I was eating everything in sight so managed to maintain rather than lose.
Would you have said 'It's NOT FAIR!? :lol: Buen Camino!lynettefoo said:...but I was prepared to cry if they didnt!
I got a similar folded thank you letter from a lovely Korean student when I was an English teacher about 15 years ago. Fortunately it was in her (much improved) English and I still have it today. Buen Camino!GunnarW said:I met Chow, a Korean lady, just after Belorado. Later, in Burgos, she wrote a small letter - probably a thank you letter - in Korean, folded on the oriental way. I kept it in my pocket. The 20th of September 2011 in San Bol, I looked to the +/- 150 Korean symbols, spent some time to fold it back and put it back in my pocket. But I lost the letter, probably in the grass of San Bol.
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