I had a similar experience on my birthday this year between Barcelos and
Casa da Fernanda. I saw a nice stone picnic table by a fountain by the side of the road and I thought it would be a good place for a rest and snack. It turned out the fountain wasn't working, but I stopped there anyway and was catching up on things on my phone. Then I walked on, had a brief chat with a couple of pilgrims, walked on again, reached for my phone to take a picture - and it wasn't there! It had been maybe 15 minutes since I left the table. I wasn't worried. My phone was fingerprint locked and who would take someone's phone in rural Portugal? So I walked quickly back to the table but it wasn't there, either! I looked all around. No luck.
Oh well, I thought. Someone has picked it up to turn it in to the police or bring it to the next albergue. I will head on to
Casa da Fernanda and enlist the aid of the hospitalera (or hospitalero). Which I did. He was sure no one would turn it in to the police, but he did drive me back there, have a look around, and knock on some doors to see if someone had turned it in locally. The other thing he did was repeatedly use his phone to call it to see if whoever had it would answer. No luck with either. He was ready to give up.
So was I. I was lying in bed, pretty depressed. My plane tickets, guidebook, camera, connections to home and others, all were on that phone. Without it I couldn't access Gmail (2 factor authentication - when I went on the CF I brought a paper with some backup codes but I had forgot to this time). Despite being in the wonderful
Casa da Fernanda my birthday was looking pretty bleak. But then i remembered the Samaung "find my phone' site i had registered with. I borrowed someone else's phone and went to the site and found my phone.
With this information, I revitalized the hospitalero and he set off to retrieve it. It turned out that a local farmer (a friend to the Casa Fernanda team, it turned out) had been driving by the stone table on his tractor, seen the phone, and picked it up. He hadn't answered when it was ringing either because he was out in the fields or was intimidated by the new technology and waiting for his kids to get home and deal with it (I heard both stories). Four hours after I lost it, my phone was returned to me to my great relief.
Lessons learned:
Register for a "Find my phone" site/app before you start your camino.
If you have 2 factor authentication using your phone, make sure you have backup authentication alternatives in case you lose your phone.
If you lose your phone tactics are:
- check with local establishments to see if it has been turned in
- borrow someone's phone and call it
- borrow someone's smart phone or computer and use the "find my phone" to find it.