• For 2024 Pilgrims: €50,- donation = 1 year with no ads on the forum + 90% off any 2024 Guide. More here.
    (Discount code sent to you by Private Message after your donation)
  • ⚠️ Emergency contact in Spain - Dial 112 and AlertCops app. More on this here.
  • Get your Camino Frances Guidebook here.

Search 69,459 Camino Questions

Camino Names?

xin loi

Active Member
Time of past OR future Camino
Walked May 14, 2014 from St Jean France

starting to walk again August 25, 2016 --SJPDP to Finisterre
After hearing from fellow walkers who hiked from SJPDP to Santiago with us back in June, we discovered that we really never knew the full name of friends--except for the three young American men who all claimed to be named "Mohammed Wenglewitz". Now we are discovering that a lot of our European friends had assumed "Camino Names" while hiking the Pilgrimage. Several told us that many European travelers assume first names, they wish they had been given, while traveling. Must admit to being a little disappointed to learn that we never knew the real names of those new friends.
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
After hearing from fellow walkers who hiked from SJPDP to Santiago with us back in June, we discovered that we really never knew the full name of friends--except for the three young American men who all claimed to be named "Mohammed Wenglewitz". Now we are discovering that a lot of our European friends had assumed "Camino Names" while hiking the Pilgrimage. Several told us that many European travelers assume first names, they wish they had been given, while traveling. Must admit to being a little disappointed to learn that we never knew the real names of those new friends.

My guy and I have alter ego names for ourselves. We use them mostly between ourselves, but also traveling and hiking, and they will be our camino names as well. We even have a dedicated email and calling cards (contact info cards) using those names.

Walking the camino has an "other world" or "outside the world" feel to it. You get a blank slate, a life reset - a gift most people don't get to experience. How people get to know you and how you interact with others is a fresh, baggage-free beginning. A camino name makes sense to me.

I would say you did know the real names of those friends - more real than whatever was on their birth certificates.

Except perhaps in the case of the Mohammed Wenglewitz Trio, which might I add, would be an awesome name for a jazz band.

Martha
(yes, my camino name)
 
Here I log-on as MSPath while signing posts as MM or Margaret Meredith, the names on my birth certificate. Nevertheless, I have always been called Meredith, which means 'keeper of the sea'. On my first camino when unsuccessfully attempting to clarify the pronunciation of my name as if Mere Edith many pilgrims often thought that I was a nun!! Hence for simplicity's sake on the camino just call me Margaret .
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
My real name is Michael, far too many syllables in the Hebrew Mi-cha-el plus that guttural in the middle, so for years it was Miki. With age and status (?) Miki became Mickey as in mouse or as in Hargitay (for those of a younger generation, he was the companion of Jane Mansfield – who she was? Forget I wrote that, its long story) so I reverted to my nickname of army years …Scruffy and yes, Scruffy I am, a day late, a dollar short, and "Please get your hair cut, today"! from the wife.
 
[...] Now we are discovering that a lot of our European friends had assumed "Camino Names" while hiking the Pilgrimage. [...]
...which can also be intriguing. :eek: Some time ago a pilgrim who met me on the Way said: "Oh, so you are Fraluchi?; I thought you were a monk with this "Fra and Luchi". :rolleyes: Well, not a monk, but a combination of my grandchildren's first names FRAncisco, LUca and CHIara.:p People call me Adrian on the Camino when I appear as Fraluchi on the Forum.;) Be assured that this is not just a "Camino name".:D
 
My name's Keith, so that's a nightmare in Spain. I get anything from Kiss, Kate etc. Despite handing over my credencial, my last Compostela was written out as 'Catherine Tyrrell' with a 'C' for goodness sake! (That was my late Gran's name so I think it might have been her reminding me to say a prayer for her in the cathedral.)

Fortunately since Keith Richards re-emerged as a Pirate of the Caribbean, Keith-awareness has improved somewhat. My middle name is Andrew but I never use it at home, so it would just feel wrong to use it elsewhere.

On my last Camino Frances we just used nicknames. I was called 'Quitter' by my Camino family (Gadget Girl and Mountain Boy) because I was only planning to walk as far as Burgos. When I decided to carry on to Santiago I became 'Quitter who Quit Quitting'.
 
Ideal pocket guides for during & after your Camino. Each weighs only 1.4 oz (40g)!
If one wanted to keep their anonymity for post-camino, it would be a good idea to go by nicknames. In the end, I'm glad to have made some of the lifelong friends I made on the camino, but I can certainly see why someone would want to be able to walk away from the camino world without connections to people. And I can respect that.

Oddly, the camino gave us a chance to be more comfortable WITH real names. We walked with our 14 month old son whose first name is Dylan (for Bob Dylan) and whose middle name is Kepa (a Basque name)......but since birth his middle name has, by chance, become the name that EVERYone calls him. Yet, whenever we met strangers when he was a baby we were loath to say his name was Kepa, because it led to a thousand awkward questions (what's kepa? what's basque?). Suddenly, on the Camino, surrounded by Spaniards and people walking through Spain, it wasn't so difficult to explain the name. It gave us a chance to get used to (and confident in) explaining that his name was Kepa. Now we are never tempted to tell a stranger his name is Dylan. The Camino helped with that. Of course, to a few Spaniards who insisted on trying to Castilianize his name to Pedro (rolls eyes, lol).....
 
My name is Clare but it is easier to say and understand "Clara" in Spanish. I don't mind having "Senora Clara" as my Spanish alter ego, as long as it is pronounced with a Spanish accent. Makes me feel more exotic!
 
Hmmm...
My first name is an old mythic name from the Viking age (and I will keep it secret, so no need to ask ;)) but my niddle name is Alexander, Alex for short, which is understood all over the world, so I always use my middle name Alex when traveling abroad. Since I walk the Camino in my old army boots, my forum name is AlexWalker, a little inspired by JohnnieWalker.:)
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
My name is Jeff, which is pretty easy. No one had trouble pronouncing it.

But I am terrible with names. I met so many people whose names I just couldn't remember and it would have been rather embarrassing after seeing them almost every day for several weeks to ask.
 
I know the feeling Jeff. I have never in my life been able to remember the labels: people's names; the names of bands; the titles of films; books; whatever. So I generally avoid asking as I feel bad when they remember my name and I don't reciprocate. On the Camino I encounter different pronunciations of Allan, often it comes out as Alain. Also people ask me why it is not spelt the more common way of Alan, Allen or even Alun. The simple truth is the registrar couldn't spell! PS it is also the welsh for "Exit". :( Why my forum name? No prizes for guessing there!
 
Well, in my case my name is Harbey which takes a bit to pronounce in the right way, so in the Camino I was just Deacon Santiago, which crated some great conversations :).
 
New Original Camino Gear Designed Especially with The Modern Peregrino In Mind!
I've never really understood this need for pseudonyms .... but as I'm just about the only person who uses his given name, I guess I'm the weird one :rolleyes:
 
3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
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.
My name is Jeff, which is pretty easy. No one had trouble pronouncing it.

But I am terrible with names. I met so many people whose names I just couldn't remember and it would have been rather embarrassing after seeing them almost every day for several weeks to ask.

Jeff:

I am always forgetting peoples names. One method I use to remember is just try to associate the first letter of their name/s. ie: SAP (Sabrina, Andrea, Paula), (PB and D) or Peanut butter and David), Peter, Bruce and David.

My backup is, I am suffering from dementia and have forgotten their name. This works also.

Ultreya,
Joe
 

Most read last week in this forum

A message has just been posted on the Facebook account of the albergue in Roncesvalles. It seems the combination of pilgrim numbers beyond their capacity and poor weather has made this a difficult...
I’m on the Camino Frances since April 4. I just finished the Meseta and it feels unpleasantly busy and has since the beginning. No time time to smell the roses or draw much. There is a sense from...
Hello, I'll be starting the Camino soon and there's one bit of it that worries me. The descent from Collado de Lepoeder to Roncesvalles seems quite steep (according to the Wise Pilgrim app) which...
We are in SJPP today While we were standing in line today, one of my pilgrims met 3 people from Taiwan, who could not find a bed. He said he also saw several people on their phones, frantically...
Good morning, all: I'll be starting my first-ever Camino (and first trip to Europe, actually) in one month. I'd appreciate any and all advice regarding the price(s)/price range for lunches on the...
Hi everyone. My name is Nika. I plan to take my backpack, and go on Camino in the end of the next week. I still don’t know how will I get from Kyiv to France. And what city should I come to… I...

❓How to ask a question

How to post a new question on the Camino Forum.

Similar threads

Forum Rules

Forum Rules

Camino Updates on YouTube

Camino Conversations

Most downloaded Resources

This site is run by Ivar at

in Santiago de Compostela.
This site participates in the Amazon Affiliate program, designed to provide a means for Ivar to earn fees by linking to Amazon
Official Camino Passport (Credential) | 2024 Camino Guides
Back
Top