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Search 69,459 Camino Questions

Help me remember an albergue

Zordmot

3rd CF in May 2022
Time of past OR future Camino
April-May 2022
Presently walking my third Camino. I have many Camino memories..but not in sequential order! I’m remembering a particular parish church albergue up a flight of steps that featured a communal supper prepared by peregrino volunteers, a non-sectarian time of spiritual reflection led by really wonderful parish volunteers, and everyone sleeps on mattresses on the floor. And the place is as cold as a tomb. It all sounds depressing but several of us consider it a real highlight of our Camino. Does this ring a bell for you?
 
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The stairs make me also think of Grañon.


Another option would be the Parroquial in Tosantos but there you have the livingroom on the groundfloor and the rooms upstairs.

 
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Presently walking my third Camino. I have many Camino memories..but not in sequential order! I’m remembering a particular parish church albergue up a flight of steps that featured a communal supper prepared by peregrino volunteers, a non-sectarian time of spiritual reflection led by really wonderful parish volunteers, and everyone sleeps on mattresses on the floor. And the place is as cold as a tomb. It all sounds depressing but several of us consider it a real highlight of our Camino. Does this ring a bell for you?
sure seems like you're describing Granon
 
Presently walking my third Camino. I have many Camino memories..but not in sequential order! I’m remembering a particular parish church albergue up a flight of steps that featured a communal supper prepared by peregrino volunteers, a non-sectarian time of spiritual reflection led by really wonderful parish volunteers, and everyone sleeps on mattresses on the floor. And the place is as cold as a tomb. It all sounds depressing but several of us consider it a real highlight of our Camino. Does this ring a bell for you?
Tosantos???
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
Tosantos has living/dining space in the ground floor, sleeping space above that, and then a spiritual reflection area in the “attic”. Run by volunteers, but not associated with a parish.
 
Tosantos has living/dining space in the ground floor, sleeping space above that, and then a spiritual reflection area in the “attic”. Run by volunteers, but not associated with a parish.


Seee my post above #3 : Tosantos describes themselves as a parroquial in Gronze.
As does Wisepilgrim.
 
Tosantos describes themselves as a parroquial in Gronze.
Sure, but I wouldn’t describe them as “parish volunteers” - neither would anyone who has stayed there. My point is that Tosantos is not likely the place they are describing (though it IS one of my favorite albergues!)
 
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If we can establish weather the clothes washing facilities were above the the roof of the church, then that would be Granon?
 
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I stayed in Albergue San Francisco de Asis in Tosantas. Mattresses/Camping mats on the floor. Prayers upstairs after dinner. You could leave a request/petition in a special box which they kept for 20/22 days. That was the number of days expected to reach Santiago. They read some of the petitions from pilgrims who had passed through the day before. All very nice and reminded me again, that we are all on the same path in life, with the same worries and concerns.
 
Not Grañon, where they have real beds not mattresses, when I was there last fall.
 
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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.
Down bag (90/10 duvet) of 700 fills with 180 g (6.34 ounces) of filling. Mummy-shaped structure, ideal when you are looking for lightness with great heating performance.

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Sound more like the parish albergue in Viana to me.
 
Presently walking my third Camino. I have many Camino memories..but not in sequential order! I’m remembering a particular parish church albergue up a flight of steps that featured a communal supper prepared by peregrino volunteers, a non-sectarian time of spiritual reflection led by really wonderful parish volunteers, and everyone sleeps on mattresses on the floor. And the place is as cold as a tomb. It all sounds depressing but several of us consider it a real highlight of our Camino. Does this ring a bell for you?
Could it be Castro Jerez
 
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This sounds like the Parroquial de Viana.

There was a lovely local woman cooking, don’t know if she was a volunteer.

Did the the main square look like this? (taken from dining room window)EBB47D0C-86CA-4D41-BAAC-9FEFF1A12B38.jpeg
1652724762198.jpeg
Dorms were upstairs. I was in the smaller of the two rooms. Only one there so got several mats! 😊
 
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Sounds like Longrono at the Iglesia de Santiago
 
Logroño has beds, though (at least since 2018)
 
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When I stayed, there were a small number of beds then the hall downstairs was opened up. Gym mats for mattresses.
Only three actual beds in Granon and they are in the two hospitalero rooms. Otherwise a huge stack of mats upstairs in the loft and downstairs in the large fellowship room off the choir loft.
 
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Presently walking my third Camino. I have many Camino memories..but not in sequential order! I’m remembering a particular parish church albergue up a flight of steps that featured a communal supper prepared by peregrino volunteers, a non-sectarian time of spiritual reflection led by really wonderful parish volunteers, and everyone sleeps on mattresses on the floor. And the place is as cold as a tomb. It all sounds depressing but several of us consider it a real highlight of our Camino. Does this ring a bell for you?
Must be Granon--the veritable heart of the Camino spirit. The only albergue in any of the Caminos I have walked that has no sello because "if it isn't stamped in your heart and soul then stamping a piece of paper would make no difference."
 
If you didn't get a stamp it's probably Granon as I didn't get a stamp when I was there.
 
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Not Grañon, where they have real beds not mattresses, when I was there last fall.
When I was there in 2016 they had thin mats on the floor (like gym mats). Sounds like have had a significant upgrade. But I wouldn't rule out Grañon based on mats depending on when OP was in the remembered albergue.
 
Presently walking my third Camino. I have many Camino memories..but not in sequential order! I’m remembering a particular parish church albergue up a flight of steps that featured a communal supper prepared by peregrino volunteers, a non-sectarian time of spiritual reflection led by really wonderful parish volunteers, and everyone sleeps on mattresses on the floor. And the place is as cold as a tomb. It all sounds depressing but several of us consider it a real highlight of our Camino. Does this ring a bell for you?
Eunate on the camino Aragones maybe?
 
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Definitely Granon - currently sitting next to a young lady who stayed there when we were in Granon a few days ago. After the Pilgrims mass they went upstairs to the loft to cook and sleep.
 
Also the Parroquial at Viana is up the steps, sleeping on mats and communal supper. Also a reflection the night we stayed with a reflection in the choir loft.
I did not know this existed. I've been more than once at the Viana "municipal" but it has bunks. Can you post lat/long or address? Or a map image with a marker?
 
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Yes, @Zordmot has been negligent. But we should give him a break, since...

When walking a Camino, one's attention span for other things can suffer!
Indeed, even a 'camino' from the front room to the kitchen!
I often had to swivel around when almost at the top of the stairs, as a child, and go back down to ask what it was I had been sent up to get!
So yes, indeed, it was Grañon.
 
Presently walking my third Camino. I have many Camino memories..but not in sequential order! I’m remembering a particular parish church albergue up a flight of steps that featured a communal supper prepared by peregrino volunteers, a non-sectarian time of spiritual reflection led by really wonderful parish volunteers, and everyone sleeps on mattresses on the floor. And the place is as cold as a tomb. It all sounds depressing but several of us consider it a real highlight of our Camino. Does this ring a bell for you?
Grañon!
 
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