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) |
---|
Where did you leave them ?I did the Camino just once in 2017, one of the great experiences of my lifetime. The shoes that carried me to Santiago have been my pride and joy, still used regularly for little hikes and longer walks, bringing me pleasure and pride every time I put them on. I was planning to keep them for the rest of my life, as weird mantlepiece decorations some day, once they became completely worn out...
Last week someone stole them. I have been mourning all week. I cannot get used to the fact that my beloved keepsake, aglow with happy memories, is no longer with me.
Just sharing.
I did the Camino just once in 2017, one of the great experiences of my lifetime. The shoes that carried me to Santiago have been my pride and joy, still used regularly for little hikes and longer walks, bringing me pleasure and pride every time I put them on. I was planning to keep them for the rest of my life, as weird mantlepiece decorations some day, once they became completely worn out...
Last week someone stole them. I have been mourning all week. I cannot get used to the fact that my beloved keepsake, aglow with happy memories, is no longer with me.
Just sharing.
I am wondering the same thing...how stolen when not on a boot rack on the Camino?.Where did you leave them ?
Think of it as helping someone in need. I’d assume the person who took them must have needed them ?
Just thinking here .... do you have a house proud Spouse/Partner? Also did they disappear around the time the garbage truck visited your area?I did the Camino just once in 2017, one of the great experiences of my lifetime. The shoes that carried me to Santiago have been my pride and joy, still used regularly for little hikes and longer walks, bringing me pleasure and pride every time I put them on. I was planning to keep them for the rest of my life, as weird mantlepiece decorations some day, once they became completely worn out...
Last week someone stole them. I have been mourning all week. I cannot get used to the fact that my beloved keepsake, aglow with happy memories, is no longer with me.
Just sharing.
No and no…..Just thinking here .... do you have a house proud Spouse/Partner? Also did they disappear around the time the garbage truck visited your area?
Why not do what I was planning to do with mine? Spray them bronze and use them as weird mantlepiece decorations! My idea was ispired by something I saw (and photographed) somewhere between Portomarin and SdC:I understand the feeling. I took this photo after completing the CF. After that, 100 km on the CN, and probably 500 km more since then. They’re hanging in there but the sole is getting thin. Time to replace. But I have a strong emotional attachment like I’ve not had with shoes before! What to do with them!
View attachment 75169
What a strange thing to steal - i think you are right, take this as a donation to a soul in need of broken-in comfy boots and a sign that its time to let go of what has served you well and break in new boots ready to make new walking memories. When the time comes we are able to travel again they should be nice and readyThanks for all the sympathetic replies. Just to clarify, it was a break-in into our closed veranda, so unfortunately no charitable explanations possible. (Nothing else was taken, so I assume they saw the shoes through the glass and went for them.) I am trying to take it philosophically, as Rako said - but at the same time wondering if this is a call to repeat the Camino next year, to break in a new pair of keepsake shoes….
Where were they when this happened????I did the Camino just once in 2017, one of the great experiences of my lifetime. The shoes that carried me to Santiago have been my pride and joy, still used regularly for little hikes and longer walks, bringing me pleasure and pride every time I put them on. I was planning to keep them for the rest of my life, as weird mantlepiece decorations some day, once they became completely worn out...
Last week someone stole them. I have been mourning all week. I cannot get used to the fact that my beloved keepsake, aglow with happy memories, is no longer with me.
Just sharing.
Oh Bella 2017, I am SO, so sorry and sad to read this news, as I know well, the attachment one feels towards walking boots, or, in your case, shoes. I still have my original pair of hiking/Outdoor boots which i bought in 1972. and These boots have taken my feet on many an adventure and i would be absolutely devastated should anything happen to them. They now sit quietly in my wardrobe and i keep the leather maintained, but i can no longer wear them due to changes in my feet. - some things do remaiń special even though the Camino taught me that " less is definitely more". Love and empathy..I did the Camino just once in 2017, one of the great experiences of my lifetime. The shoes that carried me to Santiago have been my pride and joy, still used regularly for little hikes and longer walks, bringing me pleasure and pride every time I put them on. I was planning to keep them for the rest of my life, as weird mantlepiece decorations some day, once they became completely worn out...
Last week someone stole them. I have been mourning all week. I cannot get used to the fact that my beloved keepsake, aglow with happy memories, is no longer with me.
Just sharing.
I highly recommend SANDALS!!! I started my first Camino wearing a pair of hiking shoes that I had worn for several hundred Km’s that felt like hand-in-glove. But by the time I got to Pamplona, I was blistered, bleeding, limping. I bought a pair of sandals there and walked in comfort the rest of the way. Pitched my beautiful expensive hiking shoes and never missed them. I walked a whole second Camino in the Teva sandals in the photo I posted on this thread. I’ve got them on my feet at this moment as I sip my coffee before taking off on a morning hike. Most comfortable things ever worn on these feet. I USUALLY WEAR SHORT THIN HIKING SOCKS WITH MY SANDALS. Don’t worry, I’m over 60, it’s legal. Every shoe has its downsides. For these: 1) getting small rocks in the foot bed 2) when tramping through mud it’s not pleasant. 3) there are a few moments on the CF when you wish you had more ankle support. Upsides: 1) comfort and cool feet 2) no blisters 3) easy to hose down and air dry quickly 4) if no one is looking, you can use these as your only shoes on the Camino. Each morning on the Camino before putting my socks on I would put athletic tape over those places where historically I get blisters. Not sure if that helped or if it was simply a ritual oblation to the foot goddess! Buen Camino a tus pies!!!I am truly humbled to read of this loss of a significant Camino memory, especially a physical memory. We take away much away from our Caminos in our hearts, our souls and our memories, but the tangibles we take away are, quite simply, priceless. See, witth one exception, every one of three previous Caminos has brought me face to boot lace with sullen and disagreeable shoes or boots. Footwear which bites me, pains me, stumbles me and pinches me. My feet, of course, are the middle victims, turning from helpless toes from boot to me crumpled with anxiety, dread and fear. And blisters. Oh, there have been days when we all get along: me, the boots, the feet, but too often, its an uneasy and short-lived alliance. Keep them? Not on your life -- strraight into the bin or, I confess, Goodwill. Well, whenever the fourth Camino, I have a solution and, in experimental walks so far, working brilliantly! Sandals! Ultreya!
Teva Terras - two pairs and a pair of NOAH's, originally from Isreal. And one pair of Asics. I shall be disporting them about the trails of Piedmont North Carolina throughout 2020 and, if St James would be so kind to me and many others but esepcially to a recovering Spain, Spring Camino/s 2021. And if you want to wear thin hiking socks with your sandals, you GO for it! By the way, Saint Roch is the patron saint of feet. Apparently born in Montpelier, France, he "went on pilgrimage" (Rome, Jerusalem or Santiago?) and -- wait for it -- is the patron saint of plagues! A timely discovery! And feet! And illness in general. He led quite the life, apparently not a great deal of fun. Go thou to Wikipedia! Although I was raised a Catholic and raised partially in France, I had no previous knowledge of St Roch. So that goddess who protects your feet may, if you will permit this observation, a sanctified French confessor. Buen Camino para nuestros dos conjuntos de pies!I highly recommend SANDALS!!! I started my first Camino wearing a pair of hiking shoes that I had worn for several hundred Km’s that felt like hand-in-glove. But by the time I got to Pamplona, I was blistered, bleeding, limping. I bought a pair of sandals there and walked in comfort the rest of the way. Pitched my beautiful expensive hiking shoes and never missed them. I walked a whole second Camino in the Teva sandals in the photo I posted on this thread. I’ve got them on my feet at this moment as I sip my coffee before taking off on a morning hike. Most comfortable things ever worn on these feet. I USUALLY WEAR SHORT THIN HIKING SOCKS WITH MY SANDALS. Don’t worry, I’m over 60, it’s legal. Every shoe has its downsides. For these: 1) getting small rocks in the foot bed 2) when tramping through mud it’s not pleasant. 3) there are a few moments on the CF when you wish you had more ankle support. Upsides: 1) comfort and cool feet 2) no blisters 3) easy to hose down and air dry quickly 4) if no one is looking, you can use these as your only shoes on the Camino. Each morning on the Camino before putting my socks on I would put athletic tape over those places where historically I get blisters. Not sure if that helped or if it was simply a ritual oblation to the foot goddess! Buen Camino a tus pies!!!
If someone broke in and only took your shoes count yourself lucky. They could have take anything of value, they must have needed the shoes. Maybe take your Camino trip money and start donating shoes to a local charityThanks for all the sympathetic replies. Just to clarify, it was a break-in into our closed veranda, so unfortunately no charitable explanations possible. (Nothing else was taken, so I assume they saw the shoes through the glass and went for them.) I am trying to take it philosophically, as Rako said - but at the same time wondering if this is a call to repeat the Camino next year, to break in a new pair of keepsake shoes….
Or maybe your spouse took them to have them bronzed as a surprise. You know, like baby shoes?Just thinking here .... do you have a house proud Spouse/Partner? Also did they disappear around the time the garbage truck visited your area?
What a lovely idea! No, unfortunately my spouse is stuck by COVID-19 lockdown 3,000 miles away...Or maybe your spouse took them to have them bronzed as a surprise. You know, like baby shoes?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?