• 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)

Search 69,459 Camino Questions

What became of your plans?

domigee

Veteran Member
Time of past OR future Camino
2022 CF
This is written after reading Alex Walker's thread : 'A few tips for new pilgrims'....

It wasn't my first Camino. Still, I booked a hotel in SdC before leaving and my flight back. Just for 'peace of mind' I told myself. Fear, more like! :D
Ended up having to cancel one and change the other :rolleyes:
Fortunately, that's as far as my planning went.

Did you find you had to make changes or did it all absolutely... go to plan?
 
Last edited:
Ideal pocket guides for during & after your Camino. Each weighs only 1.4 oz (40g)!
This year I booked my flight back whilst still at home, arrived 10 days earlier then my last possible arrival date ;-) So I just enjoyed Santiago and Porto for a bit longer ;-) Buen Camino, SY
 
Did you find you had to make changes or did it all absolutely... go to plan?

My first Camino didn't go according to plan. There was a family emergency at home about a week in, so that was the end of that. Switch gears, figure out how to get home as fast as possible.

My second Camino went absolutely 100% according to plan. The plan was to fly to Madrid, bus to Burgos, stay overnight and start walking the next day. The rest of the plan was to walk west to Santiago, arriving there about 3 weeks after arrival in Burgos. Then fly home. We did that :)
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
Plans? I try not to make any definite plans beyond the first night of any pilgrimage. So many things change without warning from day to day: small accidents, chance encounters, surprising sights. My fitness and motivation come and go like the tides. So I try to relax and just go with the flow. I know that for some people the uncertainty in that would be difficult but it seems to work for me.
 
Did you find you had to make changes or did it all absolutely... go to plan?
On my first camino, I gave myself way too much time, to allow for rest days, side trips, sickness, sore feet etc. So I had to hang around in Santiago, Muxia and Finesterre until time for my return flight. But given that I could not predict my own walking pace nor change my return flight without great expense, I feel that I planned appropriately for my first camino. Next month I am going again: walking further and giving myself less time. But I am still going to have extra time. And I think that having time enough to walk my own pace and detour to Santo Domingo de Silos, Mazarife and Samos was a good idea for last year.
 
Did you find you had to make changes or did it all absolutely... go to plan?
In 2010, I walked with a friend who had a detailed day by day plan. He stuck with it, but it didn't work for me after the second day. He has now walked the CF and CP again, still sticking to his detailed plan. This year, I had a 'plan' that demonstrated the feasibility of the pattern we planning to use, but it was never something that I never expected to follow strictly, and didn't.

My view is that it is not the plan that is important, but that you have done your planning. It will give you the basic understanding that you need to be flexibly in your approach when the unexpected happens, you feel like walking a bit more, or a bit less, etc.
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
For the Portuguese, we bought flights arriving and departing Lisbon. Not for a moment did we consider that getting back to Lisbon from Santiago would either take too much time or cost too much $. We "assumed" we could get a cheap flight or overnight train, like we could to Madrid. We started looking at it about four days from Santiago, only to realize it was going to take nearly an entire day to get to Lisbon. At least that was all we could find on our phone in the albergue at the end of a long day. It left us with too few days to walk to Finesterre. We had a GREAT time in Santiago with our new Camino friends though!

Things have a tendency to work out, just not as you might have thought they would.
 
My first camino was May/June of this year. I booked Orisson, Roncevalles, a room in Santiago and my flight back in advance. I arrived in Santiago 2 days early and just hung out until my flight was scheduled to leave. Having those 4 things prebooked helped me not to feel so anxious, even though it may have not been necessary.
www.angie-carter.com/camino
 
On our Camino last year we booked fully flexible return flights from Australia, accommodation at our base in Bordeaux as well as SJPdP and our first Camino night at Orisson. We fully intended to carry our packs and 'wing it' all the Way to Santiago and then onto Finisterra.

All these plans went out the window on day 1 enroute to Orisson. Our walking compañero turned out to be totally unprepared and decided that she would not be carrying her backpack anymore. This meant that we had to book ahead each night for the courier service and that made a huge difference to how we walked.

Our focus on the Camino was to help an old friend achieve her dream. We had done some training walks together and spent many hours assisting her with buying and organising gear. It turns out that she ignored all that advice, undertrained and overloaded her pack.

As I discovered many months later, I also broke my foot helping our compañero over the Pyrenees. It was an odd injury and believing that it was just a twinge, I managed it but at a lot slower pace than usual. This had my distance estimations out for a while and made for some long days.

We all completed our Caminos and arrived at Santiago.

I agree with @dougfitz that you need to do your planning so that you have a reasonable overview of the Way but remain fully flexible in adapting to how your journey unfolds.
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
I made reservation for Valcarlos for this September, not sure why but I did. The rest including St. Jean I'm in God good humour. My plan is no plan, I'll walk until I don't want to walk no more. Hopefully I will find a warm shower and a cold cerveza at the end of each day.
 
I'm with Doug. I researched all the usual stages plus alternative stops for the VDLP because there are some tricky bits where you can end up with very long stretches interspersed with crazy short ones. And I also looked up all the recommended touristy things, foodie places in the area just in case there was anything amazing that I would regret not seeing. And that was the plan. To not have regrets. My first couple of nights in Sevilla were booked and my airfares home out of Paris and I wanted to get to SdC in time to see the fireworks on St James' Eve. I had to cover at least 20 km per day in order to make the flight home and I allowed for 3-4 rest days. Ended up using them in Merida, Salamanca, Galisteo and Ourense. Otherwise it was a case of winging it re accommodation although there were some refugios that I definitely did not want to miss.
 
The First Camino : all new to me so I had a vague outline of how to walk/ where to stop etc... . But for my doing I was not getting freaky sticking to the " schedule " :D;)
Planning my second small Camino in 2012 , the Ingles , my dad died that spring so I did not walk but helped out my mum.
My third one in 2013 I walked part of the Ruta del Ebro and then Frances but my heart wasn't in it. So stopped. Had to take some buses back to my point of departure.
2014 , finally the Ingles where I got ill 15 k before reaching SdC and got there by taxi. Three days rest in a nice private hostel.
2015 and the Portugues : still did my research but it was only in the back of my mind....That was really my most relaxed Camino....everything felt in place : the road itself, the lovely people,... .
This year : the awful bombings at Brussels airport and no flights ment that I had to fly somewhere else from Santiago. So instead of Brussels , it became Lille in France. But that was just a luxurious problem because my heart went out to everyone affected while I was away walking.
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.

Most read last week in this forum

Last year on my camino I was a bit annoyed when someone back home told me to enjoy my vacation. I bristled. Why did that word annoy me so much? I was on a pilgrimage! Anyway, I'm about to embark...
I'm looking for the best app to use whilst walking on the Camino. Usually I just rely on my Apple watch but I'm leaving that at home, so need an app use that I can pause at rest stops etc...
Everyone talks about the wonderful café con leche, but what if tea is more to your liking? Can you even get tea along the Camino (Frances)? I don’t drink coffee but my morning cup of tea is...
Hey all. I haven't been on the forum for quite sometime (years probably). I walked the Camino Frances in 2016 and to say it was life changing for me is an understatement. On day 3, at the café at...
I am just back from a few weeks on the Via the la Plata. Since 2015 I have been nearly every year in Spain walking caminoroutes I loved the café con leches. This year I did not like them as much...
When you stop at a bar for a beer, wine, coffee or bite to eat, and sit at a table, is it expected that you will return your dirty dishes up to the bar before you leave? I alway do, as it seems...

❓How to ask a question

How to post a new question on the Camino Forum.

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