• 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’s better than walking a Camino ?

C.C.

Member
Time of past OR future Camino
Frances, Ingles. Portuguese central & coastal.
I have walked the Camino France, Portuguese central and coastal, Variant Espiritual and Ingles and will continue to walk while I can. But, I have found my true passion in serving as a hospitaler. 2024 will make it 8 sessions of serving and I have loved every one. Cooking, cleaning, laundry and … the best part, meeting pilgrims from all over. I’ve worked harder at some albergues than I’ve ever done and yet still want to go back again. So if you’re ever thinking about serving, know it will be hard work, but if you’re like me (a 72 year old Canadian) you might get hooked. See some of you in Villadangoes, Salamanca or Grado this spring 2024.
P.S. anyone else hooked on serving ?
 
3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
I have walked the Camino France, Portuguese central and coastal, Variant Espiritual and Ingles and will continue to walk while I can. But, I have found my true passion in serving as a hospitaler. 2024 will make it 8 sessions of serving and I have loved every one. Cooking, cleaning, laundry and … the best part, meeting pilgrims from all over. I’ve worked harder at some albergues than I’ve ever done and yet still want to go back again. So if you’re ever thinking about serving, know it will be hard work, but if you’re like me (a 72 year old Canadian) you might get hooked. See some of you in Villadangoes, Salamanca or Grado this spring 2024.
P.S. anyone else hooked on serving ?

In 2002, after first camino in 2001, I was a hospie at Nicolas Del Flüe in Ponferrada. Padre Jose Ignacio, who recently passed, posted me there.

In 2004, I was a hospitalera at Guacelmo run by Confraternity of Saint James in UK.

Fun times.

You’re right it is hard work.

Maybe one day I will volunteer on camino again.

Bless you for continuing to give back to the way.

Buen camino.
 
In 2002, after first camino in 2001, I was a hospie at Nicolas Del Flüe in Ponferrada. Padre Jose Ignacio, who recently passed, posted me there.

In 2004, I was a hospitalera at Guacelmo run by Confraternity of Saint James in UK.

Fun times.

You’re right it is hard work.

Maybe one day I will volunteer on camino again.

Bless you for continuing to give back to the way.

Buen camino.
I was in Ponferrada in March of this year … very nice albergue. Has the privilege of serving in Logrono in 2019 … another special place
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
C.C. - good for you, giving back, as it were. Being a hospitelaro is satisfying but! it is such hard work ... being up before the pilgrims get up, not going to bed until after the pilgrims go to bed ... all that background work that no one ever sees ... mostly good, great, pilgrims arriving each day but having to deal with the opposite ... and so many pilgrims arrive with low blood sugar levels, so irritable, fractious .. like children coming home from school (the answer is a piece of cake and a soft drink! ;)) .. and then you have only a short break after getting everything ready and before you open .. so hard.

Why do people volunteer for this? It is the flip of that psychological coin I think. Moving from receiving to giving, from I to they, with love of the Camino experience being at the heart of it? Just guessing here. Once one realises that the destination is not as important as the experience of Camino?

For me, well, I have never done a complete Camino since I returned to offer first aid and pastoral care, I just walk in areas where I think there will be the most need, such as the first six days from any major Camino joining point .. for me it is being there and helping that replaced getting there, to Santiago, and I think that those who volunteer at refugios, at the pilgrim office, and in other ways must feel like this too.

Gold stars to you C.C. - and to all those who return to give ❤️
 
Last edited:
C.C. - good for you, giving back, as it were. Being a hospitelaro is satisfying but! it is such hard work ... being up before the pilgrims get up, not going to bed until after the pilgrims go to bed ... all that background work that no one ever sees ... mostly good, great, pilgrims arriving each day but having to deal with the opposite ... and so many pilgrims arrive with low blood sugar levels, so irritable, fractious .. like children coming home from school (the answer is a piece of cake and a soft drink! ;)) .. and then you have only a short break after getting everything ready and before you open .. so hard.

Why do people volunteer for this? It is the flip of that psychological coin I think. Moving from receiving to giving, from I to they, with love of the Camino experience being at the heart of it? Just guessing here. Once one realises that the destination is not as important as the experience of Camino?

For me, well, I have never done a complete Camino since I returned to offer first aid and pastoral care, I just walk in areas where I think there will be the most need, such as the first six days from any major Camino joining point .. for me it is being there and helping that replaced getting there, to Santiago, and I think that those who volunteer at refugios, at the pilgrim office, and in other ways must feel like this too.

Gold stars to you C.C. - and to all those who return to give ❤️
Yes, it is addictive. I love greeting pilgrims and caring for them and hearing their stories. Enjoy cooking for and with them. I love the smell of a clean bathroom and fresh laundered sheets straight from the clothesline. Yes, my back hurts after cleaning and cooking. Have volunteered at Christmas as well as summer and spring. It is a different kind of pilgrimage in place.
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
Ideal pocket guides for during & after your Camino. Each weighs only 1.4 oz (40g)!

Most read last week in this forum

Or do you prefer Cromwell's attitude? Put your trust in God and keep your powder dry. I am starting to get tired of the attitude that it isn't necessary to take reasonable care and thought...
I struggle with social anxiety and I was wandering if anybody with the same issue had a positive experience on the Camino walking alone. I saw lots of posts and videos people talking about forming...
I am currently walking the Camino Frances with my parents and am enjoying every moment. I brought some euros with me and loaded money onto a cash passport as I thought this would be safe...
Hello, I have reserved a night in an Albergue and the confirmation says Fecha de entrada: 2024-06-05. In the UK we would write this as 05-06-2024, is that what this means, 5th June 2024, I am...
I can see where this will help in the eternal search for an open alberque. These "pilgrims" will by-pass many towns and communities during their "walk" leaving many alberques available for...
I'm always a little apprehensive about posting anything approaching humour on this Forum, for fear of upsetting someone. But here goes . . . I heard this a few years ago, and it made me smile...

❓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