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Sounds very familiar to me, because I had a similar experience last year on the Norte, except that I wasn't smart enough to rest or send my pack forward.I started my Camino on May 11th in Pamploma. It was going great and was such a great experience, education, and overall wonderful introduction to what the Camino can be. Unfortunately, I injured myself and chose to stop in León. This started the day I was heading to San Juan de Ortega. I had no albergue booked, and in my ignorance, I feared I'd find none and be sleeping the night on the street. To ensure a bed I rushed the section. The next day I could feel the shin splints coming in my left leg. By Burgos, I was limping and chose to take a rest day there. The leg feeling somewhat better after that, I chose to press on, while shipping my backpack with Correos to ease the burden. (though not overly heavy, I carried too much) At any rate, each day started fine but at the end of the section, the leg was slightly worse than the day before. Icing did wonders, as did the medical patch recommended by the Farmicia. Unfortunately, I missed the warning that the patch made skin overly sensitive to sunlight. I was walking in shorts. Pretty soon the affected area was sunburnt, bright red, and eventually pealing. It made it look a lot worse than it was. At any rate, I decided not to risk real damage and would continue on only to León where I would end my trek. From Burgos to León, so many people were kind, helpful, and caring. Several albergues had ice packs that they lent me, and other pilgrims shared knowledge and first aid supplies. stopping was a hard decision to make. I had to let go of several wonderful and entertaining friends who continued on. 5 days later when I boarded my plane for the US, the leg was much better. I wondered if I was too hasty, but a friend pointed out, "yeah, 5 days of rest and no weight. What happens when you start climbing hills again with a backpack." A valid point. Especially since it looks like a lot of hills just after León. All the medical references say 2+ weeks for recovery. I still can feel the pulling in the leg so I know I'm not over it. But there is a bright side, I now have a reason to return to that wonderful country to finish the second half.
Thanks to all on this forum who helped me prepare and gave advice.
Buen Camino.
Nicholas
If you got your credencial stamped in León (where you stopped) and you keep it and bring it back with you, you can resume in León when you start again. Just be sure to get it stamped in León again (or wherever the last stamp was). Lots of pilgrims spread their Camino out over several trips.I started my Camino on May 11th in Pamploma. It was going great and was such a great experience, education, and overall wonderful introduction to what the Camino can be. Unfortunately, I injured myself and chose to stop in León. This started the day I was heading to San Juan de Ortega. I had no albergue booked, and in my ignorance, I feared I'd find none and be sleeping the night on the street. To ensure a bed I rushed the section. The next day I could feel the shin splints coming in my left leg. By Burgos, I was limping and chose to take a rest day there. The leg feeling somewhat better after that, I chose to press on, while shipping my backpack with Correos to ease the burden. (though not overly heavy, I carried too much) At any rate, each day started fine but at the end of the section, the leg was slightly worse than the day before. Icing did wonders, as did the medical patch recommended by the Farmicia. Unfortunately, I missed the warning that the patch made skin overly sensitive to sunlight. I was walking in shorts. Pretty soon the affected area was sunburnt, bright red, and eventually pealing. It made it look a lot worse than it was. At any rate, I decided not to risk real damage and would continue on only to León where I would end my trek. From Burgos to León, so many people were kind, helpful, and caring. Several albergues had ice packs that they lent me, and other pilgrims shared knowledge and first aid supplies. stopping was a hard decision to make. I had to let go of several wonderful and entertaining friends who continued on. 5 days later when I boarded my plane for the US, the leg was much better. I wondered if I was too hasty, but a friend pointed out, "yeah, 5 days of rest and no weight. What happens when you start climbing hills again with a backpack." A valid point. Especially since it looks like a lot of hills just after León. All the medical references say 2+ weeks for recovery. I still can feel the pulling in the leg so I know I'm not over it. But there is a bright side, I now have a reason to return to that wonderful country to finish the second half.
Thanks to all on this forum who helped me prepare and gave advice.
Buen Camino.
Nicholas
I started my Camino on May 11th in Pamploma. It was going great and was such a great experience, education, and overall wonderful introduction to what the Camino can be. Unfortunately, I injured myself and chose to stop in León. This started the day I was heading to San Juan de Ortega. I had no albergue booked, and in my ignorance, I feared I'd find none and be sleeping the night on the street. To ensure a bed I rushed the section. The next day I could feel the shin splints coming in my left leg. By Burgos, I was limping and chose to take a rest day there. The leg feeling somewhat better after that, I chose to press on, while shipping my backpack with Correos to ease the burden. (though not overly heavy, I carried too much) At any rate, each day started fine but at the end of the section, the leg was slightly worse than the day before. Icing did wonders, as did the medical patch recommended by the Farmicia. Unfortunately, I missed the warning that the patch made skin overly sensitive to sunlight. I was walking in shorts. Pretty soon the affected area was sunburnt, bright red, and eventually pealing. It made it look a lot worse than it was. At any rate, I decided not to risk real damage and would continue on only to León where I would end my trek. From Burgos to León, so many people were kind, helpful, and caring. Several albergues had ice packs that they lent me, and other pilgrims shared knowledge and first aid supplies. stopping was a hard decision to make. I had to let go of several wonderful and entertaining friends who continued on. 5 days later when I boarded my plane for the US, the leg was much better. I wondered if I was too hasty, but a friend pointed out, "yeah, 5 days of rest and no weight. What happens when you start climbing hills again with a backpack." A valid point. Especially since it looks like a lot of hills just after León. All the medical references say 2+ weeks for recovery. I still can feel the pulling in the leg so I know I'm not over it. But there is a bright side, I now have a reason to return to that wonderful country to finish the second half.
Thanks to all on this forum who helped me prepare and gave advice.
Buen Camino.
Nicholas
I started my Camino on May 11th in Pamploma. It was going great and was such a great experience, education, and overall wonderful introduction to what the Camino can be. Unfortunately, I injured myself and chose to stop in León. This started the day I was heading to San Juan de Ortega. I had no albergue booked, and in my ignorance, I feared I'd find none and be sleeping the night on the street. To ensure a bed I rushed the section. The next day I could feel the shin splints coming in my left leg. By Burgos, I was limping and chose to take a rest day there. The leg feeling somewhat better after that, I chose to press on, while shipping my backpack with Correos to ease the burden. (though not overly heavy, I carried too much) At any rate, each day started fine but at the end of the section, the leg was slightly worse than the day before. Icing did wonders, as did the medical patch recommended by the Farmicia. Unfortunately, I missed the warning that the patch made skin overly sensitive to sunlight. I was walking in shorts. Pretty soon the affected area was sunburnt, bright red, and eventually pealing. It made it look a lot worse than it was. At any rate, I decided not to risk real damage and would continue on only to León where I would end my trek. From Burgos to León, so many people were kind, helpful, and caring. Several albergues had ice packs that they lent me, and other pilgrims shared knowledge and first aid supplies. stopping was a hard decision to make. I had to let go of several wonderful and entertaining friends who continued on. 5 days later when I boarded my plane for the US, the leg was much better. I wondered if I was too hasty, but a friend pointed out, "yeah, 5 days of rest and no weight. What happens when you start climbing hills again with a backpack." A valid point. Especially since it looks like a lot of hills just after León. All the medical references say 2+ weeks for recovery. I still can feel the pulling in the leg so I know I'm not over it. But there is a bright side, I now have a reason to return to that wonderful country to finish the second half.
Thanks to all on this forum who helped me prepare and gave advice.
Buen Camino.
Nicholas
Sounds very familiar to me, because I had a similar experience last year on the Norte, except that I wasn't smart enough to rest or send my pack forward.
I had to stop walking just 120 km from Santiago.
But now I'm back on the Norte after walking the Frances to León then the Salvador to Oviedo. And keeping my fingers crossed that I make it to Santiago this time!
And @Kaiso - did I meet you in San Nicolás del Real Camino? Your story sounds familiar.
Thanks.Your story also sounds familiar. Similar to that of the pilgrim in San Nicolás who regaled the dinner table with humorous tales of a certain Irishman. That was one of the better meals, and with a great group. Vegetarian options and a lot of humor. If I recall, you completed 7/8th of the Norte last time around? Best of luck on the final 1/8th.
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