I prepared well before leaving for eight days of hiking on the Camino de Santiago, the ancient pilgrimage path across northern Spain that's also called "the Way of St. James." I brushed up my rudimentary Spanish, dusted off my hiking boots and followed tips to keep my pack under a reasonable 20 pounds. I read about Camino history and foot care. I even got a cortisone shot to pacify my arthritic hip.
Still, I was nervous as my husband and I rode the bus to Los Arcos, the tiny village near Pamplona where we joined our son Mike, daughter-in-law Lindsay and year-old granddaughter Eve. They'd been hiking 10 to 15 miles per day, carrying a baby and jumbo pack, for two weeks. As a grand finale to more than two years in Europe, they were hiking the full Camino, covering more than six weeks and 700 miles from inside France to the grand cathedral in Santiago de Compostela, then on to Finisterre on the Atlantic Ocean. We would share eight days of the journey.
We are hardly a matched set when it comes to physical activity. My husband runs marathons and considers 50 miles a leisurely bike ride. Mike and Lindsay snowboard, skydive and otherwise defy caution and gravity. I'm a practiced and eager hiker but was clearly the weak link in this mighty chain.
Our spiritual beliefs also differ. Our son is skeptical of organized religion; our daughter-in-law has a generous spirituality grounded in her commitment to social justice. My husband and I are cradle Catholics. Prayer and Sunday mass are important parts of our lives, and the Camino's appeal included its rich religious heritage.
As with every family vacation, it would be a challenge to accommodate everyone's tastes. But the towns along the Camino have been serving a vast range of pilgrims for hundreds of years. If we could accommodate each other, the Camino would do its part.
In the Pamplona bus station, a pair of Norwegian women with full packs wished us "Buen Camino." In a small church nearby, an old Spanish woman did the same. The early signs were good.
Starting the journey
It was less than a five-minute walk from the bus stop in Los Arcos to the small hotel where our son and his family waited. "Con la bebe?" asked the clerk. "Segundo piso." We found them on the second floor, and soon we were all in a nearby square, sipping beer and holding our granddaughter's hand as she toddled around the fountain. When Eve's bedtime came, I volunteered to stay with her so that her parents could have dinner together. Rule one for happy multigenerational travels: Give the parents a break. Rule two is closely related: Savor the time alone with the grandkids.
The first morning, my husband and I took off from Los Arcos after a standard Spanish breakfast of a croissant and café con leche. The others would follow later after their college friend Manuela arrived by bus to join us. No problem. Yellow arrows and the scallop-shell symbol of St. James mark the Camino well. The few times I wandered onto another path, another pilgrim would quickly whistle me back.