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The Camino Primitivo Detour: Pola de Siero to Oviedo (Day 22: Stick-gate!)

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The Camino Primitivo detour from our chosen route on the Camino del Norte started out so promising. But when we woke up on our first morning on the Camino Primitivo, we found our walking sticks missing.

We were devastated.

But then a new friend offered to help us hunt down the thieves, and we set out on a Nancy-Drew-style adventure on the Camino de Santiago.

The Day Someone Stole Our Walking Sticks:

My Story:

A CAMINO DE SANTIAGO VLOG:

The Camino and Albergue Etiquette

In an albergue, all boots and walking sticks are often kept in a communal storage room near the hostel’s entrance. Albergue operators don’t want all the mud, dirt, and sweaty-shoe smell tracked into the living space, so there is usually a mudroom.

It doesn’t matter what route you are on, whether the Camino del Norte, the Camino Frances, or this detour on the Camino Primitivo, you can count on one thing: nobody steals from the communal storage room.

For a fellow pilgrim to abscond with another pilgrim’s shoes or sticks is something close to stealing the presents out of the back of Santa’s sleigh.

But, on Day 22 of our pilgrimage, I walked into the communal space and stared at the bucket that had once contained our walking sticks. Our shiny blue, adjustable sticks with their attached blister-preventing gloves were nowhere to be found. Left in their place were two crooked sticks – like actual sticks from the woods.

I poked my head out from the walk-in closet and called out to Lizz:

“Hey, we left our sticks in here, right? Right??!!”

Lizz was instantly in the doorway, confirming that we had, indeed, left our sticks in the bucket. She nearly turned over the shelves searching for our missing sticks.

Lizz laughs easily and it’s tough to bring her spirits down, but I remembered her horror when we had accidentally locked our sticks in a hotel lobby before locking ourselves out. She wasn’t laughing about our missing sticks. Not. At. All.

While Lizz ransacked the closet, I told Roberto, the friendly albergue operator with whom we had sipped wine the evening before, that our sticks were gone. This involved a lot of miming to bridge our language barrier, but between my exaggerated walk with fake walking sticks, and the destructive noises coming from the communal closet, Roberto grasped the issue.

He mimed to me the motion of someone driving a vehicle, spun on his heel, and ran for the door.

A NASCAR Ride on the Camino Primitivo

Before long, Lizz and I were seated in Roberto’s car while he careened along the Camino. When we saw a man and a woman walking with sticks that looked just like ours, he slowed the car to a crawl and drove past the culprits while we stared at our beautiful sticks in the hands of two perfect strangers.

As soon as Roberto pulled over, Lizz was out of the car and rounding the corner at a dead run. Roberto called to me to stay put, trying to explain in his broken English that if we waited, the thieves would be forced to walk right by the car. But it was too late, Lizz was already around the corner, fast approaching two known thieves who were carrying, let’s all remember, sticks.

I followed and, by the time I rounded the corner, Lizz was holding two pairs of walking sticks while two very embarrassed pilgrims walked away from her and toward my camera. Naturally, I stuck my camera in their faces.

An Honest Mistake on the Camino?

I like to believe the best in people. I really do. The stick thieves told Lizz that they didn’t think anyone was left in the albergue. This is a possibility, considering that Roberto had given Lizz and me a private room and that we – as usual – slept later than the other pilgrims, emerging as most people were leaving.

EXCEPT.

Except our shoes were in that communal room as well. Two pairs of shoes, sitting alone on the shelves next to two pairs of walking sticks. Those pilgrims would have had to ignore our shoes while they gathered their own shoes from the very same shelves.

In the end, we decided to believe them.

You can see our debate about this in our post-pilgrimage discussion on YouTube here:

My Story:

A CAMINO DE SANTIAGO VLOG:

Stickgate and a Camino Primitivo Detour Complete

We ended up having breakfast with Roberto, who had driven to the first café on the route in order to watch the thieves walk by (without sticks).

Camino de Santiago packing list opt-in form

This day would turn out to be my favorite day on the Camino. Better even than the day when we finally arrived in Santiago.

We could not stop laughing at how Roberto had whisked us into his car and took off down the Camino at NASCAR-like speeds, or how Lizz had run toward two strangers carrying sticks without any concern for her own safety. The real threat, she said, was facing miles of walking without her sticks.

That night in Oviedo, perhaps because we were still on a Stickgate high, we splurged on an expensive dinner out at a restaurant with real vegetables. We then stayed out way too late at an Irish Pub, indulging in being a tourist for the night.

Camino de Santiago packing list opt-in form

The evening was a perfect ending to our short time on the Camino Primitivo and a day that will forever be my fondest memory of the Camino de Santiago. It just goes to show that the Camino will provide.

Lessons Learned on the Camino de Santiago

  1. It’s best not to drink the night away at an Irish Pub when you’re supposed to walk a lot of miles the next day. BUT…sometimes you have to let your hair down – even on the Camino de Santiago.
  2. There just isn’t much you can do if someone decides to steal from the communal room in an albergue. However, it is nearly unheard of. Furthermore, you will run into the same pilgrims over and over again, so it is likely that any stolen item will be returned to its rightful owner in time. It is best to trust in your fellow pilgrims and trust that, if something does go missing, the Camino will provide.
  3. This is one of those days where we learned that travel insurance is key! I used World Nomads while on the Camino del Norte.

Tips for taking the Camino Primitivo Detour

  1. One of the biggest decisions you will make when walking the Camino del Norte is whether to take the Camino Primitivo detour to Oviedo. It does take an extra day or so, so it’s a big decision. But we don’t regret doing it. We did have to “bus forward” to get our day back (we took a train out of Oviedo). I would say do it! You’ll find a change of scenery refreshing at this point. And Oviedo is a beautiful city with so much to see!
  2. If you choose to take the Camino Primitivo detour to Oviedo, most pilgrims will walk to Avilés, which is not part of the traditional Camino but gets you back on the Camino del Norte and Stage 19. Right back on track. This means you will miss the coastal town of Gijón. For us, we had seen enough coast (it is possible to get tired of coastline after a while!) and we wanted to spend a day being tourists in Oviedo.

Where to Stay in Oviedo

We stayed in a hotel in the city center, right near the Cathedral. We used Booking.com to reserve our room at the last minute. Sometimes it’s just nice to have a room rather than a bunk, especially in the bigger cities when you might want to have a night out on the town.

Our hotel was OK, but you can find many options for hotels and home rentals here:

Our Pilgrimage Stats After Day 22 on the Camino de Santiago

Map of our route on the Camino Primitivo detour from the Camino del Norte

(Offstage detour) Miles: 10

Actual Miles Walked: 10

Bus forward Miles: 1 (thanks to Roberto and his car!)

Total Miles Walked So Far: 261 (419 kilometers)

Up Next: Day 23 on the Camino de Santiago Exploring Oviedo

Additional Resources for Walking the Camino de Santiago

Additional Camino Resources

01

The Buen Camino app will help you plan stages & find albergues: for iPhone for Android

02

Accommodations: When we didn’t stay in an albergue, we used the Booking.com app to find hotels

03

Travel Insurance: I used World Nomads

04

My Audible membership allowed me to listen to audible books while walking

05

Search for used outdoor gear at GearTrade

06

My Camino Resource Guide has everything you need, including this essential hiking survival kit for your backpack.



About the Author

Hi! I’m Jen!

I’m a freelance writer and travel blogger who quit my nine-to-five after my fiancé, Jeff, died of cancer at the age of 40. When he died, I realized that life is just too short to delay our dreams. Since my dream was to travel and write, I now travel and write full-time. Today I wear hiking boots instead of heels and collect experiences instead of things.


9 Comments

  1. Have walked the Camino 4 times and unfortunately, theft is very common. Expensive clothing or gear tends to disappear. Clothes drying on the lines might just walk away–like my Under Armour underware!

    Worst case was an entire albergues worth of clothes disappeared when left on the clothes line over night’

    Recall how upset Korean hikers were when someone took all of their food from the communal refrigerator.

    By the way, if you want free hiking sticks, look outside of grocery stores at night as people seem to forget their sticks after buying food.

    1. Oh, no, all of the clothes at an albergue? Awful! And so awful to lose your under armour. That is like gold out there! GREAT tip on the grocery stores and sticks. I’m going to add that to my Camino tip-list. Thank you, Al!

  2. I literally cannot believe this story! I’m really hoping it was an genuine mistake of taking someone elses stick and nothing else more … sinister.

    Even though living it must have been full of ups and downs and lots of emotions, reading it filled me with laughter 🙂

    1. I really hope it was a genuine mistake…except. I’m glad the story gave you a laugh. It still makes us laugh every time we think of it.

  3. I just cannot believe they took your sticks like that, but what a great story which you tell so well!! I think I’ll be sleeping with my sticks under the pillow when I do the Camino later this year – just in case!!

    1. I can’t believe it! For the most part, though, you can trust your fellow pilgrims. Please don’t worry! The Camino always provides, as it did here. Thank you for reading, Alison!

  4. John Quinn says:

    That is bad form. Plus if they thought no one was there why would they leave crappy sticks. Guilty. Btw the only way to do an Irish pub is to stay out too late.

  5. Anonymous says:

    Dear Jenn: I just am floored that you and Liz made this trip on foot and relying on hostels and friendly dinners with wine to fortify your next days. I am Lizzies Aunt two down. Her Mother Debbie is my sister’s daughter. Liz has always been a stand-alone sure and confident. This trip has been a wonderful treat for me, especially since I know I am not capable of doing anything near what you two girls have accomplished. I just want you to know how much I admire you and your lust for adventure. Besides that, after your year of loss and sadness, which seems to spur you on to live every moment, my wish for you tho, is to know you were loved and will be again. All the travels you will do are a pre-cursor to a bright future. You are loved, talented, and on the cusp of finding what you are looking for. love to you, Aunt Mary Dean xoxo

    1. Thank you for this. Your comment came at exactly the right time – just when I needed it most. I hope that you’re right that I’ll find love again. I know that I’m right when I say that you are capable of many many things that you think you might not be able to do. Lizzie and I never thought we could walk the Camino; we finally admitted to each other that we didn’t think we would be able to do it as we sat in Santiago after walking 440 miles together!

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