Day 2 of my Camino Francés took me from Orisson to Roncesvalles, across the Pyrenees and into Spain. It was the kind of day that makes you understand why people get weirdly emotional about the Camino de Santiago.
Not because it was easy.
Because it was magical in that quiet, cinematic way that makes you forget your legs are filing an official complaint.
We started in the clouds. Not “a little mist.” Not “some fog.” Full-on cloud world.
As we climbed higher above Orisson, the mountaintops began peeking through like islands. Clouds drifted between the ridges, rising and falling as though the Pyrenees had hired their own special-effects department.
It didn’t feel like weather.
It felt like the Camino was staging a scene.
Camino Francés Day 2 at a Glance

| Stage details | My Camino experience |
|---|---|
| Route | Orisson to Roncesvalles |
| Date walked | April 17, 2026 |
| Approximate distance | Around 17 kilometers / 10.5 miles |
| Walking time | 6 hours |
| Highest elevation | Approximately 1,430 meters near Col de Lepoeder |
| Weather | Morning clouds and mist, followed by clearer mountain conditions |
| Accommodation | Albergue Roncesvalles – Pilgrim Hostel |
| Difficulty | Challenging—long climbs followed by a steep, rocky descent |
| Route highlights | Croix Thibault, Pyrenees scenery, mountain pastures, Col de Lepoeder and Roncesvalles |
This was one of the most physically demanding stages of my Camino Francés so far. The climb tested my endurance, while the descent reminded me that gravity is not necessarily a pilgrim’s friend.

I booked a room at Plan B Hostel, which might be the most appropriately named accommodation for a pilgrimage built around abandoning the illusion that everything will go according to plan.
The arrangement was simple, even if it required a little extra choreography.
I would walk from Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port toward Orisson. At the end of the stage, Express Bourricot, a shuttle would collect me and return me to Plan B Hostel for the night. The following morning, the shuttle would bring me back to the same location so I could continue across the Pyrenees toward Roncesvalles without skipping part of the route.
It was not the traditional overnight stay at Orisson I had imagined.
But it worked.
And on the Camino, “it worked” can be one of the most beautiful sentences in the language.
A Portuguese Connection in the French Basque Country
The hostel’s name was already excellent. Then I discovered that the owners were Portuguese. The name came because it was their Plan B in life. They had degrees in economics and it presented a place where their mom could cook dinner in the restaurant downstairs.
After living in Portugal, hearing those familiar accents in Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port felt unexpectedly comforting. I was in a French Basque town, preparing to cross into Spain, yet somehow Portugal had followed me into the room.
It was a small reminder that travel does not always separate the different parts of your life.
Sometimes it folds them together in unexpected places.
- France outside.
- Portugal inside.
- Spain waiting beyond the mountain.
And me somewhere in the middle, trying to determine whether my backpack had gained weight overnight.
A Familiar Voice From Bayonne
From my room, I heard a familiar voice downstairs. It was not necessarily a voice I knew well. But it was friendly enough to make me stop what I was doing and investigate.
When I went downstairs, I discovered that it belonged to the same man I had met earlier in Bayonne. His name was Ian, an Irishman who had now reappeared in Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port as though the Camino had decided our first encounter needed a sequel.
We chatted for a while, and gradually more people joined us as everyone prepared for the next day’s hike.
The company grew.
So did the conversation.
Eventually, we began discussing why each of us had come to walk the Camino. The answers were different, but a common theme began to emerge. We were searching for some kind of balance between connection and disconnection.
- Connection with other people.
- Connection with ourselves.
- Connection with the parts of life that become difficult to hear beneath routines, responsibilities and constant digital noise.
At the same time, many of us had also come to disconnect.
- From screens.
- From expectations.
- From schedules.
- From the pressure to remain available, productive and certain about where life is going.
That contradiction may be one of the reasons the Camino affects people so deeply.
You leave ordinary life partly to get away from it.
Then you spend the journey trying to understand how you want to return.
Leaving Orisson for Roncesvalles

The walk from Orisson to Roncesvalles is one of the most memorable sections of the Camino Francés. This stage follows the Route Napoléon through the Pyrenees, passing open hillsides, mountain pastures and some of the most dramatic scenery on the early Camino de Santiago.
It also keeps climbing.
And climbing.
And then, just when you think the mountain might finally be satisfied, it requests a little more climbing. There was a strange mixture of awe and pressure throughout the morning.
Awe because the landscape was stunning. Pressure because every beautiful view appeared to come with another hill attached.
Following the Camino Near Croix Thibault
One of the major landmarks along this section is Croix Thibault, also called the Cross of Thibault.
The route around Croix Thibault cuts through the open mountain landscape, where the Pyrenees make you earn every view.
There is little shelter up there. The landscape feels enormous, exposed and wonderfully untamed.
You look around and experience two thoughts almost simultaneously:
“This is incredible.”
And:
“Are we seriously still going uphill?”
The answer, naturally, was yes.
Taking a Wrong Turn on the Camino

At some point, I went in the wrong direction. My detour took me north toward the Arneguy area before curving east and reconnecting with the Camino. This is usually the part of the story where panic begins. You check the map.
You calculate how much extra distance you may have walked.
Then you mentally spiral because you are suddenly “behind”—as though the Camino has a manager waiting to discuss your quarterly performance. But this time, the Camino did that strange thing it sometimes does.
It turned a mistake into a gift.
The path eventually looped back toward the main Camino route, but for a while, I was away from the steady flow of peregrinos.
That small detour changed the entire atmosphere. The voices disappeared. The trail became quieter.
Suddenly, it felt less like a pilgrimage highway and more like actual wilderness.

Birds chirped with the confidence of creatures that never check their daily step count.
Everything felt more present because there was silence.
That may be one of the Camino’s sneakier lessons:
- Sometimes the best part of the day is not found on the perfect route.
- Sometimes it appears when you stop trying to control every detail.
Walking Through the Forest
Eventually, the landscape changed again. We entered a forest that felt like a doorway between two different versions of the Camino.
The trees altered the mood almost immediately.
The open mountain winds disappeared. The light softened beneath the branches, and the air felt cooler and heavier. Then the forest opened, revealing distant mountain ridges beyond the trees.
It felt as though the Camino was reminding me:
“This journey is bigger than your legs.”
My legs did not appreciate the philosophy, but I did.
Horses, Lizards and Camino Mushrooms
At one point, I crossed through a horse pasture and spotted mushrooms growing near the path before reconnecting with the main Camino trail.
I am not saying the Camino Francés is an enormous scavenger hunt. I am simply saying it occasionally leaves little Easter eggs for travelers who remember to look up.
The horses, birds, lizards and mushrooms did not make the stage easier.
But they made it richer.
There is a difference.
Climbing Toward Col de Lepoeder
After Croix Thibault, the Camino continued climbing toward Col de Lepoeder, the highest point of this stage at approximately 1,430 metres. By then, the day had begun to feel like a statement.
You cannot negotiate with elevation.
You cannot charm it.
You cannot explain that you have already climbed quite enough for one morning.
You can only keep moving.
One step. Then another. The rhythm becomes simple because it has to.
Seeing Roncesvalles From Above

Near the highest part of the route, the landscape opened again. Somewhere below us was Roncesvalles, our destination for the day.
Seeing it from above created a strange mixture of relief and disbelief.
We had made it across the high section of the Pyrenees.
But we still had to get down.
On a map, a descent looks like a line.
In real life, it looks like a decision you may immediately regret.
You stand above the valley thinking:
“That is where we are going?”
Apparently, yes.
Today.
The Steep Descent Into Roncesvalles
The descent toward Roncesvalles was beautiful, steep and technically demanding. Loose stones shifted beneath our feet. Rocks were slippery, and the uneven ground forced us to think carefully about every step. A few peregrinos slipped and fell.
It quickly became obvious how hikers injure knees, ankles or wrists on the Camino.
Usually, it is not because of some grand mountain disaster. It is one tired foot landing badly on one completely indifferent rock. The descent was physically strenuous, but it was mentally exhausting too.
Climbing requires power and persistence.
Descending requires control. Patience. Concentration.
And occasionally the humility to move at the speed of an elderly tortoise carrying groceries.
Arriving in Roncesvalles
After crossing the Pyrenees and surviving the long descent, Roncesvalles felt like a landing. A place where I could finally exhale.
My body was tired, but my mind was still replaying the clouds, horses, mountain ridges and quiet detour away from the main trail.
Day 2 had been difficult.
But it was also one of those Camino days that felt larger after it was over.
What Camino Francés Day 2 Taught Me
The walk from Orisson to Roncesvalles taught me that the Camino can be unbelievably beautiful while still demanding your full attention.
It reminded me that descending can be just as brutal as climbing.
It showed me that silence is not empty. Silence is where you begin noticing what the noise had been hiding. Most importantly, it taught me that taking the wrong path does not always mean the day has gone wrong.
Sometimes the wrong turn is where the magic lives. Roncesvalles marked the end of this stage, but Day 2 gave me something I could carry much farther:
The discipline to keep moving.
And the curiosity to keep noticing.
Plan Your Camino de Santiago
Continue preparing for your pilgrimage with these Camino guides:
- Camino de Santiago: The Complete Guide to Walking the Way
- Camino Francés: Route, Stages, and Planning Guide
- What to Pack for the Camino de Santiago
- How to Train for the Camino de Santiago
- Camino Albergues: What First-Time Pilgrims Should Expect
- Choosing the Best Camino de Santiago Route
Atypical Last Thoughts

The Camino rewards preparation, patience and a reasonable respect for gravity.
But every so often, it also rewards getting a little lost. My wrong turn did not ruin the walk from Orisson to Roncesvalles. It gave me horses, lizards, mushrooms, silence, and a part of the Pyrenees that felt entirely my own.
That is the strange beauty of walking the Camino Francés. You begin the day trying to reach a destination. Then somewhere between the clouds and the slippery rocks, the trail gives you something you did not know you were looking for.
Have you ever taken a wrong turn while traveling that unexpectedly led to something better? Let me know in the comments.
What’s Next on the Camino?
Continue the Journey
- ← Day 1: Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port to Orisson
- Day 3: Roncesvalles to Zubiri → (publish once available)
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