Daniel H
Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- 2021
Thanks to all that have posted in this sub thread about the Aragones. Your descriptions, advice, and pictures have convinced me to take the road less traveled to begin my Camino walk. Here is my outline for the first part. Feel free to add suggestions or cautions. I will try to post a follow-up of my experiences as thanks to all the help you have given me, and to pay it forward to those yet to come.
A little about me:
I'm 48 and walking alone, for my first camino. My fantastic wife and kids are supporting my desire to make this journey from afar. I'm pretty fit and experienced in remote backpacking trips in the High Sierra, where I live. I also speak Spanish and am comfortable using online maps to figure things out. So I'm not really nervous about the trip. My only concerns are how my body will handle the long daily distances, and what it will be like walking when it will be cold and wet. (I'm from California, where cold rain is a rare pleasure.)
Travel to Oloron:
I'm flying into Madrid and will immediately hop on the first train to Zaragosa, arriving mid day. I'll meet up with a friend, stay the night in Zaragosa, and then catch the morning train to Canfranc, and then a bus to Oloron.
Day 1: Oloron Sainte Marie to Sarrance (monastery), 21 km
Day 2: Sarrance to Borce (?), 22 km
Day 3: Borce to Canfranc (new albergue) 28 km
Day 4: Canfranc to Jaca (?) 21 km + sightseeing
Day 5: Jaca to Arrés with bus/taxi to San Juan de la Peña (39 km if walked the whole way)
Day 6: Arrés to Ruesta
Day 7: Ruesta to Liedena 29 km / then walk or taxi up to Monasterio de Leyre for a stay and music (+ 10 km)
Day 8: Leyre to Monreal (via Lumbier) 32km
Day 9: Monreal to Puente La Reina 30 km
Then onward to Compostela.
I'll need to increase the pace for the latter part of the Camino if I want to make it to the end before my Nov 11 flight back home. This is why I didn't dedicate a tourist day for San Juan de la Peña, or walk it and stay at the hotel on top, but maybe I should.
These first days are an ambitious idea of what I could do, but will always be open to what the Camino and my body tells me.
Thanks for reading and sharing your feedback.
A little about me:
I'm 48 and walking alone, for my first camino. My fantastic wife and kids are supporting my desire to make this journey from afar. I'm pretty fit and experienced in remote backpacking trips in the High Sierra, where I live. I also speak Spanish and am comfortable using online maps to figure things out. So I'm not really nervous about the trip. My only concerns are how my body will handle the long daily distances, and what it will be like walking when it will be cold and wet. (I'm from California, where cold rain is a rare pleasure.)
Travel to Oloron:
I'm flying into Madrid and will immediately hop on the first train to Zaragosa, arriving mid day. I'll meet up with a friend, stay the night in Zaragosa, and then catch the morning train to Canfranc, and then a bus to Oloron.
Day 1: Oloron Sainte Marie to Sarrance (monastery), 21 km
Day 2: Sarrance to Borce (?), 22 km
Day 3: Borce to Canfranc (new albergue) 28 km
Day 4: Canfranc to Jaca (?) 21 km + sightseeing
Day 5: Jaca to Arrés with bus/taxi to San Juan de la Peña (39 km if walked the whole way)
Day 6: Arrés to Ruesta
Day 7: Ruesta to Liedena 29 km / then walk or taxi up to Monasterio de Leyre for a stay and music (+ 10 km)
Day 8: Leyre to Monreal (via Lumbier) 32km
Day 9: Monreal to Puente La Reina 30 km
Then onward to Compostela.
I'll need to increase the pace for the latter part of the Camino if I want to make it to the end before my Nov 11 flight back home. This is why I didn't dedicate a tourist day for San Juan de la Peña, or walk it and stay at the hotel on top, but maybe I should.
These first days are an ambitious idea of what I could do, but will always be open to what the Camino and my body tells me.
Thanks for reading and sharing your feedback.