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Hi all,
My husband and I are walking the Norte from San Sebastián to Santander in mid-September. We stay in hotels versus albergues, and given what I've been reading about the bed race on the Norte, I figure that leaves more beds for those who are counting on albergue beds. But I know there are...
Jbirk -- I'm headed to the Norte in a few weeks and will be staying in pensions. Did you book ahead, and if so, how far ahead? I'm used to booking the night before when staying in hotels on the Frances. Wondering I can expect the same. Thanks, and Buen Camino.
I've worn a Royal Robbins Discovery Skirt on two Caminos and just loved it. Big, secure pockets and looks good enough for wearing after the Camino. I wear it all summer at home as well. They are almost discontinued, but still out there. And the Purple Rain skirt looks similar, but a bit shorter.
My first Camino I took nothing special to wear to sleep, assuming I'd sleep in some of my walking clothes as people advised. For me it was a mistake. The next time I took lightweight pajamas. This time I'm bringing silk long johns from Lands End. They weigh little, can provide a base layer if I...
I was thinking about this thread as I took a training walk today. I am gluten free, which I realize is not keto, but I was able to make adjustments to make my Camino work, though I admit I ate plenty of (carb heavy) potatoes. However, I thought I'd mention that Spain is heaven for canned fish...
Another vote for Clementina's place. I loved it so much I wrote a story about it:
http://www.edibleaustin.com/index.php/travel-2/beyond-texas/1674-food-for-the-journey
Also, don't miss the pilgrim's mass in Carrion de los Condes. (I also stayed at Hotel la Corte, very happily.) It was a top...
If you're willing to go off path for a few days, the monastery and monks at Santa Domino de Silos offer a transcendent experience. You can't stay at the monastery (only men) but there are pensiones just opposite, and they have been chanting there 1000 years and made the Chant albums. It would...
The Macabi didn't work for me. I'm also 5'2 and average weight, but I found the waist way too binding for me, so there wasn't a payoff for how unflattering it also looked. I bought a Royal Robbins Discovery skirt on Amazon and liked it so much I bought a second one. I wore it on the early part...
I also recommend the side trip to Santo Domingo de Silos -- it was a highlight of my Camino, even though it required two days off the walk itself. I hadn't heard about it until I was nearing Burgos, and I made the decision to make the side trip, and it was magical. (I was walking with the Chant...
This is the perfectly timed thread for me -- thank you! I hope to return to the Camino in June to walk in the weeks leading to my 50th birthday. I walked half the Frances in 2014. But I'm coming off a year of frozen shoulder and don't think I'll be ready to carry a backpack all day. I have no...
I strongly recommend taking a side trip to Santa Domingo de Silos, outside Burgos. The monks of Silos have been singing Gregorian chant for a thousand years and you can hear them at all of the offices of the day. They also have accommodation -- though for men only. I'm a woman and stayed at a...
As the variety of responses shows, there is no right answer to this. But I'll share my experience with only having 28 days (that "only" being a great gift and luxury). In the end I realized that knowing I couldn't walk the entire CF gave me a tremendous freedom I wouldn't have had if I had...
I walked my first Camino slowly -- like DeadFred I was passed a lot, and I took extra nights, took a side trip to Santo Domingo de Silos (highly recommended). In four weeks I walked Pamplona to Carrion de Los Condes, then bussed and trained to Santiago and walked out to Finisterre.
I had a...
Posting because people still search the forums on these questions. In October 2014 I also used the casaloncho service (though I didn't stay with them) a few days along the Santiago -> Finisterre route and it worked perfectly.
I stopped in San Bol to soak my feet in the arroyo and lie back and look at the trees awhile, but continued on to Hontanas to sleep. It was an enchanted moment for me. I keep wondering what type of trees tower there. Does anyone know?
I'll add that as I finish up my first Camino (11K to Finisterre tomorrow) I am so glad I took the side trip to Santo Domingo de Silos. Standing at lauds service with monks singing Gregorian chant is an experience I will never forget. If you bus it, the timetable makes it a two-day trip, but well...
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