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This is very subjective but I used and liked the one from the Confraternity of St. JamesI'm planning walking the Camino Primitivo in Spring 2017. Can anyone advise the best guide book for me?
I hope you can help.
Christopher
Let the forum know if you find a good one, Christopher.I'm planning walking the Camino Primitivo in Spring 2017. Can anyone advise the best guide book for me?
I hope you can help. Christopher
Hi Chris I'm walking the Camino Primitivo in May next year. I have been relying on forum posts, checking out the http://www.gronze.com/ and http://caminodesantiago.consumer.es/los-caminos-de-santiago/primitivo/ (13 etapas in total from Oviedo to Santiago) for information. The websites give you a rough profile and distance of each etapa along with albergues (contact numbers, etc) so you should be able to make up some sort of guide and download to your iPod or phone. The eroski.com webiste is in spanish though. Be sure to check them out.I'm planning walking the Camino Primitivo in Spring 2017. Can anyone advise the best guide book for me?
I hope you can help.
Christopher
Liz Bryant's Combined Guide here in the Resources section is what I'm using to plan for next May. Along with Gronze and Eroski. Liz's guide has 13 stages but we're doing it in 14 so we can take our time.
I've also downloaded the app from Editorial Buen Camino and have been reading through that website today. I'm so glad I'm Hispanic and can read Spanish my husband is glad too since he doesn't.
I'm planning walking the Camino Primitivo in Spring 2017. Can anyone advise the best guide book for me?
I hope you can help.
Christopher
My husband and I walked the Primitivo from Oviedo to Finisterre for the first three weeks of September. Use Liz Brandt's guide- no need for more weight, threw away my guide book after a few days. No need. Extraordinarily well way-marked, even the Hospitales. Just a note: I think Liz's accommodations for O Padron are actually in the town of Padron (of the pepper fame) which is southwest of Santiago.I'm planning walking the Camino Primitivo in Spring 2017. Can anyone advise the best guide book for me?
I hope you can help.
Christopher
Did anyone use the German guide from Conrad Stein Verlag? I'm thinking of going next year and speak German too. I like knowing how far it is to the next albergue so during the day I can decide whether I like to walk on, or do a shorter walk.
On the Primitivo you don't get many options unless you want to walk an extra 10-15 or even 20km between albergues. Not so great for deciding on the spot if you want a longer walk.Did anyone use the German guide from Conrad Stein Verlag? I'm thinking of going next year and speak German too. I like knowing how far it is to the next albergue so during the day I can decide whether I like to walk on, or do a shorter walk.
sometimes an extra 10-20 is OK, it's the extra 30-40 that kills youOn the Primitivo you don't get many options unless you want to walk an extra 10-15 or even 20km between albergues. Not so great for deciding on the spot if you want a longer walk.
Hi Whistling, I'm also planning to walk the Primitivo in Spring next year and I'll be using the 'WisePilgrim' app on my phone. I used this when I walked the Via de la Plata this Spring and found it really helpful (particularly the information about albergues and the 'location finder', for the few occasions I wandered off course, intentionally and unintentionally!). It has elevation profiles and details of all villages, facilities and distances, so you can plan and choose your own stages as you walk, if that's your preference. Have a great time and maybe we'll see each other on the way. Buen Camino
I am a long way from home right now, in Mato Grosso in Brazil, and a long way therefore from my copy of the CSJ guide. I would say, from memory, that it is not any kind of 'specialist' resource on historical sites along the way, but overall I was very glad to have it along. I had the Cicerone guide too, which is heavy, partly because it covers the Norte and Ingles and Fisterra as well. I am inclined to be 'sympathetic' to having more guides rather than less, and allow a little bit of weight for them.Is the CSJ guide to the Primitivo worth getting? I don't need info on places to stay or elevation gain. But I do want information on historical sites along the way. That seems to be the thing that I'm missing. Liz's guide has a few references to historical stuff but I'm wondering if the CSJ guide has more.
Whaaat, Tim? Mato Grosso, Brasil??? You're kidding me... OMG, you really are a globetrotter this year and especially this autumn. Fifth country, second continent, at least one Camino and one full marathon. Did I forgot anything???I am a long way from home right now, in Mato Grosso in Brazil, and a long way therefore from my copy of the CSJ guide. I would say, from memory, that it is not any kind of 'specialist' resource on historical sites along the way, but overall I was very glad to have it along. I had the Cicerone guide too, which is heavy, partly because it covers the Norte and Ingles and Fisterra as well. I am inclined to be 'sympathetic' to having more guides rather than less, and allow a little bit of weight for them.
I haven't yet tried using the Wise Pilgrim app as a main guide, partly because of an anxiety, which may not be completely rational, that my phone battery might give up at a crucial moment. But I did have it on my phone for the CP this year and used it. A happy medium is maybe to photograph the pages of a book you want but don't want the weight of, and I did that a bit this year too.
A minor gripe about the CSJ guides - the cost of postage (I live in Ireland) always seems to me very high. That of course is beyond the control of CSJ. But for the small cost of the guide itself, and the light weight, I found it a useful complement to other resources.
I printed out Liz Brandt's guide, and threw it away a page at a time!
I walked in May and found it a wonderful experience. I hope you will enjoy it as much.
My feeling was that I didn't need to use any guide much for route finding, more for planning. I thought the route was was very well marked indeed. I have said before it is a bit like Goldilocks and the Three Bears: on the CF there are far too many marks, on the Norte I thought far too few but on the Primitivo I thought just right. Whenever I felt I needed information, there was an arrow there. When things were going smoothly there were not so many, and if I felt I needed information and there was no arrow, it was usually because I had made a wrong turn.
Buen camino. Tim
The Cicerone guide's authors are Laura Perazzoli and Dave WhitsonI used Cicerone. It's a wee bit heavy because it covers several routes. I didn't especially like the layout of maps, but it's quite good on background info. The author is on this forum. Dave? Someone will supply that info for me. I used CSJ too. The layout a tad confusing, but lots of info.
Edit: I have added another below.
Liz Brandts guide was great - and I do discarded each page as I went. I also downloaded a guide - Wise Pilgrim Guide. Both were helpful. I just completed the Primitivo - and posted it on the Camino Primitivo forum in terms of my days, reviews, etc.This is very subjective but I used and liked the one from the Confraternity of St. James
Buen Camino
(and be sure to tell everyone how terrible it was: Primitivo....keep the secret)
http://www.csj.org.uk/
The first half of the Primitivo has virtually no fountains. There's one on the first day to Escamplero but after that they are very far apart if at all. We carried 3 liters of water and were glad we did consider how hot it got (into the high 70s and 80s) We carried food almost every day after Grado in order to have lunch. You have to be prepared for easily 10 km or more without water or food. Some days all 25 km were without services. Especially on a Sunday or a Monday when bars are closed.Liz Brandts guide was great - and I do discarded each page as I went. I also downloaded a guide - Wise Pilgrim Guide. Both were helpful. I just completed the Primitivo - and posted it on the Camino Primitivo forum in terms of my days, reviews, etc.
Surprises: Harder than I thought (and I walk a lot) because of ups and downs; the number of stretches without food or water or even vending machines; how depopulated this part of Spain is. Joyful surprises: fellow pilgrims, kindness of strangers, views. Buen camino