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[QUOTE="oursonpolaire, post: 13031, member: 1799"] Like Steve S, I found Lee Hoinacki's book excellent. There are some poems and hymns which you might find helpful, such as Thomas Campion's Never Weather Beaten Sail, or Sir Walter Raleigh's The Passionate Man's Pilgrimage, or John Bunyan's To Be a Pilgrim; the hours on the trail can be long at times, even in company, and kilometres can fly by with good verse. As well, if you are interested in frequenting the pilgrims' masses, you should pick up a Spanish language missal (easily available in the US from RC-oriented religious bookstores) and acquire a bit of familiarity with the Spanish texts. I would suggest that you think less of the distance to be covered than the hours to be shared, and the tiem spent with earth and sky and the trail before you. The Camino offers us many things, and one of these is time away from machines. I am a cyclist of many years and many thousands of km, but I would advise a walking Camino, partly because you will not likely have many such occasions to spend such hours with your daughter. This may be the source of many years' memories for you, and there is no need to rush. Let the path itself set your schedule, as much as can be managed. Like man, sufficient unto the day etc. [/QUOTE]
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