Do you speak German? I highly recommend this podcast of a young woman who walked from her front door in Leipzig to Finisterre last year, "Einfach los." I believe she passes through Nuremberg and continues on the Jakobsweg into France, and then Spain. She was at "that place" in her own life: end of a longterm relationship, end of a career with a particular company, and undertook this pilgrimage for similar reasons as you describe. She walked for nine months. You can find the podcast on spotify here:
https://open.spotify.com/show/2M0He7KA7wAI57tLXuOGPV or anywhere you access podcasts. She gives locations as she walks, and describes the path.
(I met Theresa last November in Santiago, and spent a few days with her, rambling around the city, talking, reflecting, and laughing, before she continued on to Finisterre. She is thoughtful, authentic, and incredibly kind; a rather special human being. I am using her podcasts to re-learn German, and to learn about the pilgrim paths through that country!)
I hope you find what you are looking for. Buen camino, guten Weg!
Many thanks for this, I'll have to look out for it. I am undertaking a very similar Project, although rather piece-meal at the moment. So far I have walked from home to Potsdam, and Potsdam to Leipzig. Except I intend to walk down into Switzerland before heading across into France. Nonetheless I will have to try and listen to this ( my German is pretty average, despite living here).
@clarkandkaren , I would love to hear more about your journey. Perhaps you would be so kind as to post on here as you go along? Start a thread, and just add to it as and when the inclination strikes. There is a 'from home to Santiago ' category on here. You could start it off with a preliminary plan, because I'm sure it's not just myself that would love to know.
My (preliminary) plan is :
This year:
Leipzig - Nürnberg (Via Imperii - Hoff, then on to the Fränkischer)
Next year (2025)
Nürnberg - Tübingen.
Tübingen - Basel
Then either:
A/ Basel- Le Puy en Velay, on the Via Podiensis, thence the Frances. Although the latter is becoming increasingly unappealing.
B/ Basel - Genève ( Drei -Seen -Weg). Then onwards to Le Puy en Belay, and the via Podiensis to St Jean. Cut across to Biarritz, thence the Norte, probably cutting onto the Primitivo, Verde to the Norte again, variant into Santiago.
But there are a handful of other routes that I'd like to throw into the mix once I hit Spain so the latter is most definitely not fixed!
Finish in Muxia. Thanks to
@Robo for that one, I love the idea of the rocks at the end. Fitting.
Timeframe? Perhaps five months, with breaks. ( Working as a Hospi for instance) . Don't care, so long as I'm done before winter.
Tips: No idea what your German is like, as always anything helps. Accommodation options seem to be pretty sparse, to date I have predominantly used booking.com and airbnb. Theoretically there are some Pilgrim options, hopefully the further South you get the more you will find.
@Marc S. posted this link :
https://www.pilgerunterkunft.de/
I'm doing a Hospitaliers course at the end of March, if anybody there has some hints/ links I will let you know.
Be aware that generally here in Germany there are few if any facilities between stops. So carrying plenty of water and some food is a very high priority. Church yards often have water taps however they are generally from their own Wells and the water is often not considered potable. I'm going to be investing in a Sawyer water filter, just as a backup. You could of course just get a lifestraw for emergency's.
One option you may wish to consider is either a tent or a bivvy bag. On the 200km I've done so far I saw many, many places I could have set up, you don't have to go far off trail to become almost invisible. But my start was in October so it was getting a little too cool for my comfort! I am predominantly a warm weather hiker....
France has many, many excellent camping options.
Again, any French you can learn will help! Although, if you take the Le Puy you'll probably find a lot of Germans on the route too, from what I understand. There's several threads on here about the Le Puy, they will give you some useful hints.
Guten Weg/ Bon Chemin/ Buen Camino!
Peter
EDITED to add: I used Mapy.cz , way marking was often completely non-existent, although I'm told that improves the further South you go.