KJFSophie
My Way, With Joy !
- Time of past OR future Camino
- 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2023, 2024
Some questions on forums regarding 'old' and 'new' routes in the Brierley Guide for the Ingles route... Why not ask the man himself? Here is my email to him and his response:
To the Esteemed John Brierley,
I’m interested in finding out if the ‘optional routes’ in the newer 2019 guidebook for the Camino Ingles are the same as the “old routes”. A walker of several camino, and dedicated Brierley guidebook user, I’m planning my next ( short ) camino on the Ingles with an older friend. We’ve read the routes were updated and not for the better, and have also read that the guidebooks with the old route and some of the alternate routes may have some overlap.
Is it at all possible to indicate which options are the old route and if they are still passable…and why they have been obliterated?
This question keeps surfacing on Camino Forums and FB pages among other resources.
I would appreciate any clarification you can provide. Thanking you in advance for your assistance.
Sophie, USA
Dear Sophie
Thank you for your enquiry. The 2019 edition of the guide shows the new waymarked route in the familiar yellow colour. The former route is marked in grey and is shown in case a pilgrim should stray off the new path and inadvertently find themselves following arrows on the old route. Old waymarks have been removed from the first few hundred meters but confusion may still arise and old waymarks will disappear in time.
The camino routes are constantly changing (not, in my opinion, always for the best). These changes occur for a variety or reasons (not necessarily all logical but mostly around safety and improved facilities). To minimise the chances of getting lost I suggest pilgrims stay on the newly waymarked route. The 2019 guide includes one suggestion to follow a short alternative (green) route through woodland (rather than the new route parallel to the motorway into Sigueiro) and this is shown on the stage 5 map (p.43) with details in the text.
I hope this helps in your planning and wish you an uplifting journey along the beautiful pathways that make up the camino Inglés.
Many blessings and 'Bo camino'…
John (Brierley)
To the Esteemed John Brierley,
I’m interested in finding out if the ‘optional routes’ in the newer 2019 guidebook for the Camino Ingles are the same as the “old routes”. A walker of several camino, and dedicated Brierley guidebook user, I’m planning my next ( short ) camino on the Ingles with an older friend. We’ve read the routes were updated and not for the better, and have also read that the guidebooks with the old route and some of the alternate routes may have some overlap.
Is it at all possible to indicate which options are the old route and if they are still passable…and why they have been obliterated?
This question keeps surfacing on Camino Forums and FB pages among other resources.
I would appreciate any clarification you can provide. Thanking you in advance for your assistance.
Sophie, USA
Dear Sophie
Thank you for your enquiry. The 2019 edition of the guide shows the new waymarked route in the familiar yellow colour. The former route is marked in grey and is shown in case a pilgrim should stray off the new path and inadvertently find themselves following arrows on the old route. Old waymarks have been removed from the first few hundred meters but confusion may still arise and old waymarks will disappear in time.
The camino routes are constantly changing (not, in my opinion, always for the best). These changes occur for a variety or reasons (not necessarily all logical but mostly around safety and improved facilities). To minimise the chances of getting lost I suggest pilgrims stay on the newly waymarked route. The 2019 guide includes one suggestion to follow a short alternative (green) route through woodland (rather than the new route parallel to the motorway into Sigueiro) and this is shown on the stage 5 map (p.43) with details in the text.
I hope this helps in your planning and wish you an uplifting journey along the beautiful pathways that make up the camino Inglés.
Many blessings and 'Bo camino'…
John (Brierley)