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Camino Routes
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The longest, reasonably marked & with infrastructure, Camino?
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[QUOTE="gittiharre, post: 741141, member: 3568"] I would not walk the Turonensis...lots of road walking and not so well served with pilgrim accommodation. I would go through Germany on the Via Regia ( good pilgrim infrastructure and quirky) and then head south to Lake Constance and walk through Switzerland, which is expensive, but you can do it under the radar a bit by using the pilgrim albergues in combo with sleeping in the straw and some convents and monasteries. Self cater and take coffee sachets, so you don't have to buy coffees. The scenery is spectacular. Take the boat along Lake to Geneva, like the old pilgrims, as this part is not nice and very expensive. From Geneva you get into France on the Gebenennsis and then onto the Le Puy route. Very good infrastructure for pilgrims and affordable. For the via regia: Oekonomischer Pilgerweg website. They have a guidebook too. There is a website for Via Jacobi Switzerland, they will send you brochures with maps and accommodation if you email them and there is a yellow Guidebook from the Association de St Jacques Rhone d' Alpes for the Via Gebenennsis with accommodations including private donativo Accueil Jacquaire, order on line from them. Numerous guidebooks for Le Puy route. [URL="http://www.chemindecompstelle.com"]www.chemindecompstelle.com[/URL] is a website for Le Puy GR 65) with a few accommodations you can click on and see... [/QUOTE]
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