Terry Callery
Chi Walker
There is a running joke we Mainers tell about the tourist from New York City who stops to ask directions from a local fisherman.
"How do I get to Boothbay Harbor?" queries the city slicker.
The old fisherman scratches his head and begins to point South and says you head that-a-way....no...naw.
Then he points North and says take that road there....no...naw.
"Come to think of it - you can't get there from here!"
Sometimes I scratch my head at some of the questions asked on this forum...not that they aren't good questions...but they are
more accurately answered by going to the source. Asking me, a Mainer what the weather is like in Porto in March is a little like the joke referenced above. I planned the logistics for my last Camino from Lisbon to Santiago (traveling during the uncrowded months of February and March) using the following sources. Also while doing the research for the two books I wrote about my French and Portuguese Caminos, I referenced the following valuable resources.
Weather - AccuWeather.com - I checked it every morning to figure out if I needed to put on my water-proof Columbias and my Frogg Toggs paper thin ultralight rain suit. Just plug in the right city anywhere in the country you are in.
Accommodations and Route. Two websites are quite valuable giving routes distances and accommodations----- www.Gronze.com and www.WisePilgrim.com.
I rarely booked ahead, except at the Poet's Inn in Lisbon on my first night and I did that through www.Booking.com.
I planned my airline trip with AAA (check for your local website address) and got a fair of just $401 from JFK to Madrid for my next Camino on the Primitavo and Ingles. Also got flight insurance and emergency medical insurance for when I will be in Europe.
I used the John Brierley "Camino Portugues" guide book which is available on this website. I purchased two copies- one I kept at home as a reference for writing my book, since the other I destroyed by tearing out the one page map I needed for the day's Camino trek, putting just the one page in a Ziploc baggy for quick access in my pants pocket.
For very good background cultural, food and customs information in Portugal, Julie Dawn Fox, an English speaking ex-patriot now living in Portugal has a well written and insightful blog www.JulieDawnFox.com.
For great background information once in Spain check out www.GaliciaGuide.com.
I learned a bit of Portuguese before I went and found that the Pilsner Method where a new word is repeated at progressively increasing time intervals in a conversation style of learning was perfect for me. Great tricks offered -such as any word ending in "tion" changes to "cao" in the Portuguese. Information becomes "Informacao" in Portuguese for example. Gives you an instant 2,000 word vocabulary. Also you can get an instant translation on www.translate.google.com.
Or you could wait for an answer from the old fisherman guy on the side of the road, scratching his head.
Terence Callery
Any additions to this list from Forum members?
"How do I get to Boothbay Harbor?" queries the city slicker.
The old fisherman scratches his head and begins to point South and says you head that-a-way....no...naw.
Then he points North and says take that road there....no...naw.
"Come to think of it - you can't get there from here!"
Sometimes I scratch my head at some of the questions asked on this forum...not that they aren't good questions...but they are
more accurately answered by going to the source. Asking me, a Mainer what the weather is like in Porto in March is a little like the joke referenced above. I planned the logistics for my last Camino from Lisbon to Santiago (traveling during the uncrowded months of February and March) using the following sources. Also while doing the research for the two books I wrote about my French and Portuguese Caminos, I referenced the following valuable resources.
Weather - AccuWeather.com - I checked it every morning to figure out if I needed to put on my water-proof Columbias and my Frogg Toggs paper thin ultralight rain suit. Just plug in the right city anywhere in the country you are in.
Accommodations and Route. Two websites are quite valuable giving routes distances and accommodations----- www.Gronze.com and www.WisePilgrim.com.
I rarely booked ahead, except at the Poet's Inn in Lisbon on my first night and I did that through www.Booking.com.
I planned my airline trip with AAA (check for your local website address) and got a fair of just $401 from JFK to Madrid for my next Camino on the Primitavo and Ingles. Also got flight insurance and emergency medical insurance for when I will be in Europe.
I used the John Brierley "Camino Portugues" guide book which is available on this website. I purchased two copies- one I kept at home as a reference for writing my book, since the other I destroyed by tearing out the one page map I needed for the day's Camino trek, putting just the one page in a Ziploc baggy for quick access in my pants pocket.
For very good background cultural, food and customs information in Portugal, Julie Dawn Fox, an English speaking ex-patriot now living in Portugal has a well written and insightful blog www.JulieDawnFox.com.
For great background information once in Spain check out www.GaliciaGuide.com.
I learned a bit of Portuguese before I went and found that the Pilsner Method where a new word is repeated at progressively increasing time intervals in a conversation style of learning was perfect for me. Great tricks offered -such as any word ending in "tion" changes to "cao" in the Portuguese. Information becomes "Informacao" in Portuguese for example. Gives you an instant 2,000 word vocabulary. Also you can get an instant translation on www.translate.google.com.
Or you could wait for an answer from the old fisherman guy on the side of the road, scratching his head.
Terence Callery
Any additions to this list from Forum members?