[QUOTE="Terri Moynihan, post: 282617, member: 44130" ... I am a 60 year old lady with very little walking experience so I intend to take it easy, possibly 15 to 20 km daily with maybe a day of rest here and there.[/QUOTE]
DO NOT GO until you have a lot of "walking experience", such as walking up to 25kms/15 miles per day, including steep inclines and carrying a pack just to condition yourself. What you don't find in these forums is the numbers of wannabe pilgrims who bag out in the first week or so, just because they weren't prepared and ready for the Camino. For my first Camino, inter-spaced with my regular local hikes, I climbed a demanding local 2000ft mountain 10 times prior to my Camino, and hard learned some lessons about protein requirements, albeit I already knew about dehydration, again hard learned from walking in the heat.
Only because I was strong, and had about 20 years or more of walking "experience" did I survive the 33 days to Santiago. All in all, at 74 years of age, it was still a learning experience, as I had never carried a backpack before, so last fall, after 12 hikes up my local mountain, I walked the Camino Francis again, doing it 'right' this time, without any blisters, and carrying only 14kg/30lbs instead of starting out with 23kg/50lbs before water and food, and carrying my pack the whole distance, then walking to Finistere and Muxia. Along the way, and especially at the beginning, I was more aware of many wannabe pilgrims dropping out due to fatigue and injuries. Even so, I plan to carry even less weight this year, all going well, walking the Camino del Norte.
The bottom line is that if you are not physically prepared and properly equipped for walking the Camino, especially at this time of year, then you're begging for major disappointment and defeat.
Rigourously train now and then walk successfully in September.