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I am personally a big fan of the Norte, it is my 'go to' Camino
@Gypsyqueen my advice remains the same - the Camino Francés from St Jean Pied de Port all the way to Santiago de Compostela. I don't think you will get all the benefits of "the Camino" if you chop and change the route. Although you may well get a great holiday, and have a terrific time.
From my perspective the Norte is lovely, but it is no more lovely than many, many coastal walks in Australia. And the Le Puy route is equally lovely. As are many other walks in Europe. You can't tackle them all at once.
I can say as an Australia who also thought she would walk one camino and that would be it - if the Camino experience "grabs" you - it is amazing how easy it is to go back. Perhaps not immediately (life interferes) but eventually you will. And will be able to walk many of the different routes.
For me the Camino is about starting and continuing to walk all the way to Santiago de Compostela. IMO.
It is about letting the Camino itself make decisions for me, rather than me "managing" how it will be. It is about a community of people who form around me as the journey progresses and who share the journey with me and with whom I form friendships. It is about letting go of cares and worries and choices and decisions and just being. It is a precious time with a simple daily routine of getting up and walking, finding something to eat, finding a bed, talking to people around me. Nothing more complicated than that. It is about having the distant goal of Santiago in the back of my mind while living fully focussed on the present. It is about being at one with the sky and the soil and the landscape. It is about getting hot and getting cold, getting wet and getting dry, being hungry and being fed. It is all about simplicity.
We spoil ourselves by trying constantly to find the "best" and being scared of missing out somehow.
Let your Camino begin -as soon as you buy your tickets!
Hello!
My dad and I are going to walk three weeks of the Camino in June, we just cannot decide which route to walk. We are deciding between El Camino del Norte and El Camino Frances. It will be our first Camino, so we are leaning toward El Camino Frances. However we are both in excellent shape and like the idea of walking along the seaside so we are attracted to El Camino del Norte. I have read that for your first Camino it is much better to do the Frances because it is easier, is this necessarily true given our fitness level?
Some other questions:
-Which Camino has more unpaved paths? We would prefer more unpaved than paved.
-Is it harder to find an albuerque to stay in on del Norte?
-Which Camino goes through the mountains more?
And... a three week walk would probably leave out the last 150 ish kilometers. While the entire experience is well worth it, I found the last bit from Sarria, to be of a different nature@Abs I've walked both, and loved both, but I always advise people to walk the Camino Francés first. Not because it is easier (which is a myth - nothing on the Norte is as hard as the walk between SJPDP and Roncesvalles, and the same for the walk up to O Cebreiro). But because, imo, it is the essence of the "Camino" experience - quite unlike any other. If you are looking for a good hike, with nice landscapes - then the Norte is lovely. But if you are looking for a unique experience, then the Camino Frances. Apart from the Norte I've walked a few other caminos and found wonder in them all, but still regard the Francés as special. I realise this is a very personal thing, and others may disagree.
As to your other questions, the Norte has more paved roads than the Camino Frances, and yes it is harder to find albergues on the Norte (they are further apart) although there is plenty of alternative more expensive accommodation. As to which goes through the mountains more - the Norte is generally up and down over headlands and if you take the Primitivo turnoff from the Norte that is through the mountains. But the Camino Frances crosses four mountain ranges - do not think it is flat - it is not. Even the fabled "flat" meseta is actually a high plateau, and for many of us the most inspiring part of the walk. Mule Killer Hill is anything but flat!
Hello!
My dad and I are going to walk three weeks of the Camino in June, we just cannot decide which route to walk. We are deciding between El Camino del Norte and El Camino Frances. It will be our first Camino, so we are leaning toward El Camino Frances. However we are both in excellent shape and like the idea of walking along the seaside so we are attracted to El Camino del Norte. I have read that for your first Camino it is much better to do the Frances because it is easier, is this necessarily true given our fitness level?
Some other questions:
-Which Camino has more unpaved paths? We would prefer more unpaved than paved.
-Is it harder to find an albuerque to stay in on del Norte?
-Which Camino goes through the mountains more?
Hi everyone,
I leave for Europe in 5 weeks from Australia. Originally I was planning to walk the Camino Norhe but I have decided I would like to do half the Norte and half the Frances, leaving most likely from Irun as I want to experience both and as I'm from Australia it's unlikely I will be doing it again, at least not for many,many years. Is this realistic ? I would greatly appreciate any assistance from experienced walk peregrino's and any tips of the best route to take ?
So curious what you did and your thoughts on doing both routes. Thanks.Hi everyone,
I leave for Europe in 5 weeks from Australia. Originally I was planning to walk the Camino Norhe but I have decided I would like to do half the Norte and half the Frances, leaving most likely from Irun as I want to experience both and as I'm from Australia it's unlikely I will be doing it again, at least not for many,many years. Is this realistic ? I would greatly appreciate any assistance from experienced walk peregrino's and any tips of the best route to take ?
This. This is it. So good. So well stated. Thank you!@Gypsyqueen my advice remains the same - the Camino Francés from St Jean Pied de Port all the way to Santiago de Compostela. I don't think you will get all the benefits of "the Camino" if you chop and change the route. Although you may well get a great holiday, and have a terrific time.
From my perspective the Norte is lovely, but it is no more lovely than many, many coastal walks in Australia. And the Le Puy route is equally lovely. As are many other walks in Europe. You can't tackle them all at once.
I can say as an Australia who also thought she would walk one camino and that would be it - if the Camino experience "grabs" you - it is amazing how easy it is to go back. Perhaps not immediately (life interferes) but eventually you will. And will be able to walk many of the different routes.
For me the Camino is about starting and continuing to walk all the way to Santiago de Compostela. IMO.
It is about letting the Camino itself make decisions for me, rather than me "managing" how it will be. It is about a community of people who form around me as the journey progresses and who share the journey with me and with whom I form friendships. It is about letting go of cares and worries and choices and decisions and just being. It is a precious time with a simple daily routine of getting up and walking, finding something to eat, finding a bed, talking to people around me. Nothing more complicated than that. It is about having the distant goal of Santiago in the back of my mind while living fully focussed on the present. It is about being at one with the sky and the soil and the landscape. It is about getting hot and getting cold, getting wet and getting dry, being hungry and being fed. It is all about simplicity.
We spoil ourselves by trying constantly to find the "best" and being scared of missing out somehow.
Let your Camino begin -as soon as you buy your tickets!
Kanga, that was all I needed to hear. You wrote the most beautiful comment@Gypsyqueen my advice remains the same - the Camino Francés from St Jean Pied de Port all the way to Santiago de Compostela. I don't think you will get all the benefits of "the Camino" if you chop and change the route. Although you may well get a great holiday, and have a terrific time.
From my perspective the Norte is lovely, but it is no more lovely than many, many coastal walks in Australia. And the Le Puy route is equally lovely. As are many other walks in Europe. You can't tackle them all at once.
I can say as an Australia who also thought she would walk one camino and that would be it - if the Camino experience "grabs" you - it is amazing how easy it is to go back. Perhaps not immediately (life interferes) but eventually you will. And will be able to walk many of the different routes.
For me the Camino is about starting and continuing to walk all the way to Santiago de Compostela. IMO.
It is about letting the Camino itself make decisions for me, rather than me "managing" how it will be. It is about a community of people who form around me as the journey progresses and who share the journey with me and with whom I form friendships. It is about letting go of cares and worries and choices and decisions and just being. It is a precious time with a simple daily routine of getting up and walking, finding something to eat, finding a bed, talking to people around me. Nothing more complicated than that. It is about having the distant goal of Santiago in the back of my mind while living fully focussed on the present. It is about being at one with the sky and the soil and the landscape. It is about getting hot and getting cold, getting wet and getting dry, being hungry and being fed. It is all about simplicity.
We spoil ourselves by trying constantly to find the "best" and being scared of missing out somehow.
Let your Camino begin -as soon as you buy your tickets!
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