• Remove ads on the forum by becoming a donating member. More here.
  • 20% off everything Altus the next few days at the Camino Forum Store. More here. (Discount taken at check out)

Search 69,459 Camino Questions

June, bag, poles?

  • Thread starter Deleted member 17908
  • Start date
D

Deleted member 17908

Guest
Hello all! I plan to start my Camino in SJPDP in early June 2013. Weather history indicates that is a very rainy month, but I am from the Pacific Northwest USA, so can cope. Of course I am trying to take as little as possible, so I have a few questions.

Should I take an ultra-light sleeping bag? I get cold easily.

Should I bring hiking poles? I find them very annoying. I am an experienced hiker with weak ankles and bad knes, I find I don't need poles going uphill or on flat ground but I do need them going down steep, rocky terrain, my daughter who has done two Caminos says the only really bad part is just before Santiago. I don't want to carry poles and not use them for 425K, is there a place to buy them along the way?

Finally, I am looking forward to meeting people along the way, but really don't want to stay in rooms with a lot of other noisy people. On the other hand, I don't wish to be alone at night to dwell on how much I miss my husband, family, dog, etc. Are there smaller hostels where one can share rooms with fewer people and how does one find them?

I think these will be my only questions to the forum. I will experience the journey as it unfolds, but I will need a certain level of comfort to do that.

Thank you all for your replies.
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
The weather in June may be wet or very dry. Year to year it varies just as it does here in Seattle and the Northwest.
1. Take a light sleeping bag and a silk sleep liner. The silk liner will probably be adequate in June but there will be some chilly nights and mornings.
2. Take a good poncho...check out the threads on this forum about Altus raincoat/ponchos. There have been a lot of discussion.
3. I had been a non-believer in walking poles on my first two Caminos and then was persuaded that I should try a good pair and learn a little about using them. I would now never be without them.
I still hate carrying them....but uphill and downhill is now half of the effort that it was.
4. The steep inclines up and down start on the first day out of SJPdP. I am not sure where your daughter was referring to, but can't think of any real hills near Santiago. You will be using them most days...except perhaps on the Meseta.
5. There is a Puget Sound Camino Group (both Seattle and Portland) if you are not already aware.
Buen Camino
 
Newly found friends share rooms along the way, but I am not aware of any accommodations that make the arrangements.
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
Certainly nearer to Santiago there are some private albergues with also private rooms (habitaciones) so you can choose between a small dormitory (maybe 10 beds) or your own room, but possibly still meet in the bar/cafe to talk or eat with others.
We joined the Francés at Palas de Rei from the Primitivo and used private albergues and hostals from there but I expect that there are others similar further back along the Way

Sticks, we prefer a single hook topped walking pole. Although there were some steep places on the Primitivo I found some of the rough paved areas of the Francés more diffficult to walk on and the hill off of Monte de Gozo isn't easy walking IMHO
 
There is almost endless debate on this forum on all these questions. A few days intensive surfing might even provide you with enough opinion to form one of your own. :wink:

Me, I carried a lightweight sleeping bag and was frequently grateful that I did. I carried Leki poles from SJDP to Santiago and used them twice - once on the descent from the Alto del Perdon, and once to wave at a particularly persistent cattle dog somewhere near Samos. You say you find hiking poles annoying. Just imagine how annoying they'll get each day as they tangle your wrists, snag your ankles, or worse, sit comfortably strapped to your pack as you haul them all the way to Santiago and beyond. The Hostal / Albergue question is really difficult to answer - though you will find numerous threads and strongly held opinions that will contradict me. You will encounter such a range and variety of accommodation, people and circumstance. There are small Hostales - though there may also be noisy plumbing, paper thin walls and a bar that doesn't shut till the last customer leaves - and there are Albergues of every size and shape (and acoustics) (and pilgrims).

Finding the place that will really meet your needs... Well that's down to Brierley's guide, the Internet, this forums many threads - and luck.

Buen Camino
 
I am a big fan of trekking poles, due to some life-long knee problems. You might not need them at all when you hike at home, but what about when you walk 20 to 30 kms every day for a month?

If you do bring them, buy the most light weight ones you can find. That way when you're not using them and you strap them to your pack, they won't be so much of a bother. You may also consider bringing them and using them for the first few days from SJPP to say, Estella, then posting them on to where you will be in two weeks. The Spanish Correos (post office) is fantastic, and they will hold packages for up to two weeks.

If you don't bring them, you can always buy them along the way. They are available in every city on the Camino, and in some smaller towns. You just might not have the same selection and prices that you'd have at home.

Finally, if you do bring them, as said before, be sure you know how to use them correctly. They are meant to make your walk easier, not to require you to exert more energy than you would without them.

Must-have features: telescopic / adjustable / collapsible, rubber tips to go over the metal tips, and wrist straps
 
Ideal sleeping bag liner whether we want to add a thermal plus to our bag, or if we want to use it alone to sleep in shelters or hostels. Thanks to its mummy shape, it adapts perfectly to our body.

€46,-

Most read last week in this forum

Greetings fellow travelers, I am hoping to do my first international trip at 57 and solo to walk the Camino Primitivo in mid-July. I want to book the trip through either Santiago Ways or Camino...
Hello, my name is Wendy and I walked the Camino Primitivo in September 2022 and I’m planning to walk the full Camino Portugues from Lisbon to Santiago beginning September 7, 2024, in honor of my...
Hello! I and my friend Cecilia will walk Camino Ingles with start 4th of October. We are so excited to our first but not last Camino. Buen Camino to all of you.
I'll be volunteering in Santiago July 01- July 15 this year with the Camino Companions who offer services for the English speaking pilgrims, announcements at mass, English Mass at the Pilgrim's...

❓How to ask a question

How to post a new question on the Camino Forum.

Similar threads

Forum Rules

Forum Rules

Camino Updates on YouTube

Camino Conversations

Most downloaded Resources

This site is run by Ivar at

in Santiago de Compostela.
This site participates in the Amazon Affiliate program, designed to provide a means for Ivar to earn fees by linking to Amazon
Official Camino Passport (Credential) | 2024 Camino Guides
Back
Top