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sillydoll said:How about a route in France?
You could walk some of the Arles Route, turn south to the Somport Pass and walk the spectacular Aragones route to Pamplona.
Then you could hop on a bus to Bilbao and continue on the Norte to as far as you can get or all the way to Oviedo and then south again on the stunning Primitivo route.
You are really spoilt for choice!
sillydoll said:With 20 days to walk you could start in Lourdes, 3 days to Oloron St Marie, 3 days to Canfranc and then to Pamplona on the Aragones - then get the train to Irun and walk on the coastal road - which my friend describes as the most stunning camino route she has walked - to Bilbao (158km) in 7 days.
viajero said:I have not walked the via de la plata but have done part of the Norte (from Irun to Aviles). I think you would enjoy the "nature" part. It is very naturally beautiful--the views down to the sea are amazing. I thought it was harder than the frances too. Very hilly. Not sure what it would be like in November though. good luck in making your choice.
I PM'ed Marcel with these route suggestions, but will also put them here in case they are useful for someone else.Marcel234 said:And what about this...Is it possible to go from Toulouse to Lourdes to Oloron St Marie to Pamplona/ Puenta la Reina?
KiwiNomad06 said:I PM'ed Marcel with these route suggestions, but will also put them here in case they are useful for someone else.Marcel234 said:And what about this...Is it possible to go from Toulouse to Lourdes to Oloron St Marie to Pamplona/ Puenta la Reina?
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Margaret
Caminando said:Consider the Camino Portugues and finish in Fistera.
You say you like the heat, yet I would suggest you be careful if you walk any of the VDP in summer, because of the heat.
falcon269 said:I have walked Toulouse to Maubourget, taken the bus to Lourdes by way of Pau, then taken the bus back to the Arles route. After Pau, you head for Oloron, Somport, Jaca, and Puente la Reina. If you need to meet transportation in Pamplona, you can go directly there from Sanguesa.
When it is hot, the Camino Aragones is as hot as the Via de la Plata!
Marcel234 said:I have all the options, so doesn't mather for me if it's France, Spain, Portugal or China ;-).
Caminando said:Marcel234 said:I have all the options, so doesn't mather for me if it's France, Spain, Portugal or China ;-).
If it could even be China (i.e., anywhere) could you say what it is that attracts you about a camino?
Pieces said:well, I was recently thinking that visiting the 88 tempels of the shikoku pilgrimage in Japan would be interesting. But then, I always wanted to go to Japan...
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