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I did it in 6 long days. I have a daily blog describing it at danscaminotravels.wordpress.comHello!
This will be my second Camino. I walked solo this past September from Astorga to Santiago and will be walking solo again . I feel the Camino calling me again. I plan on walking between late April/May May/early June. I'm still not sure on the dates as of yet. I'm tracking airfare for now. My questions is how many days to Logrono from SJPP? I plan on taking 2 days to cross the pyrenees, take a rest day in either Pamplona and or Estella. And maybe spend a night or two in Logrono at the end. I am a slow walker and happy walking 7-10 miles/day. I'm a fit 48 yo female. Can this be done in 10-14 days?
Thanks
Hi,Hello!
This will be my second Camino. I walked solo this past September from Astorga to Santiago and will be walking solo again . I feel the Camino calling me again. I plan on walking between late April/May May/early June. I'm still not sure on the dates as of yet. I'm tracking airfare for now. My questions is how many days to Logrono from SJPP? I plan on taking 2 days to cross the pyrenees, take a rest day in either Pamplona and or Estella. And maybe spend a night or two in Logrono at the end. I am a slow walker and happy walking 7-10 miles/day. I'm a fit 48 yo female. Can this be done in 10-14 days?
Thanks
We did it in 10 days, with no rest days but a couple of shorter days. Stayed at Orisson on the way over the Pyrenees. 62 years young and reasonably fit.Hello!
This will be my second Camino. I walked solo this past September from Astorga to Santiago and will be walking solo again . I feel the Camino calling me again. I plan on walking between late April/May May/early June. I'm still not sure on the dates as of yet. I'm tracking airfare for now. My questions is how many days to Logrono from SJPP? I plan on taking 2 days to cross the pyrenees, take a rest day in either Pamplona and or Estella. And maybe spend a night or two in Logrono at the end. I am a slow walker and happy walking 7-10 miles/day. I'm a fit 48 yo female. Can this be done in 10-14 days?
Thanks
My questions is how many days to Logrono from SJPP?
I am a slow walker and happy walking 7-10 miles/day. (11 -16 km per day) I'm a fit 48 yo female.
Can this be done in 10-14 days?
Alwyn, I’m going with Bradipus on this: 100 miles.All up about 80+ km (50 miles)
You've obviously got a better calculator than me.I’m going with Bradipus on this: 100 miles.
14 days would be a very comfortable journey. It would allow 2 days to cross the Pyrénées and a rest day in Pamplona and a couple of days in Logroño as well.Hello!
This will be my second Camino. I walked solo this past September from Astorga to Santiago and will be walking solo again . I feel the Camino calling me again. I plan on walking between late April/May May/early June. I'm still not sure on the dates as of yet. I'm tracking airfare for now. My questions is how many days to Logrono from SJPP? I plan on taking 2 days to cross the pyrenees, take a rest day in either Pamplona and or Estella. And maybe spend a night or two in Logrono at the end. I am a slow walker and happy walking 7-10 miles/day. I'm a fit 48 yo female. Can this be done in 10-14 days?
Thanks
I used the Godesalco planner website distances. Very useful tool.Alwyn, I’m going with Bradipus on this: 100 miles.
Hi Anniesantiago! Yes, I do have the Brierley guide though not entirely sure how to read it. I tried while researching for my 1st Camino. I will take another crack at it. I've been using WisePilgrim App to plan. I plan to hopefully leave out of Logrono to get back to Madrid so that will be a nice ending.Do you have a Brierley guide?
It will make it easier to plan.
Also, Logroño is a wonderful place to spend a couple of days!
Lots to see there.
This is perfect and exactly what I needed! Thank you for attaching the stages and distances. So, incredibly helpful.Short answer: yes
Possible stages for you might be (cribbing from your details for some):
##...km.
00)..00..Saint-Jean
01)..07..Orisson
02)..18..Roncevalles
03)..06..Espinal
04)..16..Zubiri
05)..11..Zalbaldika
06)..08..Pamplona for 2 nights
08)..12..Zariquiegui,
09)..08..Uterga
10)..14..Cirauqui,
11)..13..Estella for 2 nights
13)..20..Los Arcos
14)..18..Viana
15)..09..Logrono
All up about 164 km (102 miles)
A demonstration set of stages - personal preferences may indicate other choices.
At present (northern winter) in smaller places with only one albergue, these are marked as "temporarily closed". I suspect that should not be an issue when you are underway.
Following the vagaries of where things are: three of the stages above are less than your preferred daily distance limit and three are greater.
Edited to correct my distance calculator
PS: I've used km as that is the lingua franca for the route.
Kia kaha (take care, be strong)
I cannot snswer your question but I think it is lovely to walk up to 10 miles aday. Wise planning compared to my rushing 25 to 32 kilometers per day. I am also a slow walker so the days were 7-8 hours long. Buon CaminoHello!
This will be my second Camino. I walked solo this past September from Astorga to Santiago and will be walking solo again . I feel the Camino calling me again. I plan on walking between late April/May May/early June. I'm still not sure on the dates as of yet. I'm tracking airfare for now. My questions is how many days to Logrono from SJPP? I plan on taking 2 days to cross the pyrenees, take a rest day in either Pamplona and or Estella. And maybe spend a night or two in Logrono at the end. I am a slow walker and happy walking 7-10 miles/day. I'm a fit 48 yo female. Can this be done in 10-14 days?
Thanks
My plan is to take two days to cross over the Pyrenees into Roncesvalles. Then from Roncesvalles, I’ll take a taxi or bus to Pamplona where I will start my Camino. I will be walking from Pamplona to Logroño.Certainly possible!
My two cents added to this:
1. I don't know whether you are planning on crossing the mountains or taking the lower road on the first days, but surprisingly I found the lower road more tiring than the mountain way. It goes up and down continously and the view while still pretty is nothing compared to the Pass.
2. The day from Roncesvalles down to the valley is the most dangerous in my opinion. Being tired from the first days and with big rocks on a downhill path, it is easy to slip and injure yourself. I did it myself (twisted my ankle) and my mother did it on another occasion (she was 47 at the time, so similar age to you). I also took the taxi with people to the hospital coz I was not the only one injured and the nearest doctor's office was in Pamplona, so it is not just a family curse.
3. There is (or was?) an albergue next to the stream in Astorga that was managed by German (or Austrian?) nuns. It was lovely, and I can recommend it.
4. Alternatively, you might consider walking 5km out of town to Cizur Menor where the albergue managed by the Order of Malta is quite lovely. (or spend one night here and one night there). The Alto del Perdon can be a bit tiring, so getting closer to it is also helpful.
5. As always, check the opening times before taking my advice at face value, coz I am not sure when these albergues open in the year. I was at the german nun albergue in April, so I assume they open early, but I stopped at the Malta one in August, so I am not sure how early in the season they open.
6. Before Logrono there is a long path on asphalt, so I would try to plan that day as short as possible by maybe regrouping a few kms to the days before.
Buen camino!
Did you mean to say Astorga here?3. There is (or was?) an albergue next to the stream in Astorga that was managed by German (or Austrian?) nuns. It was lovely, and I can recommend it.
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