How to resume all this in a few words...
In fact, I started in Aachen (Germany) (or Aix la Chapelle in French) and have been walking so far till Vézelay.
I did all this in plenty of stages and not all at once. As I live in Brussels, Belgium, this was a good possibility to be on a camino without having to wait for another (summer) holiday. In Belgium, I mostly spent two, tree or occasionally four days on the camino. Then, having reached the French border, my stages got longer.
From the border till Reims (mixing up the GR 654-long distance way AND the alternative way described by the RP51 association).
From Reims to Troyes (only following the description of the RP51 association)
From Brienne le Château (this is close to Troyes) till Vézelay (this time only following the GR waymarkings)
In Belgium, from Namur onwards (and perhaps before), the Dutch and Flemish associations speak of the 'pelgrimspad' - following mostly the river Maas (Meuse in French), whereas I followed the GR.
Between Aachen and Namur, I followed the Jacobean waymarkings.
I walked some sunny summer days, some rainy summer days, foggy autumn, sunny winter, snowy winter, sunny early spring and recently rather cold, greyish early spring)
Now, to tell you which one I preferred... hard to say. There is such a great variety in such a short distance.
All this is the way, every different part of it.
Belgian and French 'Ardennes' are rather hilly (well gently hilly, we are not in the Alps, neither in the Pyrenees and the highest points must still be well under 650m) with plenty of woods to cross.
Then you come through French farm lands, very flat, might seem unspectacular, but I liked them as well.
And after Reims some vineyards, then farmlands, some woods, then Burgundy with plenty of vineyards and lovely wine.
(if you have a facebook account, pm me your contact name or mail address, so I could let you see some of my pictures - I still have no blog, and no picasa account)