[Gocamino] July 25th, 2009 BAD ADVICE
hme347 at aol.com
hme347 at aol.com
Sat Aug 1 09:55:12 PDT 2009
BAD ADVICE! ?
Depending on the time of year, it is probably best to walk as much as possible in the morning, or early in the day, because the afternoon sun can be brutally hot and oppressive. ?
Also, many towns do not have inns or small hotels. So refugios may be your only choice. Some of my best friends from the Camino are those that I met at refugios where you have great comraderie that you can never experience in a hotel.
The French Camino is popular for good reasons. ?It is beautiful, significant and inspirational. ?At no time did the number of people walking compare to Grand Central Station, and I am a native New Yorker!
Howard Mendes, NYC
-----Original Message-----
From: Rosina <blaroli at aol.com>
To: GOCAMINO at oakapple.net; saintjames at yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sat, Aug 1, 2009 11:20 am
Subject: Re: [Gocamino] July 25th, 2009
Hi Janan,
With my own youth way behind me I can understand your concerns.
To begin with, I would not recommend staying in the albergues? because the rush
to get there limits walking to the morning since the albergues tend to fill up
by one p.m. and, I found, walking is easier, and more pleasant, in the
afternoon.? Walking 3 or 4 hours in the morning, then stopping for lunch and a
rest, and walking another three or four hours in the afternoon is less tiring
and more enjoyable, and it can be done if?one isn't in a rush to get to an
albergue on time to secure a bunk..
It is easier to book rooms in an inn, or a small hotel, ahead of time from town
to town; usually the proprietor?of an inn will make arrangements for the next
one, etc. The cost of such accommodations is not much more than?what a private
albergue would cost, and there is the?added bonus of privacy and bathroom
availability.
Also, by this method, one can send the heavy backpack ahead (it costs about 3-4
dlls. to do so and there are taxis, etc., that?do this) and carry only the
indispensable items for a day or so. Logically, this makes walking much, much
easier and effective without the weight, and discomfort, of a heavy burden.
The news are that this year, as most recent years, the Camino is chock-full, and
the albergues are so overloaded that the municipal authorities of the various
towns?are fitting up sports arenas and parks with tents for pilgrims. I really
don't think that deferring the pilgrimage from 2010 to 2011 would make that much
difference insofar as crowds and places to spend the night are concerned.?And
then, doing so you three would miss the extraordinary?opportunity of
experiencing the?wondrous and special celebrations of a Holy Year, which will
not come around for another eleven years.
What I would counsel the three of you, strongly, would be to avoid the French
Camino and opt for one of the other several routes which often are, in my view,
more beautiful, more significant and more inspirational. The Camino del Norte
and the Primiivo are quite?lovely and very welcoming; As you surely know, one
need only walk the last 100 kms. to Santiago to earn a Compostela, and while the
entire Via de la Plata maybe too much of an undertaking, the last 100-150 ms.
through Orense are hauntingly?beautiful, and certainly free of?the frantic
activity and crowds of the French Camino's segment from Sarria to Santiago which
at times can be likened to Grand Central Station in New York City at rush hour.?
Some pilgrims may disapprove of sending the backpack ahead, yet, in the first of
my four caminos, ten years ago, I asked a priest?in Roncesvalles about it. He
told me that?the church strongly disapproves of self-inflicted corporal
suffering, and reminded me that when Saint Francis made his pilgrimage to
Santiago he carried nothing but his walking stick and a bundle made of a
handkerchief containing a Missal and some bread and fruit.?
In fact, my very favorite Camino-related?work of art is precisely a painting of
Saint Francis descending the Pyrenees on his way to Santiago wearing just such a
garb.
I can send you a copy of the painting, if you wish.
Hugs!
Rosina
?
?
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