DesertRain
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The Authentic Pilgrim’s™ Guide to the Camino de Santiago
Where to Start: SJPP or Roncevalles?
Trick question! They are BOTH artificial constructs of the modern age. The Authentic Camino™ begins at your front door. If you do not walk from there, you are simply giving into the dominant culture’s constant demand for instant gratification.
If you absolutely insist on starting your walk in SJPP/Roncesvalles, for goodness sake, do NOT take the train, bus, taxi, etc. to you “starting point.” Authentic™ modes of transportation include: Donkey, horse-drawn wooden cart, palanquin, etc. Despite rumors to the contrary, rickshaws are NOT Authentic™ having first appeared in Japan in 1868. Perhaps if fellow traveller Marco Polo had brought it back from the Orient, it would have been acceptable. But he didn’t. Get over it.
If you do not currently live in an area connected by land to the Iberian Peninsula, your options are limited. The Authentic Pilgrim™ recommends that you book passage on a three-masted schooner or larger ship. Depending on your starting point, expect your voyage to take between several hours (from Northern Africa) to 12 months (for all you Aussies and Kiwis). If you do not have the money to book such conveyance, you may wish to join the crew. As a crew member, expect flogging, rats, salted penguin meat and weevils in your biscuits. On the up side, you Brits will receive half a pint of rum daily.
Footwear: Boots, Shoes or Sandals?
This is one topic on which the Authentic Pilgrim™ sees no bad choice. It comes down to personal preference. HOWEVER, the Authentic Pilgrim™ reminds you that whatever footwear you choose must not contain ANY for the following materials: Rubber, plastic, nylon, polyurethane, and most metal alloys. Basically, unless you made your footwear out of rawhide and the sinew from a deer that you poached from your Lord’s lands (or, of course, you are the Lord), you are dangerously close to becoming an effete poseur.
What Size Backpack? How Much Weight Should I Carry?
You are not really going to carry your own gear are you?!!?! That is the purpose of serfs! But should you choose to leave them at home, the Authentic Pilgrim™ recommends that you at least have a pack mule. Not only will you appreciate not having to carry your hemp sack over the Pyrenees yourself, you you will also appreciate it when, after getting a hoof infection that goes systemic, your mule’s carcass provides plenty of meat for a feast at that night’s albergue stop. Which brings me to.....
What Should I Know About Health Care and First Aid on the Camino?
The Authentic Pilgrim™ knows to expect the unexpected on the Camino. Not only are there highway bandits with large clubs, rabid dogs and twisted ankles, you probably have not completely recovered from the scurvy you contracted on your voyage to SJPP. It is no accident that all along the Camino are historic hospitals. If you have any medical problems, I suggest that you go to one such fine institutions and ask for one of two treatments: leeches or bleeding. It is amazing how quickly siphoning off a pint of blood daily can help you reach Santiago. Or kill you from an infected scarificator. Whatever.... Anyway, other Authentic™ treatments include: balancing the humors, nettle tea and exorcism.
Communication: Will My iPhone Work?
By now, I am sure you know the Authentic Pilgrim’s™ advice: Leave all phones, PDAs, computers, tablets, GPS units, etc. at home. Should you wish to communicate with your family, I strongly advice you bring a few homing pigeons. Barring that, a message in a bottle thrown into Atlantic once you get to Finesterra should reach home before you do.
I Have Arrived in Santiago! How Should I Get Home?
Turn around and head back the way you came.
Remember.... if you vary from these and subsequent installments of this guide, you are not an Authentic Pilgrim™.
Where to Start: SJPP or Roncevalles?
Trick question! They are BOTH artificial constructs of the modern age. The Authentic Camino™ begins at your front door. If you do not walk from there, you are simply giving into the dominant culture’s constant demand for instant gratification.
If you absolutely insist on starting your walk in SJPP/Roncesvalles, for goodness sake, do NOT take the train, bus, taxi, etc. to you “starting point.” Authentic™ modes of transportation include: Donkey, horse-drawn wooden cart, palanquin, etc. Despite rumors to the contrary, rickshaws are NOT Authentic™ having first appeared in Japan in 1868. Perhaps if fellow traveller Marco Polo had brought it back from the Orient, it would have been acceptable. But he didn’t. Get over it.
If you do not currently live in an area connected by land to the Iberian Peninsula, your options are limited. The Authentic Pilgrim™ recommends that you book passage on a three-masted schooner or larger ship. Depending on your starting point, expect your voyage to take between several hours (from Northern Africa) to 12 months (for all you Aussies and Kiwis). If you do not have the money to book such conveyance, you may wish to join the crew. As a crew member, expect flogging, rats, salted penguin meat and weevils in your biscuits. On the up side, you Brits will receive half a pint of rum daily.
Footwear: Boots, Shoes or Sandals?
This is one topic on which the Authentic Pilgrim™ sees no bad choice. It comes down to personal preference. HOWEVER, the Authentic Pilgrim™ reminds you that whatever footwear you choose must not contain ANY for the following materials: Rubber, plastic, nylon, polyurethane, and most metal alloys. Basically, unless you made your footwear out of rawhide and the sinew from a deer that you poached from your Lord’s lands (or, of course, you are the Lord), you are dangerously close to becoming an effete poseur.
What Size Backpack? How Much Weight Should I Carry?
You are not really going to carry your own gear are you?!!?! That is the purpose of serfs! But should you choose to leave them at home, the Authentic Pilgrim™ recommends that you at least have a pack mule. Not only will you appreciate not having to carry your hemp sack over the Pyrenees yourself, you you will also appreciate it when, after getting a hoof infection that goes systemic, your mule’s carcass provides plenty of meat for a feast at that night’s albergue stop. Which brings me to.....
What Should I Know About Health Care and First Aid on the Camino?
The Authentic Pilgrim™ knows to expect the unexpected on the Camino. Not only are there highway bandits with large clubs, rabid dogs and twisted ankles, you probably have not completely recovered from the scurvy you contracted on your voyage to SJPP. It is no accident that all along the Camino are historic hospitals. If you have any medical problems, I suggest that you go to one such fine institutions and ask for one of two treatments: leeches or bleeding. It is amazing how quickly siphoning off a pint of blood daily can help you reach Santiago. Or kill you from an infected scarificator. Whatever.... Anyway, other Authentic™ treatments include: balancing the humors, nettle tea and exorcism.
Communication: Will My iPhone Work?
By now, I am sure you know the Authentic Pilgrim’s™ advice: Leave all phones, PDAs, computers, tablets, GPS units, etc. at home. Should you wish to communicate with your family, I strongly advice you bring a few homing pigeons. Barring that, a message in a bottle thrown into Atlantic once you get to Finesterra should reach home before you do.
I Have Arrived in Santiago! How Should I Get Home?
Turn around and head back the way you came.
Remember.... if you vary from these and subsequent installments of this guide, you are not an Authentic Pilgrim™.