Hola
I've responded to your email. Since this comes up from time to time it might be worth us having a more general discussion about the need for maps on the Camino routes.
The well used used routes - the Via de la Plata, the Caminos Frances, Portuguese, Ingles etc follow the historically researched line of the medieval pilgrimage. We follow in the footsteps of millions of pilgrims who have gone before us. The routes have been marked by them and by their modern equivalents - pilgrims who paint the yellow arrows and local authorities who maintain the granite markers and other signs.
One of the great lessons for me was learning to give up my dependency on knowing everything that was to come and simply to follow the route from arrow to arrow. Over many, many thousands of kms walking the Camino routes I have rarely got lost and usually that happened, as in my life, when I didn't follow the arrows and thought I knew the best direction to take.
There are some exceptions of course - when routes are subject to major change or disruption. Even then local pilgrims or local authorities usually put up temporary signage. I doubt the usefulness of maps where the path of the Camino is not charted on them - it then simply changes from being a pilgrimage on the path of those who have gone before and will come in future. When recently walking from Florence to Rome in snowy conditions I occasionally used the navigation app on my phone - it was perfect. It also dispensed with the need for detailed directions to accommodation in towns.
On the well walked routes I'd advise pilgrims to have a guidebook or some walking notes, to have a sense of where you are going and might sleep that night and to trust the arrows and waymarks - in many ways they make the camino the Camino!
Buen camino
John