MikeOK
Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Camino Frances: SJPdP -> Fisterra, (sep 26- oct 18, 2017)
Regret is a strong word. I Dont regret walking the camino, but I regret picking the Camino Frances over del Norte.
Before the camino I was debating goining del Norte or camino Frances for a long time. The Norte just spoke to me because of the views, the hills, and the road less traveled. However, due to a weather forecast of rain, some shin troubles in the month before going, a bit unsure of how my body would react due to me walking as a way to celebrate full recovery from back troubles and surgery, and listening to people saying do the CF first, I choose the camino Frances. I actually made my final decision at the airport.
Dont get me wrong it was a great journey, and I meet some fantastic people on the way, and had some fantastic conversations. However the CF was also what I feared it would be, a turist-pilgrim superhighway. Everything is build around the camino and around serving the turists. There is a cafe every few km serving pilgrim-coffee, pilgrim-wine and pilgrim-food - I started refering to them as touristshops, but instead of selling cheap plastic items, they sell cheap food. It is like an all tourist town in your exotic travel destination - some people like these places, other people hates them.
IMO the CF is now more of a social gathering than a serious walk. This brings me to the more personal issues with the CF. I decided early that I was there to walk, and not spending time in the albergue or sitting in a cafe talking about walking all day. The CF is a fairly easy walk - which is not the same as saying walking 800km is easy - but besides walking up to Orrision from SJPP there are no real Challenges on the CF, the whole route is on nice roads made to accomodate people of all ages and shapes. So when deciding on walking until I was tired put me around 40km on average incl plenty of time for small breaks, lunch and taking in the sights. This made me kind of a Lone Walker on a route where most people average 20-30 km a day. I had to choose between doing a social walk or walking my camino. I talked to plenty of people and walked in group for days at the time but I think I would have found more people walking like me on del Norte (at least the number of albergues are smaller, and therefore a large chance of running into the same people over and over again).
Overall I highly recommend doing a camino, there is something speciel about just walking several hundred miles for weeks. Just Pick the route that speaks to you, and not the route recommend by others.
Before the camino I was debating goining del Norte or camino Frances for a long time. The Norte just spoke to me because of the views, the hills, and the road less traveled. However, due to a weather forecast of rain, some shin troubles in the month before going, a bit unsure of how my body would react due to me walking as a way to celebrate full recovery from back troubles and surgery, and listening to people saying do the CF first, I choose the camino Frances. I actually made my final decision at the airport.
Dont get me wrong it was a great journey, and I meet some fantastic people on the way, and had some fantastic conversations. However the CF was also what I feared it would be, a turist-pilgrim superhighway. Everything is build around the camino and around serving the turists. There is a cafe every few km serving pilgrim-coffee, pilgrim-wine and pilgrim-food - I started refering to them as touristshops, but instead of selling cheap plastic items, they sell cheap food. It is like an all tourist town in your exotic travel destination - some people like these places, other people hates them.
IMO the CF is now more of a social gathering than a serious walk. This brings me to the more personal issues with the CF. I decided early that I was there to walk, and not spending time in the albergue or sitting in a cafe talking about walking all day. The CF is a fairly easy walk - which is not the same as saying walking 800km is easy - but besides walking up to Orrision from SJPP there are no real Challenges on the CF, the whole route is on nice roads made to accomodate people of all ages and shapes. So when deciding on walking until I was tired put me around 40km on average incl plenty of time for small breaks, lunch and taking in the sights. This made me kind of a Lone Walker on a route where most people average 20-30 km a day. I had to choose between doing a social walk or walking my camino. I talked to plenty of people and walked in group for days at the time but I think I would have found more people walking like me on del Norte (at least the number of albergues are smaller, and therefore a large chance of running into the same people over and over again).
Overall I highly recommend doing a camino, there is something speciel about just walking several hundred miles for weeks. Just Pick the route that speaks to you, and not the route recommend by others.
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