We are planning to walk El
Camino Frances June - July 2017.
Any suggestions from anyone who has done this with their children?
Can't wait!
My wife an I took our 15 year old God daughter for part of the Camino. Wife & I walked from SJPP but our 21 year old daughter and 15yo God daughter met up with us in Barbarelo, a few miles west of Sarria. They met up with us in Mid-July of this year.
Your kids need to understand what is expected of them.
1- we tried to prepare her in advance for the amount of walking per day
2- her parents walked with her for a few weeks, building up from 2 miles to 7 miles. She basically stopped walking at the end of May when school finals started
3- she essentially refused to continue walking after school ended, so she didn't do any practice walking for the month of June or the first half of July
4- she never understood/realized/comprehended that she would be walking 6 to 8 hours
(including lunch breaks, rest stops) every day, day after day after day
5- she didn't understand/realize/comprehend that walking at home on flat Indiana sidewalks is very different than walking on uneven rock paths
6- my family (
wife, daughter & myself) has previously done cross country hikes and US national trail hikes and we tried to convey to our God daughter & her family what was to be expected of her. Up at 5:30-6am, starting 30 to 60 minutes after wake up (
depending upon if we ate breakfast on the trail or before starting for the day)
7- we found out that she is an over-self-confident child, she is an entitled child
So I would suggest that you get your kids to understand the daily rigors of this walk. Its not a hard hike, but it does wear on you with the repetitive daily grind. There are hills everywhere, virtually every day.
As my wife and I were already in Europe we had no idea that our God daughter stopped her practice walks.
The first day we met up with them we planned a "jet lag" day and didn't walk. The 2nd day we got her up at 6am, walked from our hotel (
Casa Barbarelo) backwards on the trail into Sarria to get her used to walking. Had breakfast, took her to a hiking store for some hiking poles, then back to Barbadelo ... she was worn out. We chalked that up to jet lag. We were wrong. It got worse. She thought that walking 5 to 7 miles on flat Indiana sidewalks was all she needed to do to prepare for this journey. She was sadly mistaken.
So my advice to you is make sure your children understand fully what is expected of them.
IN ADDITION TO UNDERSTANDING THE RIGORS OF WALKING ... make sure your children are not picky eaters. In some of the smaller villages they will need to eat what they are served. They will not see a McDonalds. They will not find fast food anywhere. Some of the food is really good, some fairly bad or just bland.
This can be an amazing experience for them or an awful one.
ALL THAT SAID we walked almost daily with 2 grandfathers (
in their early 70's) and their 2 grandsons (
one was 13 the other was 15) and those kids were enjoying the experience. They were a pleasure to walk with and each carried 45 liter packs that weighed about 20# (
9kg). Both were cub/boy scouts, both had hiked before. Both were going home to hike at the Filament Boy Scout Camp with 45# (
20kg)/60+ liter packs containing food/tents/sleeping bags, etc so the Camino was essentially a long, but easy practice hike for them.