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John Brierley book - duplicate town?

RobinGore

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Time of past OR future Camino
2019 Frances, 2023 Frances, 2025 Frances
In the pages of the Brierley Camino Frances book (I have the 2019 edition): On Etapa/Stage 29, Sarria to Portomarín ... there is a town listed twice called Baxán. It is listed as the next town after Rente on the map in the Brierley book. Then comes A Pena, Cortiñas, and then appears Baxán again (!) just before Morgade.

IMG_0675.webp
 
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The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
OSM lists two hamlets, Baxan Grande and Baxan Pequeno, just to the south-west of A Serra. They seem to be a little off the Camino Frances route. Neither appear to be close to Morgade. There are other locations with the name elsewhere in Spain and some other countries.
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
OSM lists two hamlets, Baxan Grande and Baxan Pequeno, just to the south-west of A Serra. They seem to be a little off the Camino Frances route. Neither appear to be close to Morgade. There are other locations with the name elsewhere in Spain and some other countries.
thank you for your reply! that's so sweet! I uploaded a picture of what I'm seeing and both of these little Baxan hamlets appear to be directly on the route but maps can be deceptive. Thanks Doug!
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
I hope you don't base your Camino on such outdated kind of "MAPS"
This is more a drawing of the area to give you an overview and not o map I would hiking with it.
I prefer OSM or Outdooractive with all the necessary maps offline on my pilgrimages.
 
I hope you don't base your Camino on such outdated kind of "MAPS"
This is more a drawing of the area to give you an overview and not o map I would hiking with it.
I prefer OSM or Outdooractive with all the necessary maps offline on my pilgrimages.
To be fair, between Sarria and Santiago not much of a map is needed, be it printed or digital... also i dare to say for a large part of the year not even any planning would be needed.
 
also i dare to say for a large part of the year not even any planning would be needed.
For the Frances in seasons you may be right, but I would still do some planning, as I like to know what kind of stages I have to make in between Cities/Villages I would like to spend some hours to visit.
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
I’m not saying it’s true of the Brierley publishers but some map publishers put in false data here and there in order to establish their copyright. Should their map be reproduced without attribution they can then prove ownership. Again I’m not saying this is the case here.

 
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In the pages of the Brierley Camino Frances book (I have the 2019 edition): On Etapa/Stage 29, Sarria to Portomarín ... there is a town listed twice called Baxán. It is listed as the next town after Rente on the map in the Brierley book. Then comes A Pena, Cortiñas, and then appears Baxán again (!) just before Morgade.

View attachment 182042
Having walked that route this year, I dont see they are useful in your planning as there is nothing on offer for pilgrims. (From memory I think one of them had a giant shed. )
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
OSM lists two hamlets, Baxan Grande and Baxan Pequeno, just to the south-west of A Serra. They seem to be a little off the Camino Frances route. Neither appear to be close to Morgade. There are other locations with the name elsewhere in Spain and some other countries.
I've not heard of OSM, where can find that? Thanks
 
Transport luggage-passengers.
From airports to SJPP
Luggage from SJPP to Roncevalles
I've not heard of OSM, where can find that? I
I don't know what kind of phone you have for my iPhone I found it in the app store with the name:
OsmAnd Maps from OsmAND B.V. but there must be an Android app too.
 
Join us from Logroño to Burgos in May 2025 or Astorga to OCebreiro in June.
I hope you don't base your Camino on such outdated kind of "MAPS"
This is more a drawing of the area to give you an overview and not o map I would hiking with it.
I prefer OSM or Outdooractive with all the necessary maps offline on my pilgrimages.
Actually, I think his maps are great. They show the really important stuff, e.g. how far you need to walk to get coffee, how far to get lunch.
 
I've not heard of OSM, where can find that? Thanks
Here is a link the the website. This should bring up the whole of the Iberian peninsula. There is a search box on the page.
I also use the Android app, and you will find the OSM geospatial data set is used by many other mapping apps and camino specific tools. Many mapping services will integrate several sources, including OSM.

On the earlier question, I had a look on the IGN Android App, and found the two locations I found on OSM in Lugo province. There are more listings for the name elsewhere, but the two in Lugo province are for a callejero (street) and poblacion (?settlement). Both are near A Serra.

I haven't found anything near Morgade. @Blister Bill might have the best explanation for that.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
I hope you don't base your Camino on such outdated kind of "MAPS"
This is more a drawing of the area to give you an overview and not o map I would hiking with it.
I prefer OSM or Outdooractive with all the necessary maps offline on my pilgrimages.
don't you fret, I'm not too worried about the maps and completely realize they're all a bit different ... I love playing with and studying maps. I do have to check out OSM (never heard of it)
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
don't you fret, I'm not too worried about the maps and completely realize they're all a bit different ... I love playing with and studying maps. I do have to check out OSM (never heard of it)
I do my planning with Gronze, Buen Camino and other apps. With my Google research for open Bars/Restaurants will be filled into my spreadsheet. Like some people doing it with Brierley and other books. Even with Google you may find a Restaurant or Hotel, which doesn't exist anymore.
 
I hope you don't base your Camino on such outdated kind of "MAPS"
This is more a drawing of the area to give you an overview and not o map I would hiking with it.
I prefer OSM or Outdooractive with all the necessary maps offline on my pilgrimages.
A rubric found on an 18th century map in a Boston library:

WARNING:
Roads are shifted, houses burn,
are abandoned or rebuilt;
a round world distorts a flat map;
man’s memory is fallible;
expect not exactness.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
A rubric found on an 18th century map in a Boston library:

WARNING:
Roads are shifted, houses burn,
are abandoned or rebuilt;
a round world distorts a flat map;
man’s memory is fallible;
expect not exactness.
it's so true :)
 
Some map errors are intentionally placed by cartographers, often referred to as "trap streets" or "phantom settlements," to protect their intellectual property by identifying potential map plagiarists who might copy the error onto their own maps without realizing it; essentially acting as a copyright trap.
 
For the Frances in seasons you may be right, but I would still do some planning, as I like to know what kind of stages I have to make in between Cities/Villages I would like to spend some hours to visit.
That's the difference between research and planning. Research to know which places you think you might be interested in spending more time in, but know that you may find yourself utterly enchanted in a place that you have never heard of. Plan enough time that you can alter stages as those magical places crop up, or if you get sick or injured.
 
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Plan enough time that you can alter stages as those magical places crop up
That is why a good research will help me to find places. Even on VdlP Cádiz-SdC with 44 stages between 15km (2h 15m) and 42km (6h 45m) walking I had enough time to see unexpected things. With the right training throughout the year, it is easier to walk the few weeks on the Camino even at the age 68.
 

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