As many of you know, online guides are available on the CSJ (Confraternity of St. James) website for a variety of Caminos. These guides are written exclusively by volunteers, pilgrims like you, and the CSJ asks only for a small donation to keep its website going and to give some support to maintaining the organization.
Most recently, some of those online guides have moved over to the Camino Resources section of this forum. The most recent Lisbon-Porto and Porto-Santiago guides, as well as the Vadiniense guide, appear not to be updated on the CSJ website. I have no idea what's going on there, but the important thing is that they are still available.
Sometimes I think people have the impression that these "guidebooks" are written by professionals who have some financial stake in them. And that impression may lead to some false expectations and sense of entitlement as to what the guides can actually deliver.
I have been personally responsible for updating the Portugués guides for a couple of years now. I haven't walked the Portugués in years and years, so I rely on people communicating with me, and every year a handful of Camino angels (you know who you are!) take the time to provide feedback so I can update. But human errors and miscommunication are inevitable, and I´m sure I get some of it wrong.
If you use one of these guides, please do it in the spirit of -- this is a labor of love, someone´s best effort, but it´s not perfect, it´s not GPS accurate, it´s not anyone´s source of income.
Rebekah (author of Invierno, Vadiniense, Salvador, and maybe a few more I´m forgetting) is "getting out of the guide-writing business." I´m happy to take over the Invierno, and Reb has given me her blessing. But unless people who use these things (and we know from download counts that there are HUGE numbers of people who do) report back to improve it, the mistakes will go uncorrected, the new albergues will go unreported, etc. etc. The Invierno guide as it now exists is based on a translation of a Spanish document I did years ago, along with my experience and Reb´s as we walked it.
Long way to say, if you use one of these guides, please be understanding, and more importantly, HELP us to improve it.
Buen camino, Laurie
Most recently, some of those online guides have moved over to the Camino Resources section of this forum. The most recent Lisbon-Porto and Porto-Santiago guides, as well as the Vadiniense guide, appear not to be updated on the CSJ website. I have no idea what's going on there, but the important thing is that they are still available.
Sometimes I think people have the impression that these "guidebooks" are written by professionals who have some financial stake in them. And that impression may lead to some false expectations and sense of entitlement as to what the guides can actually deliver.
I have been personally responsible for updating the Portugués guides for a couple of years now. I haven't walked the Portugués in years and years, so I rely on people communicating with me, and every year a handful of Camino angels (you know who you are!) take the time to provide feedback so I can update. But human errors and miscommunication are inevitable, and I´m sure I get some of it wrong.
If you use one of these guides, please do it in the spirit of -- this is a labor of love, someone´s best effort, but it´s not perfect, it´s not GPS accurate, it´s not anyone´s source of income.
Rebekah (author of Invierno, Vadiniense, Salvador, and maybe a few more I´m forgetting) is "getting out of the guide-writing business." I´m happy to take over the Invierno, and Reb has given me her blessing. But unless people who use these things (and we know from download counts that there are HUGE numbers of people who do) report back to improve it, the mistakes will go uncorrected, the new albergues will go unreported, etc. etc. The Invierno guide as it now exists is based on a translation of a Spanish document I did years ago, along with my experience and Reb´s as we walked it.
Long way to say, if you use one of these guides, please be understanding, and more importantly, HELP us to improve it.
Buen camino, Laurie