- Time of past OR future Camino
- First one in 2005 from Moissac, France.
Hey all - I was going through various posts about equipment .. puffa jackets, boots or trainers, sleeping bags or liners, ponchos or jackets .... which rucksack and why - now, don't get me wrong, I also like reading about gear, all that choice out there and one can be drawn in, most of us are - and it can be fun making those choices ... but I have also noticed a certain nervousness, even fear, in some novice pilgrims; the concern that they may not 'get it right' .. and that is a shame as the truth is that absolutely none of it is important - it just doesn't matter what you wear, which footwear, which pack - the bottom line is that it should be simple and it should be comfortable ... as well as, well, it just isn't necessary to spend huge amounts of money on kit - one could just as easily go through what one already owns and take some of that - and to check on this, to see if I was right (or just making things up in my head) I looked at earlier hikers, back fifty or more years ago ..
I found this rather amazing woman, Emma 'Grandma' Gatewood - she walked the whole of the Appalachian trail at 67 years old - on her feet she wore soft sneakers, what we in the uk call plimsolls (which reminded me that in 1973 I climbed the mountain St Victoire in Provence, on the black path, the 'death' path, without ropes or any other kit, wearing plimsolls), and her 'hiking kit' - well!
"When Emma Gatewood set out to hike the Appalachian Trail, no woman — and only five men — had ever completed a thru-hike. In 1955, the 67-year-old grandmother of 23 finished the hike and earned herself the nickname "Grandma Gatewood." Upon completion of the epic trail, she told Sports Illustrated, "I would never have started this trip if I had known how tough it was, but I couldn't and wouldn't quit." Gatewood is also known as a pioneer of ultra-light hiking — she hiked the trail in Keds sneakers and often carried just an army blanket, a raincoat and a plastic shower curtain that she used as a bag. "Grandma Gatewood" hiked the AT two more times, in 1960 and in 1963, completing her final hike in sections. She was the first person to hike the trail three times, and she was the oldest woman to thru-hike the trail until Nancy Gowler did so at the age of 71 in 2007.
So, my point is, don't be afraid, don't spend money you don't need to spend, don't worry about it - just wear what is comfortable - this is Emma as she hiked -
I found this rather amazing woman, Emma 'Grandma' Gatewood - she walked the whole of the Appalachian trail at 67 years old - on her feet she wore soft sneakers, what we in the uk call plimsolls (which reminded me that in 1973 I climbed the mountain St Victoire in Provence, on the black path, the 'death' path, without ropes or any other kit, wearing plimsolls), and her 'hiking kit' - well!
"When Emma Gatewood set out to hike the Appalachian Trail, no woman — and only five men — had ever completed a thru-hike. In 1955, the 67-year-old grandmother of 23 finished the hike and earned herself the nickname "Grandma Gatewood." Upon completion of the epic trail, she told Sports Illustrated, "I would never have started this trip if I had known how tough it was, but I couldn't and wouldn't quit." Gatewood is also known as a pioneer of ultra-light hiking — she hiked the trail in Keds sneakers and often carried just an army blanket, a raincoat and a plastic shower curtain that she used as a bag. "Grandma Gatewood" hiked the AT two more times, in 1960 and in 1963, completing her final hike in sections. She was the first person to hike the trail three times, and she was the oldest woman to thru-hike the trail until Nancy Gowler did so at the age of 71 in 2007.
So, my point is, don't be afraid, don't spend money you don't need to spend, don't worry about it - just wear what is comfortable - this is Emma as she hiked -