Sunday, March 30, 2014

How to post a comment

A learning experience is one of those things that says,
'You know that thing you just did? Don't do that.' 

Douglas Adams 



We love our technology but sometimes it lets us down.  From previous Camino blogs I know that some people found it easy to post comments while others tried several times only to find their comments had wandered off on their own camino, never to be seen again.

But have faith. Posting a comment usually works if you follow the steps below. My 80-something mum, Helen, is a regular Camino 'commentator' and was one of the first to post a comment on this latest blog!  Just saying ...

Posting a comment


To post a comment you need to be 'in the blog'. If you are receiving the posts by email, click on the post title to take you through to the blog. Just to confuse things, what you see may vary depending on how you've accessed the post, but this will give you the general idea.
  1. Scroll to the end of the post. You may see a text box straight away (go step 2).  Or you may see hyperlinked words No comment, 1 comment, 3 comments etc, depending on whether others have already posted a comment.  Click on the hyperlink.
  2. Type your comment in the text box.
  3. Before you are able to publish your comment, you'll be asked to choose an identity - the easiest option is to choose Name/URL. Type in your name as you want it to appear. Leave the URL blank.
  4. You may be asked to type in a verification code (anti-hacking device to ensure you're human and not a virus!).
  5. Then choose Publish your comment.
Voila!
Or just send me an email to my usual address. Either way, I will be very happy to hear from you.

In the meantime, here's a glimpse of Le Puy-en-Velay, the starting point of the Camino Le Puy.  In my next post, I'll let you know how I came to choose this Camino this time.

J. x

Le Puy-en-Velay, France


Friday, March 28, 2014

More than one Camino

These days it seems everyone is talking about The Camino. And when they do, although they may not know its name, they are probably talking about the Camino Frances - an 800 km journey from St Jean Pied de Port on the French side of the Pyrenees to Santiago de Compostela in the north west of Spain. But there is more than one Camino ...

The three questions I've been asked most about the Camino (after Why do you do it? and Where do you sleep?) are:

Where exactly is the Camino?
How many people walk the Camino?
And where do they come from?  

Where exactly is the Camino?


The Camino de Santiago, also known as El Camino de Santiago or The Way of Saint James, is made up of many 'pilgrim paths' that all lead to the town of Santiago de Compostela in northern Spain. The origins of the Camino de Santiago go back to the middle ages when the various paths were important christian pilgrimage routes with pilgrims walking to seek forgiveness from St James. It is thought that the remains of the apostle Saint James are buried in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela. These days people walk the Camino for many other reasons ...

The Camino Frances is the most popular and well known Camino and the one depicted in the recent movie The Way. I have walked this Camino twice, and its beauty and spirit are extraordinary. I hope I will walk that way again one day. But this time I am following another path.

The map below shows the 12 waymarked routes including Camino Frances (yellow, starting at St Jean Pied de Port), Camino Le Puy (green, starting at Le Puy) and Camino Primitivo (blue, starting at Oviedo, in northern Spain, just south of Gijon).

More than one Camino - the 12 main waymarked routes



How many people walk the Camino?


In 2013, 215,880 pilgrims received the compostela at the Pilgrims Office in Santiago.  The compostela is a certificate granted to pilgrims who have walked at least the last 100 kms along one of the Camino routes in to Santiago de Compostela. Of those 215,880, just over 70% had walked the Camino Frances, although only 12% of pilgrims started at St Jean Pied de Port.  Most start further along the way, with the greatest number, 24% in 2013, starting in Sarria, which is just over 100 kms from Santiago.

The remaining 30% came to Santiago via one of the other Camino routes:

70.3% Camino Frances
13.6% Camino Portugues
6.2% Camino del Norte
4.2% Via de la Plata
3.2% Camino Primitivo (where I may be by early May)
2% Camino Ingles
0.2% Muxia - Finesterre
0.2% Other Caminos (including Camino Le Puy where I will be next week).

 

Where do modern day pilgrims come from?


The first time I walked the Camino in late 2011, I met just one American and did not meet any Australians. Of course, they were on the path, we just didn't cross paths.  When Jill and I walked the Camino last year, we met quite a few Americans (many who said they'd been inspired by the movie of The Way) and a few Australians.  So where do most pilgrims come from?

The Pilgrims Office stats for 2013 show the Top 10 countries that pilgrims call home:

49% Spain
7.5% Germany
7.2% Italy
4.95% Portugal
4.69% USA
3.85% France
2.32% Ireland
1.95% UK
1.56% Canada
1.44% Australia (up by 64% since 2012 and by 129% since 2011).

So, although there has been huge growth in the number of Australians walking the Camino, we are still a small group.

As for Camino Le Puy, it seems there may not be a whole lot of pilgrims, Australian or otherwise, along the way. But there will be at least three I know who will be starting from Le Puy on  the same day as me ... that's the serendipity of the Camino.  More on that another time.

Just four more sleeps to departure day!  Yeah.

J. x





Wednesday, March 26, 2014

On The Way ... again

Less than a week to go!  On Tuesday 1 April, I will be heading to Paris, and then south by train to Le Puy en Velay, to begin another Camino adventure.

It will be a year, almost to the day, since my friend Jill and I travelled to St Jean Pied de Port to walk the 800 km Camino Frances to Santiago de Compostela.  What a great adventure that was - and how lucky we were to walk that path together.  And to be welcomed in the square outside the Cathedral de Santiago de Compostela by Jill's husband, and my friend, Martin, with green and gold tinselled posters, balloons and an Australian flag! I still get goosebumps and a big smile just thinking about it.

About 18 months earlier, in the northern autumn of 2011, I'd walked the Camino Frances for the first time. When I set out from SJPP on a late September day, I had no idea what was ahead. I remember feeling anxious, excited and alone. I took a deep breath and started walking. I could not have imagined then that The Way would sit so naturally with me.  So much so, that I would find myself walking the Camino Frances again in April 2013 and now ready to embark on a third and different Camino just a year later.

My plan this time is to walk the Camino Le Puy, approx 750 km across the south west of France from Le Puy en Velay to SJPP. From there, I will cross the Pyrenees once more and hope to walk for around two weeks on one of the 'other' camino routes in Spain. Yes there is more than one!  At this stage, I'm thinking it will be the Camino Primitivo, a 320 km route from Oviedo to Santiago de Compostela.  Or perhaps it will be another path.  No need to decide that now - that freedom is one of the many things I love about the Camino.

In the next few days, I'll write a post with a little more information on the main Camino routes of France and Spain, and another on how to post a comment on the blog, if you'd like to.  So watch this space.

Whether you follow this blog each day, or visit from time to time, I hope you will enjoy the adventure. Who knows what lies ahead? Pas moi. Not me.

J. x

PS. My earlier Camino blogs can be found here:

Jenny en Camino Frances 2011

Jenny and Jill en Camino Frances April 2013


The road from Hontanas to Castrojeriz, on the Camino Frances.
A painting by Libby Mewing, from a photo taken on  Jenny and Jill's Camino April 2013.
Thank you J and M. x