Walking the Camino de Santiago in March 2024 / St. Jean Pied de Port - Santiago de Compostela
Автор: Robin French
Загружено: 2024-04-10
Просмотров: 18070
Описание:
Love and respect to all the friends we made on the road -
from Spain, Ireland, Denmark, Korea, Canada, America, France, Italy, Germany, Hungary, Lithuania, Sri Lanka, Netherlands, Hong Kong, Mexico.
Also to the hospitaleros in all the albergues who were so friendly and welcoming. Particularly the ones who really try to preserve the true spirit of this pilgrimage.
Also to the people working in the bars for all the coffee, pastry and tortillas to keep us walking and happy.
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Yesterday? Walking.
Today? Walking.
Tomorrow? Walking.
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pack list
Karrimore Jura (cheap option) / Berghaus arrow (better quality option)
backpack rain cover
carabiner clips x2
packable tote bag
Trail runners
Barefoot sandals Xero genesis or primark flip flops(Lighter than crocs/havianas)
1x nylon drawstring bag (for sandals so pack doesn’t get dirty inside)
Rain poncho (sea to summit one is lightweight and packs small)
Suncream in travel size bottle
WASH KIT
Lightweight wash bag
Lightweight towel (S2S one the size of a tea towel is super light and adequate to dry you)
Wash soap
Dry bag for soap
Toothbrush
Toothpaste
Shaving razor
Nail clippers
Travel wet wipes
Hand sanitizer
Shower cap
Hairbrush
Vaseline
STUFF POUCH
Lightweight stuff bag
earphones
Phone charger cable
EU plug with USB (lighter than adapter)
Ear plugs + spares
Sewing needle/thread
Duct tape in a small roll
Lightweight cord
Ziplock bag for first aid items
Safety pins
Zinc tape
Safety whistle
Dressing
Plaster
Antiseptic wipes
guidebook or A4 print out
Phone
Glasses
Tissues
Lightweight wallet
Passport
Credit card
€50 notes
Credidential
Cash wallet
small coins
Pack liner or large dry bag
S2S thermolite liner
Wool top for bedtime
Wool leggings for bedtime
Small wool bedtime socks
Cotton trousers lightweight
Cotton undewear
WALKING CLOTHES
Big drawstring bag
3x thin trainer socks
1x quick dry t shirt
Light/thin Fleece
1 down puffer
dry bag for down puffer
1x quick dry shorts
1 leggings for walking
1x underwear quick dry
Wool hat (thin)
Merino buff
brimmed hat
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Notes on gram counting
I made a spreadsheet and counted every gram. it’s a good way to see where excess weight can be cut. The weight creeps in where you least expect it.
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Less support - lighter weight
If you keep it light you don’t need things that are heavy but provide support.
Bulky shoes, walking poles, rucksacks with waist support/airflow back - all are only necessary if you’re carrying more weight.
With more weight you need to drink/carry more water, more snacks, more changes of clothes
You create a positive feedback loop - and before you know or you’re carrying 8kg. Without all this unnecessary and expensive equipment - I think Phoebe and I carried around 4kg and this enables us to be very light on our feet.
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Notes on rucksack choice
Berghaus Arrow is 750g lighter ish than similar size packs with waist support/air flow. That’a a huge weight saving and it’s cheaper/less cumbersome.
30-35liters is plenty of space - I had room to spare.
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Notes on water
I bought plastic water bottles as I went - I never needed to carry more than 500ml as there were many fountains/shops along the way.
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Notes on socks
I like thin trainer socks - they are light. You can handwash them in the evening and they’re dry by morning.
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Notes on sleeping bag/liner
We walked through the month of March - it was cold some nights - mostly it was too hot with my Snugpak jungle bag so I used it like a quilt.
Phoebe had a lightweight 3 season sleeping bag that was always too hot.
The albergues that were colder always provided blankets.
If I was doing it again I’d take a Sea to Summit reactor extreme - it’s light weight and compact - and isn’t noisy.
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Notes on packliner
I always wanted my sleeping stuff/wool clothes to stay dry.
Pack liner is so noisy, when you fill your bag it rustles. I had to shove everything into my tote bag and pack my bag outside because it was too noisy. A dry bag might make less noise.
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One change of clothes?
As soon as you’re walking your clothes will get smelly and dirty. At the end of the day you can wash them (almost every albergue had lavadoras or hand washing sink) and they’ll be dry and clean for the next day.
Most days I didn’t feel I needed to clean my hiking clothes anyway.
Your evening/bedtime clothes ( wool and cotton fabrics) won’t smell because you keep them clean and don’t exercise in them. I often went a week or so without washing these.
No one said we were smelly. At least not to our faces.
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