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🟡 Founding Pilgrims — join the first wave
I’m building this free Camino Base Camp for first-time pilgrims preparing their first Camino de Santiago. If you’re here early, you’re part of the founding group. Please comment below with: 1. Where you’re from 2. When you dream of walking 3. Your biggest Camino question right now I’ll use your answers to shape the next guides, live sessions and planning tools. From someday to Santiago. Buen Camino. —Edu
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🟡 Founding Pilgrims — join the first wave
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START HERE 👋 Welcome, pilgrim — your first Camino starts now
Welcome to Camino de Santiago 🐚 If you've dreamed about walking the Camino "someday," you're in the right place. This is where someday becomes a plan — one clear step at a time. I'm your host, and here's my unfair advantage: I live in Estella, right on the Camino Francés. I watch pilgrims walk past my town every single day. So when you ask a question here, you're asking a local — not a website. 👉 DO THESE 3 THINGS RIGHT NOW (takes 5 minutes): 1. Introduce yourself 👋 Head to The Pilgrim Register and post a quick hello: where you're writing from and your "someday" — when you dream of walking. 2. Check the Classroom 📚 Start with "Start Here," then "Camino 101" — the whole Camino in one simple overview. No overwhelm, promise. 3. Get the app 📲 Download the Skool app ( iOS / Android ) so the community travels with you — you'll catch every answer and never lose momentum. A few things to know: 🤝 No question is too basic here. We were all first-timers once. 🎯 This is a warm, small tribe — not a noisy 200-page forum. 💬 Ask anything in Ask a Local. I answer every one. Whether you walk for adventure, faith, healing, or a fresh start — YOU BELONG HERE. The yellow arrows will guide you in Spain. I'll guide you until you get there. ➡️ From someday to Santiago. ¡Buen Camino!
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🔥How levels work here — from Dreamer to Compostela
Every pilgrim on the Camino carries a credential they stamp along the Way. Here, your LEVEL is your stamp — it shows how far you've come with us. Here's how it works, in plain terms. HOW YOU EARN POINTS It's simple: you get 1 point every time another member LIKES your post, comment, or reply. That's it. Writing more doesn't earn points — being HELPFUL does. The kinder and more useful you are, the faster you climb. 👍 THE 9 PILGRIM LEVELS Everyone starts at Level 1 and walks up: 1. Dreamer 🌟 — you're here, and the free courses (Start Here + Camino 101) are yours 2. Planner — unlocks the Choose Your Camino worksheet 3. Trainer — unlocks the Packing Checklist 4. Pilgrim-in-Training — unlocks the Budget Calculator + Q&A replays 5. Pilgrim 🐚 — unlocks the Stage-Planner + the "Pilgrim" title shown next to your name 6. Wayfarer — the full Template Vault + community-regular status 7. Veteran — a trusted voice, with a say in what we build next 8. Guide — an honorary mentor who helps welcome new pilgrims 9. Compostela ➡️ — legend status, and a personal invitation to walk a founder-led Camino with me WHY WE DO THIS Levels make preparing for your Camino feel like the journey it is — one step at a time, with real progress you can see. And they reward the people who make this place warm: the ones who answer questions and cheer others on.
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Is the Camino de Santiago Safe for Solo Women?
This is one of the most common questions I'm asked, and it deserves an honest answer. So here it is, plainly: YES. The Camino de Santiago is widely considered one of the safest long-distance walks in the world, and huge numbers of women walk it solo every single year. In fact, women make up a large share of all pilgrims, and on many routes, the majority. Why is it so safe? A few reasons. The Camino is a well-trodden path with pilgrims spread along it all day, so you're rarely truly alone. The towns along the way are used to welcoming pilgrims and look out for them. And there's a genuine culture of care on the Way, people watch out for each other. Here's the thing that surprises solo walkers most: you set out alone, but you're almost never lonely. You'll see the same friendly faces day after day, share meals, and often form a little "Camino family" within the first few days. Walking solo on the Camino means freedom, not isolation. That said, sensible precautions still apply, just like anywhere: - Book ahead in busy seasons so you're not caught without a bed. - Start walking early, and stop before it gets dark. - Trust your instincts, and keep a charged phone and a rough plan for each day. - Tell someone back home your general route. Thousands of women finish the Camino every year and describe it as one of the most empowering things they've ever done. If walking solo is your worry, please don't let it stop you. *** Walking solo and want a friendly group in your corner before you go? Join our free community —many of our pilgrims are women planning their first solo Camino. Ask anything in Ask a Local. You won't walk alone. 🤝
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Is the Camino de Santiago Safe for Solo Women?
Camino de Santiago Packing List for Beginners: What to Bring (and Leave)
Almost every first-time pilgrim makes the same mistake: they pack too much. After a few kilometres, every extra item feels heavier. So let's get this right before you go. Here's the beginner's packing philosophy, from the Camino Francés. THE GOLDEN RULE: your full backpack should weigh no more than about 10% of your body weight. For most people that's 6–8 kg, water included. Write that number down — it's the filter for every "should I bring this?" decision. THE BIG THREE (get these right, the rest is easy): • BACKPACK: 30–40 litres is plenty. Bigger just tempts you to overpack. • SHOES: comfortable, broken-in trail shoes or light boots. Never brand-new. Your feet are everything out here. • SLEEP: a lightweight sleeping bag or liner for the albergues (pilgrim hostels). THE ESSENTIALS: about 3 sets of walking clothes (wear one, wash one, dry one), a warm layer, a rain jacket, a sun hat, flip-flops for showers, a basic first-aid and blister kit, a water bottle, and your documents. That's genuinely most of it. WHAT TO LEAVE AT HOME: "just in case" items, jeans, more than one book, heavy toiletries, and half the clothes you first laid out. Spain has shops — you can buy anything you truly need along the way. One kind tip: on most routes you can pay a small daily service to carry your pack ahead to your next stop, so you walk with just a daypack. Good to know if weight worries you. ***Want the full printable packing checklist and honest gear advice with no sales pitch? Join our free community of beginner pilgrims — share your packing questions and we'll lighten that bag together. 🎒 From someday to Santiago.
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Camino de Santiago Packing List for Beginners: What to Bring (and Leave)
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Start your first Camino with Camino 101 — a free beginner guide and community hosted by a local on the Camino Francés. From someday to Santiago.
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