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Walking With Sticks
We live on El Camino (the French bit) and the pilgrim/hiking season is well under way. I am puzzled by the apparent indispensiblity of sticks. Almost all hikers carry them but almost none use them. When I used to go hill walking in the UK nobody used them or carried them. Are they a 'must have' that walking magazines recommend at the behest of advertisers or are they actually useful. Nobody uses them to go shopping or on the beach ...yet. Why walk all the way to Santiago de Compostella if you can't do it without sticks?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.A Canadian friend of ours who did the bit from St. Jean pied de Port as quickly as possible didn't enjoy it much. He found that most of the people didn't speak English, walked too slowly to be travelling companions and that there were better walks in Canada. Even I, an atheist get the travelling rather than the destination thing and the history has some significance.
Nordic walking is very popular around this part of Suffolk. Noticeboards are plastered with information about 'introductory courses' and lots of people can be seen walking in the countryside, or alongside main roads between villages, using walking poles.
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/Nordi c_walki ng
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Nordic walking may well be popular as an aerobic excercise. A back of envelope calculation give an extra energy requirement of between 5% and 10% for walking using 2 sticks weighing a total of 500. gm. I guess some people like punishing themselves, my friend who walked to Santiago de Compostela wouldn't even carry a Spanish dictionary because it was too heavy.