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Planning to do the coastal route. Thank you!I haven't done the Ingles in October, but when I did the Portugues out of Porto in the first half of October 2018, the weather was fine.
Since you are talking about proximity to the coast, are you planning to walk the Coastal rather than the Central (in which case, I'll move this thread from the Central sub-forum to the Coastal sub-forum)?
Here's something you might find helpful: https://www.climatestotravel.com/cl... is quite abundant, in,(49.4 inches) per year.Hi all. We are planning to walk the Camino Porto in October 2024. I did the Ingles in October 2023, but I am wondering if the proximity to the coast would make the weather significantly different.
We left Porto the same day! We cut over to the central at Vila da Condo and cut back to coast at Ponte de Lima, then Spiritual Variante. Lovely walk, wasn’t it?DVT, I hiked Camino Portuguese, leaving Porto on Sept 26, 2023. I hiked the coast from Porto to Viana do Castelo, then took a taxi to Ponte de Lima, then proceeded the central route up through Tui and on to Santiago, 14 days total, arriving in Santiago 10 October. I was surprised how warm the weather was, with several days in the high 80s. I did not experience a single day of rain! Bob
It was such a great experience and I loved the route I picked! But the sun and heat was relentless and I did complain about it. I sent my raincoat and a few other items ahead to SdC since it looked like I wasn’t going to need them. When I read about the rains and flooding just a week later, I was So glad I wasn’t there then. I would have called it quits.We left Porto the same day! We cut over to the central at Vila da Condo and cut back to coast at Ponte de Lima, then Spiritual Variante. Lovely walk, wasn’t it?
To OP: It was unseasonably hot and dry. My new Decathlon poncho never left its pouch. The unrelenting sun was our only weather concern. The boardwalks of the coast are full sun but with a lovely ocean breeze and very flat. The central was very hot and some stages offered very little shade PLUS hills but very lovely. It started raining Oct 13, the day we left SdC and, judging by reports on this forum, did not let up for weeks with torrential rain, flooding and high winds. So, prepare for everything then fine tune based on weather reports right before you leave. No point in getting weather advice now.
Yes, I was quite prepared for rain but those that came after us and kept walking were very brave! I don’t think I would have made it.It was such a great experience and I loved the route I picked! But the sun and heat was relentless and I did complain about it. I sent my raincoat and a few other items ahead to SdC since it looked like I wasn’t going to need them. When I read about the rains and flooding just a week later, I was So glad I wasn’t there then. I would have called it quits.
In my experience the general rule is that the rain picks up as you enter Galicia.Here's something you might find helpful: https://www.climatestotravel.com/climate/portugal/porto#:~:text=The average temperature of the,Here are the average temperatures.&text=Rainfall is quite abundant, in,(49.4 inches) per year.
As a general rule, rain in northern Portugal starts to pick up in October but as David Tallan notes, you never know ...