• 20% off everything Altus the next few days at the Camino Forum Store. More here. (Discount taken at check out)

Brands of tea in Spain

J Willhaus

Veteran Member
Nov 3, 2014
6,494
23,151
Laramie, WY
Time of past OR future Camino
2016, 2022, 2023, 2024, planned 2025
Hello my tea drinking pilgrim friends,
My tea choices in the US are limited mainly to Liptons and Tetley or an off store brand. I drink iced tea at home (unsweetened) and usually add a mint or orange spice tea bag to the brew for a different iced tea flavor.

I am a hospi at an albergue on the Camino Argonese and want to know what kind of tea to buy for tea drinkers. There is a partial box of mint tea and an almost empty box of P &G tips. There is an unopened box of Hornsby. Is the Hornsby ok? I seem to recall some remarks to the contrary in previous threads.

Please advise. There is no tea pot for loose leaf tea. Only a kettle and mugs.
 
Very light, comfortable and compressible poncho. Specially designed for protection against water for any activity.

Our Atmospheric H30 poncho offers lightness and waterproofness. Easily compressible and made with our Waterproof fabric, its heat-sealed interior seams guarantee its waterproofness. Includes carrying bag.

€60,-
Prepare for your next Camino on California's Santa Catalina Island, Oct 27 to Nov 2

henrythedog

Veteran Member
Jan 3, 2017
3,824
17,504
Lancashire UK
Time of past OR future Camino
Annually - often more - from 2014
Hello my tea drinking pilgrim friends,
My tea choices in the US are limited mainly to Liptons and Tetley or an off store brand. I drink iced tea at home (unsweetened) and usually add a mint or orange spice tea bag to the brew for a different iced tea flavor.

I am a hospi at an albergue on the Camino Argonese and want to know what kind of tea to buy for tea drinkers. There is a partial box of mint tea and an almost empty box of P &G tips. There is an unopened box of Hornsby. Is the Hornsby ok? I seem to recall some remarks to the contrary in previous threads.

Please advise. There is no tea pot for loose leaf tea. Only a kettle and mugs.
Teabags other than those sourced in the UK or Ireland (the spiritual home of tea) are universally awful.

Liptons yellow label and (IIRC) Hornemans should be banned.

Hornsby? Never come across those; but I’d leave them sealed and - if one is available - buried in a lead box.
 
F

Former member 49149

Guest
Isn't it great how we can argue on the head of a pin? Head to Santiago, and even just pretend to be interested, heading up to the sisters in the pilgrim welcome centre, who will offer you tea - from Ireland. Isn't it so funny? Tea is from India, for God's sake!
I bring tea over when I come to Pamplona, in spite of the range of miniscule little packets so beautifully packaged here!
 
New Original Camino Gear Designed Especially with The Modern Peregrino In Mind!

Flog

Pilgrim
Aug 20, 2017
1,121
3,890
Ireland
Time of past OR future Camino
2055
Isn't it great how we can argue on the head of a pin? Head to Santiago, and even just pretend to be interested, heading up to the sisters in the pilgrim welcome centre, who will offer you tea - from Ireland. Isn't it so funny? Tea is from India, for God's sake!
I bring tea over when I come to Pamplona, in spite of the range of miniscule little packets so beautifully packaged here!
Yep, proper builders tea (Barry's?) up in room 6 if you need a fix in Santiago..
 

Flog

Pilgrim
Aug 20, 2017
1,121
3,890
Ireland
Time of past OR future Camino
2055
Hello my tea drinking pilgrim friends,
My tea choices in the US are limited mainly to Liptons and Tetley or an off store brand. I drink iced tea at home (unsweetened) and usually add a mint or orange spice tea bag to the brew for a different iced tea flavor.

I am a hospi at an albergue on the Camino Argonese and want to know what kind of tea to buy for tea drinkers. There is a partial box of mint tea and an almost empty box of P &G tips. There is an unopened box of Hornsby. Is the Hornsby ok? I seem to recall some remarks to the contrary in previous threads.

Please advise. There is no tea pot for loose leaf tea. Only a kettle and mugs.
We went through a lot of coffee at Canfranc. I think I may have picked up tea bags in Eroski but there wasn't much demand..
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.

RJM

Veteran Member
May 10, 2017
2,582
7,572
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino's Frances, Fisterre, Portuges. Over 180 day
I drink both black or green tea, everyday. I drink it plain and squeeze every little drop out of the bag after it steeps for ten minutes. I can honestly say I notice no real discernible difference in taste between brands. I would drink any tea an albergue was kind enough to offer me. :)
 

Peregrina2020

New Member
Jul 25, 2022
2
4
North Auckland
Time of past OR future Camino
2025
  • Like
Reactions: DoughnutANZ

roving_rufus

Veteran Member
Oct 8, 2012
640
2,197
Ireland
Time of past OR future Camino
Frances (2013-2015) Portugues (2017-2019) Via Francigena (2018-??) Camino from Ireland (2020-??)
Mint or camomile are nice to have but as for black tea most brands in Spain are just okay. But it's nice to find tea in an albergue!
But I'm from Ireland so we are one of the highest consumers of tea per capita, and whether it's Barry's Lyons Punjana or Nambarrie, our blends tend to be quite strong as heavy on Assam - which means most other black tea blends seem wishy-washy in comparison. And explains why a cup of Barry's tea in SdeC sounds amazing!
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
Jul 18, 2014
14,096
58,471
Time of past OR future Camino
Yearly and Various 2014-2019
Via Monastica 2022
And explains why a cup of Barry's tea in SdeC sounds amazing!
Go to Tertulia. You can get a whole pot of Assam there. Made with loose tea.
Which is not to say you should give the Barry's from the welcome Centre a miss. You shouldn't - that has its own specialness, too!

Sorry @J Willhaus. Back to what you can get for Canfranc...
 

roving_rufus

Veteran Member
Oct 8, 2012
640
2,197
Ireland
Time of past OR future Camino
Frances (2013-2015) Portugues (2017-2019) Via Francigena (2018-??) Camino from Ireland (2020-??)
Go to Tertulia. You can get a whole pot of Assam there. Made with loose tea.
Which is not to say you should give the Barry's from the welcome Centre a miss. You shouldn't - that has its specialness, too
Sounds good! Loose leaf tea always beats out teabags except in one regard convenience
 

Colleen Kathma

New Member
Aug 24, 2019
15
17
Adelaide, South Australia
Time of past OR future Camino
2021
I drink both black or green tea, everyday. I drink it plain and squeeze every little drop out of the bag after it steeps for ten minutes. I can honestly say I notice no real discernible difference in taste between brands. I would drink any tea an albergue was kind enough to offer me. :)
Same! I add some Chai tea for variation. Brands? Tetley, Twinings . . . whatever on special when I shop. I'm packing for my Pilgrimage in August. Popped in a selection of tea - bags! I'll be grateful for access to hot water! Cheers!
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.

wayfarer

Veteran Member
Aug 24, 2008
5,899
17,349
Co. Clare. Ireland
Time of past OR future Camino
2012, 2013, 2014.
And explains why a cup of Barry's tea in SdeC sounds amazing!
Barry's Gold blend....the only tea worth drinking IMO. 😊
I always carry a supply with me when I travel and have often given some away like some kind of tea bag dealer. 😄
 

StuartM

Active Member
Nov 1, 2012
594
854
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino Frances (2012)
Teabags other than those sourced in the UK or Ireland (the spiritual home of tea) are universally awful.

Liptons yellow label and (IIRC) Hornemans should be banned.

Hornsby? Never come across those; but I’d leave them sealed and - if one is available - buried in a lead box.
Totally agree. The consistently worst tea I ever had in my life was travelling in Asia (closely followed by America). I was really shocked that tea-growing nations generally could not produce a decent cup of tea locally. It amazed me that 9 times out of 10 it was that yellow Liptons stuff that was on offer. If Coldplay was a drink they'd be Liptons tea.

As a hardened tea-drinker my heart would sink to see Liptons being the only tea on offer. I'm not particularly nationalistic but any non-British (maybe Irish, don't have much experience with it) tea would send me into a depression. It's one of the few things we do better than anyone. I'm not a fan of Tetley or PG Tips but I'll drink either instead of Liptons sheep dip or any other obscure European supermarket brand. My favourites: Yorkshire (the plain one, not the gold label), Ringtons, Lancashire, Scottish Blend, Nambarrie at a push. Never seen any of those in Spain (seen Yorkshire on sale in Italy so maybe it's spreading).

I think the only thing a proper tea-drinker hates more than being offered Liptons is being offered mint tea. I'd actually be quite insulted by it, it's like offering a coffee drinker a cup of warm coke because it's kind of the same thing.

I don't go more than 5 miles from home without taking teabags with me.
 
3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc

Laura Blue

Member
Feb 12, 2016
37
80
Time of past OR future Camino
Saria to SDC 2014 - SDC to Muxia 2015 - planned Porto to SDC coastal March 2016
In Spain you mostly get Lipton's which is weak, Tetley or PG tips are fine for an English tea drinker, but then if course it depends if there is milk.
I guess when travelling it's best just to go with the flow and look forward to home comforts on return. 🤣
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.

lt56ny

Veteran Member
Jul 28, 2012
4,776
12,821
Bucerias, Mexico
Time of past OR future Camino
2024 Aragones, Madrid, Portugues Coastal
Hello my tea drinking pilgrim friends,
My tea choices in the US are limited mainly to Liptons and Tetley or an off store brand. I drink iced tea at home (unsweetened) and usually add a mint or orange spice tea bag to the brew for a different iced tea flavor.

I am a hospi at an albergue on the Camino Argonese and want to know what kind of tea to buy for tea drinkers. There is a partial box of mint tea and an almost empty box of P &G tips. There is an unopened box of Hornsby. Is the Hornsby ok? I seem to recall some remarks to the contrary in previous threads.

Please advise. There is no tea pot for loose leaf tea. Only a kettle and mugs
Don't know anything about teas. Strictly cafe con leche kind of guy. Thanks for volunteering. Are you in Canfranc?
 
  • Like
Reactions: MaryLynn

GailGwyn

Active Member
Jun 18, 2017
317
407
Time of past OR future Camino
part Camino Frances (2013), Part Camino Norte (2014)Camino Frances (2019)Camino Portuguese (2020)
Yep, proper builders tea (Barry's?) up in room 6 if you need a fix in Santiago..
I love visiting the sisters in room 6 when I reach Santiago. By then I'm ready for a 'proper' cuppa.
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.

Marcus-UK

Old Git
May 13, 2015
363
654
Birmingham
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino Ingles 2016 Camino Portuguese 2017
IIsn't it great how we can argue on the head of a pin? Head to Santiago, and even just pretend to be interested, heading up to the sisters in the pilgrim welcome centre, who will offer you tea - from Ireland. Isn't it so funny? Tea is from India, for God's sake!
I bring tea over when I come to Pamplona, in spite of the range of miniscule little packets so beautifully packaged here!
Tea is not from India. Commercial Tea growing originated in China. The Portuguese and British traders set up tea plantations in their former colonies which included India.

To get a decent Irish/English brew you need a strong black tea and usually double up on the local tea bags to hope for a decnt strength and colour.
 

amancio

Veteran Member
Nov 2, 2007
1,121
3,546
Durcal, Granada
Time of past OR future Camino
Frances, Norte, Primit, Salvador, Portug, Arag, Ingles, VdlP, Leban-Vadin, Fisterra, Invierno, LePuy
Might be Hornimans. I misread.
hornimans tastes like stake sawdust, get rid of it now!!!

PG tips and Tetley are available in Mercadona and Lidl, both are reasonable brands. As a Spaniard, I have my tea imported from Ireland, actually, Barry's, or else Lyons from UK. Spanish tea is awful in general, we do not have a tradition to drink tea, and will never have one if we still only drink Hornimans and Lipton and the like.

Thanks for being so considerate, I carry my own tea bags when I go on the Camino, actually!

Another very common sin in Spain is regarding milk: people like to drink ultrprocessed cheap milk that tastes awful, it is not always easy to find fresh milk, the kind of milk you NEED to keep in a fridge. If you have an opportunity, try to avoid that shitty milk too.
Makes a lot of a difference!

Enjoy that amazing town, Canfranc, you are very lucky, I hope the river Aragón is full o fresh, clean water this year!
 

J Willhaus

Veteran Member
Nov 3, 2014
6,494
23,151
Laramie, WY
Time of past OR future Camino
2016, 2022, 2023, 2024, planned 2025
hornimans tastes like stake sawdust, get rid of it now!!!

PG tips and Tetley are available in Mercadona and Lidl, both are reasonable brands. As a Spaniard, I have my tea imported from Ireland, actually, Barry's, or else Lyons from UK. Spanish tea is awful in general, we do not have a tradition to drink tea, and will never have one if we still only drink Hornimans and Lipton and the like.

Thanks for being so considerate, I carry my own tea bags when I go on the Camino, actually!

Another very common sin in Spain is regarding milk: people like to drink ultrprocessed cheap milk that tastes awful, it is not always easy to find fresh milk, the kind of milk you NEED to keep in a fridge. If you have an opportunity, try to avoid that shitty milk too.
Makes a lot of a difference!

Enjoy that amazing town, Canfranc, you are very lucky, I hope the river Aragón is full o fresh, clean water this year!
It is a beautiful setting here. Thanks for the tea advice. I haven't seen milk except the kind hermetically sealed in the 1 liter boxes, but my kids used to show dairy cows in 4H in the states so I know the kind you mean. We have not had a single pilgrim ask for or make tea yet, but I put out the choices we have every day and I make my own iced tea to drink during these hot days.
 
Very light, comfortable and compressible poncho. Specially designed for protection against water for any activity.

Our Atmospheric H30 poncho offers lightness and waterproofness. Easily compressible and made with our Waterproof fabric, its heat-sealed interior seams guarantee its waterproofness. Includes carrying bag.

€60,-

Robi Diaz De Vivar

Active Member
Apr 11, 2019
183
479
Cortelazor la Real, 21208, HUELVA, Espana
Time of past OR future Camino
Frances (2016), Norte (2017), Portuges (2018), Mozarabe (2019), Primitivo (2019), Via de La Plata (2
Hello my tea drinking pilgrim friends,
My tea choices in the US are limited mainly to Liptons and Tetley or an off store brand. I drink iced tea at home (unsweetened) and usually add a mint or orange spice tea bag to the brew for a different iced tea flavor.

I am a hospi at an albergue on the Camino Argonese and want to know what kind of tea to buy for tea drinkers. There is a partial box of mint tea and an almost empty box of P &G tips. There is an unopened box of Hornsby. Is the Hornsby ok? I seem to recall some remarks to the contrary in previous threads.

Please advise. There is no tea pot for loose leaf tea. Only a kettle and mugs.
Hi there. I think that maybe you mean Hornimans (a popular Spanish brand of tea) not Hornsby. It is a very good brand and any of its many flavours are excellent, I am a particular fan of their Minty Moroccan. If your clientele is mostly Spanish then I recommend that you stock supplies of Manzanilla (camomile) Tila (lime flower) and menta poleo (penny royal-spearmint blend). I run a guest-house in Andalucia and this reflects our Spanish guests' preferences. Good luck and I hope that your peregrinos appreciate your thoughtfulness. Happy dia de Santiago!!!!!
 

Brooklynpoet

Member
Feb 19, 2020
60
89
New York
Time of past OR future Camino
Frances (July 2020)
Teabags other than those sourced in the UK or Ireland (the spiritual home of tea) are universally awful.

Liptons yellow label and (IIRC) Hornemans should be banned.

Hornsby? Never come across those; but I’d leave them sealed and - if one is available - buried in a lead box.
Completely agree. And PH tips is fine. I think Twinings eng breakfast is awful though, though their darjeeling isn’t bad- so Twinings is a partial exception to the British/Irish rule. And of course for loose teas, China and India rule.
 
  • Like
Reactions: MaryLynn
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.

Sharonih

Active Member
Nov 17, 2016
203
324
Vancouver Island, Canada
Time of past OR future Camino
CF (SJPdP to Santiago) March 15, 2018
Hello my tea drinking pilgrim friends,
My tea choices in the US are limited mainly to Liptons and Tetley or an off store brand. I drink iced tea at home (unsweetened) and usually add a mint or orange spice tea bag to the brew for a different iced tea flavor.

I am a hospi at an albergue on the Camino Argonese and want to know what kind of tea to buy for tea drinkers. There is a partial box of mint tea and an almost empty box of P &G tips. There is an unopened box of Hornsby. Is the Hornsby ok? I seem to recall some remarks to the contrary in previous threads.

Please advise. There is no tea pot for loose leaf tea. Only a kettle and mugs.
Honestly tea like coffee is a preference thing but any tea you buy will be drank and appreciated.
 

Bert45

Veteran Member
Jan 7, 2018
776
1,076
UK
Time of past OR future Camino
2003, 2014, 2016, 2016, 2018, 2019
I think that the main problem with tea made on the Continent is that they don't understand that the water must be BOILING before being poured onto the tea in a warmed tea-pot. They seem to think that hot water will do. If you don't have a tea-pot (buy one!) you can still make a half-decent cuppa if you warm the mug before pouring the boiling water onto the tea bag. You must wait at least three minutes before adding milk. I use a tea-pot and always put the milk in the cup or mug first, but I have to adapt when I'm not at home.
 
3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc

MariaSP

Active Member
Dec 11, 2017
179
773
Galicia
spanishforcamino.com
Time of past OR future Camino
C. inglés 2029
C. portugués 2021, 2022
Teabags other than those sourced in the UK or Ireland (the spiritual home of tea) are universally awful.

Liptons yellow label and (IIRC) Hornemans should be banned.

Hornsby? Never come across those; but I’d leave them sealed and - if one is available - buried in a lead box.
Totally agree about Liptons and Hornimans. 😂
 

J Willhaus

Veteran Member
Nov 3, 2014
6,494
23,151
Laramie, WY
Time of past OR future Camino
2016, 2022, 2023, 2024, planned 2025
I am personally a coffee snob and only like one kind/brand of coffee at home so I can understand preferences with tea would be similar. I only like coffee with cream although I drink it with whole milk or as coffee con leche here in Spain.
 

amancio

Veteran Member
Nov 2, 2007
1,121
3,546
Durcal, Granada
Time of past OR future Camino
Frances, Norte, Primit, Salvador, Portug, Arag, Ingles, VdlP, Leban-Vadin, Fisterra, Invierno, LePuy
I think that the main problem with tea made on the Continent is that they don't understand that the water must be BOILING before being poured onto the tea in a warmed tea-pot. They seem to think that hot water will do. If you don't have a tea-pot (buy one!) you can still make a half-decent cuppa if you warm the mug before pouring the boiling water onto the tea bag. You must wait at least three minutes before adding milk. I use a tea-pot and always put the milk in the cup or mug first, but I have to adapt when I'm not at home.
indeed, it is very common to see people heat up water in a microwave which, on top of being quite dangerous (very hot water might splash in your face as you bring it out of the microwave oven). Indeed, water needs to BOIL. A teapot is desirable, but not a complete must, a decent mug, boiling water, a proper brand of tea and real milk, that is all it takes!
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).

MariaSP

Active Member
Dec 11, 2017
179
773
Galicia
spanishforcamino.com
Time of past OR future Camino
C. inglés 2029
C. portugués 2021, 2022
Hi there. I think that maybe you mean Hornimans (a popular Spanish brand of tea) not Hornsby. It is a very good brand and any of its many flavours are excellent, I am a particular fan of their Minty Moroccan. If your clientele is mostly Spanish then I recommend that you stock supplies of Manzanilla (camomile) Tila (lime flower) and menta poleo (penny royal-spearmint blend). I run a guest-house in Andalucia and this reflects our Spanish guests' preferences. Good luck and I hope that your peregrinos appreciate your thoughtfulness. Happy dia de Santiago!!!!!
Hornimans black tea is awful, I wouldn't offer it to my worst enemy.
Other Hornimans flavours are good, as you say.
 
  • Like
Reactions: henrythedog
F

Former member 49149

Guest
Tea is not from India. Commercial Tea growing originated in China. The Portuguese and British traders set up tea plantations in their former colonies which included India.

To get a decent Irish/English brew you need a strong black tea and usually double up on the local tea bags to hope for a decnt strength and colour.
Hey, grumpy, thanks, I sit corrected.. I know that is not your name, just being skittish. I also know the Chinese invented nearly everything. I was just being lazy. I know the traders you referred to set up everything to be in their favour. If it were not so serious, one would have to laugh. Everything comes back to bite us. Everything. We have short memories and don't want to know, though, do we?
Hang on, this is about tea, and specifically what Janet should pick up next time she goes shopping... good luck, Janet. And now for the nugget: the pilgrim accepts... 🤣
(and my father would drink ghastly stuff as black as the earl of hell's waistcoat, having been on the gas for hours...)
 

RJM

Veteran Member
May 10, 2017
2,582
7,572
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino's Frances, Fisterre, Portuges. Over 180 day
Same! I add some Chai tea for variation. Brands? Tetley, Twinings . . . whatever on special when I shop. I'm packing for my Pilgrimage in August. Popped in a selection of tea - bags! I'll be grateful for access to hot water! Cheers!
I don't know about now but pre pandemic on the Frances I found the availability of cups and a way to heat water for tea or even instant coffee to be hit and miss at the albergues. The only solutions I ever found practical is carry your own cup (microwave safe) and one of those electric water boilers that clip on a cup. Covers all bases.
 
Prepare for your next Camino on California's Santa Catalina Island, Oct 27 to Nov 2

RJM

Veteran Member
May 10, 2017
2,582
7,572
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino's Frances, Fisterre, Portuges. Over 180 day
I think that the main problem with tea made on the Continent is that they don't understand that the water must be BOILING before being poured onto the tea in a warmed tea-pot. They seem to think that hot water will do. If you don't have a tea-pot (buy one!) you can still make a half-decent cuppa if you warm the mug before pouring the boiling water onto the tea bag. You must wait at least three minutes before adding milk. I use a tea-pot and always put the milk in the cup or mug first, but I have to adapt when I'm not at home.
While on the Camino I've taken a couple of tea bags and squeezed them into my water bottle containing the warmest tap water I can put in it, and then I leave the tea bag strings hanging out the mouth of the bottle and screw the lid down tight. The threads keep it in place and I never leaked on me. I let it soak for a while and take out the bags and have 500ml of cool tea to drink.
Nice improvise, overcome and adapting, right?
 

Marcus-UK

Old Git
May 13, 2015
363
654
Birmingham
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino Ingles 2016 Camino Portuguese 2017
Hey, grumpy, thanks, I sit corrected.. I know that is not your name, just being skittish. I also know the Chinese invented nearly everything. I was just being lazy. I know the traders you referred to set up everything to be in their favour. If it were not so serious, one would have to laugh. Everything comes back to bite us. Everything. We have short memories and don't want to know, though, do we?
Hang on, this is about tea, and specifically what Janet should pick up next time she goes shopping... good luck, Janet. And now for the nugget: the pilgrim accepts... 🤣
(and my father would drink ghastly stuff as black as the earl of hell's waistcoat, having been on the gas for hours...)
BTW, The Portuguese introduced Tea drinking to the English. Katherine of Braganca brought it with her when she married Charles II. It became fashionable and as a consequence, the Opium wars ensued with China, who did not want to take Opium in exchange for Tea. This also resulted in the British transplanting tea bushes to India, Ceylon, Malaysia, Nigeria etc...
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.

Scott Sweeney

Veteran Member
Jun 19, 2014
744
1,094
Fredericksburg, Va.
Isn't it great how we can argue on the head of a pin? Head to Santiago, and even just pretend to be interested, heading up to the sisters in the pilgrim welcome centre, who will offer you tea - from Ireland. Isn't it so funny? Tea is from India, for God's sake!
I bring tea over when I come to Pamplona, in spite of the range of miniscule little packets so beautifully packaged here!
Tea actually had it's origin in China, but yes over that doesn't reaction. ;-)
 
  • Thank you
Reactions: DoughnutANZ

Jeff Crawley

Veteran Member
Nov 9, 2014
3,935
11,733
Kent, UK
canterburypilgrim.wordpress.com
Time of past OR future Camino
A "Tourigrino" trip once Covid has passed, so 2023
Isn't it great how we can argue on the head of a pin? Head to Santiago, and even just pretend to be interested, heading up to the sisters in the pilgrim welcome centre, who will offer you tea - from Ireland. Isn't it so funny? Tea is from India, for God's sake!
I bring tea over when I come to Pamplona, in spite of the range of miniscule little packets so beautifully packaged here!
I know the world should aspire to Barry's but can I put a mention in for Kenyan tea? Go on, go on, go on, go on ;)
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.

Sixwheeler

Active Member
Jun 28, 2013
500
919
76
Bath, U.K.
Time of past OR future Camino
2013
Teabags other than those sourced in the UK or Ireland (the spiritual home of tea) are universally awful.

Liptons yellow label and (IIRC) Hornemans should be banned.

Hornsby? Never come across those; but I’d leave them sealed and - if one is available - buried in a lead box.
🤣🤣🤣
 
  • Like
Reactions: SusanWW

DoughnutANZ

Ka whati te tai ka kai te tōreapango
Apr 16, 2019
2,926
10,989
Tamaki Makaurau Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand
Time of past OR future Camino
2019, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027 & 2028.
Tea actually had it's origin in China
Indeed it did and China still has the best tea in the world. Last time I was there and went to a supermarket they had over a hundred different brands with some of them costing around a week's wages.

It is interesting what some people get used to when they have less choice, as in Britain.
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
Feb 19, 2022
12
11
Cambridge uk
Time of past OR future Camino
Future
Hello my tea drinking pilgrim friends,
My tea choices in the US are limited mainly to Liptons and Tetley or an off store brand. I drink iced tea at home (unsweetened) and usually add a mint or orange spice tea bag to the brew for a different iced tea flavor.

I am a hospi at an albergue on the Camino Argonese and want to know what kind of tea to buy for tea drinkers. There is a partial box of mint tea and an almost empty box of P &G tips. There is an unopened box of Hornsby. Is the Hornsby ok? I seem to recall some remarks to the contrary in previous threads.

Please advise. There is no tea pot for loose leaf tea. Only a kettle and mugs.
I am a big tea drinker from England and I would strongly suggest getting Twinings Assam and English Breakfast tea- you can order from Amazon. Earl Grey is nice - but EG is tea you enjoy- Assam & EB are the teas you NEED!
 
  • Like
Reactions: Taswegian Traveller
Jun 24, 2021
59
70
Gold Coast, Australia
Time of past OR future Camino
CF September 2022
CF April 2024
I love visiting the sisters in room 6 when I reach Santiago. By then I'm ready for a 'proper' cuppa.
@GailGwyn, what/where is this 'room 6' referenced in a couple of posts? Seems as a tea drinker only, I'm going to be in serious/desperate need of finding the sisters in room 6 when I arrive in SdC later this year. 😁
 
Jul 18, 2014
14,096
58,471
Time of past OR future Camino
Yearly and Various 2014-2019
Via Monastica 2022
EG is tea you enjoy
Oh, not it's not. Some of us hate the bergamot flavor of it. Ick.
Assam (if it's black) or matcha (if it's green). I guess I live in the extremes. 🤭

what/where is this 'room 6' referenced in a couple of posts? Seems as a tea drinker only, I'm going to be in serious/desperate need of finding the sisters in room 6 when I arrive in SdC later this year
It's upstairs from where you get your compostella. Just go up there and walk in the direction of the street you came in from. And the tea is a small part of what's offered there.
 
3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
F

Former member 49149

Guest
Oh, not it's not. Some of us hate the bergamot flavor of it. Ick.
Assam (if it's black) or matcha (if it's green). I guess I live in the extremes. 🤭


It's upstairs from where you get your compostella. Just go up there and walk in the direction of the street you came in from. And the tea is a small part of what's offered there.
You are so correct, @VNwalking. The sisters offer a space to share something of your experience on camino if you wish, and the tea is incidental, actually! However, they understand very well that it is an attraction!
 
F

Former member 49149

Guest
Hello my tea drinking pilgrim friends,
My tea choices in the US are limited mainly to Liptons and Tetley or an off store brand. I drink iced tea at home (unsweetened) and usually add a mint or orange spice tea bag to the brew for a different iced tea flavor.

I am a hospi at an albergue on the Camino Argonese and want to know what kind of tea to buy for tea drinkers. There is a partial box of mint tea and an almost empty box of P &G tips. There is an unopened box of Hornsby. Is the Hornsby ok? I seem to recall some remarks to the contrary in previous threads.

Please advise. There is no tea pot for loose leaf tea. Only a kettle and mugs.
On your way home when you say goodbye to your service as hospitaleros, if you have nothing better to do, you can have a look at wiki for information on tea worldwide! I looked it up after some of the excellent information in the posts above helped me to visualise some of the old fashioned pubs, with lettering stating they were importers of fine teas...
 
  • Love - Red heart
  • Like
Reactions: Bala and mspath
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.

mspath

Veteran Member
Nov 25, 2009
11,319
49,349
France
allmycaminos.blogspot.fr
Time of past OR future Camino
Frances, autumn/winter; 2004, 2005-2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
It is often the simple sharing/drinking of tea that is most important. For a happy camino mutual celebratory brew read here
 
Last edited:

Marcus-UK

Old Git
May 13, 2015
363
654
Birmingham
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino Ingles 2016 Camino Portuguese 2017
Hello my tea drinking pilgrim friends,
My tea choices in the US are limited mainly to Liptons and Tetley or an off store brand. I drink iced tea at home (unsweetened) and usually add a mint or orange spice tea bag to the brew for a different iced tea flavor.

I am a hospi at an albergue on the Camino Argonese and want to know what kind of tea to buy for tea drinkers. There is a partial box of mint tea and an almost empty box of P &G tips. There is an unopened box of Hornsby. Is the Hornsby ok? I seem to recall some remarks to the contrary in previous threads.

Please advise. There is no tea pot for loose leaf tea. Only a kettle and mugs.
You would normaly use loose leaf tea in a pot or a jug and after steeping/mashing the tea is poured through a strainer into a cup or mug.However it is OK to make Tea in a mug using loose leaf tea. Use a teaspoon or so of tea leaves and pour on boiling water. After you have added milk/sugar the tea leaves settle to the bottom of the cup and you just have to remember not to drink the las CM or half inch of liquid.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
Prepare for your next Camino on California's Santa Catalina Island, Oct 27 to Nov 2
F

Former member 49149

Guest
I remember going to USA from the Philippines after a five month stay there in the late 70s. There were two things I was looking forward to; a bath, not a shower, and a glass of cold fresh milk.
Since then I have been out of my own place on many occasions. I have learned to try new things, without looking forward to what is familiar, just being where I am. My own take on the fact that fresh milk is either not easily available or very expensive in other places? There are reasons I know nothing about!
We all have our stereotypes, and we have to be careful as we may tread on sensibilities with our projections of what is right or normal.
Thanks again to Janet for the evidence of trying to meet little needs of passing pilgrims in asking for advice about popular teas... and safe return to yourself and Phil, Janet, when your hospitalero spell is up.
 

GailGwyn

Active Member
Jun 18, 2017
317
407
Time of past OR future Camino
part Camino Frances (2013), Part Camino Norte (2014)Camino Frances (2019)Camino Portuguese (2020)
@GailGwyn, what/where is this 'room 6' referenced in a couple of posts? Seems as a tea drinker only, I'm going to be in serious/desperate need of finding the sisters in room 6 when I arrive in SdC later this year. 😁
It's upstairs above the Pilgrims Office. Pilgrims can pop in anytime for a cup of tea/coffee, but the sisters and volunteers always invite people to come at the end of the Mass in English. You can sit and chat to other pilgrims. They also have a more 'in depth' sharing, for those who want it, each afternoon. They call themselves Camino Companions. They belong to the FCJ order. www.fcjsisters.org. it's all very friendly and informal.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.

LavanyaLea

Active Member
Jan 12, 2022
422
990
UK
Time of past OR future Camino
N Wales, Frances, Salvador, Primitivo 2022
Tea actually had it's origin in China,
👍🏻 I held back for soooo long to jump in on the tea discussion 🙊
Indeed it did and China still has the best tea in the world. Last time I was there and went to a supermarket they had over a hundred different brands with some of them costing around a week's wages.
Indeed! I went to a tea plantation for dragon well tea, and they really pay attention to how they grow tea! Workers must come by bicycles so as not to pollute the trees, and tourists with cars can only come past certain hours. They have multiple harvests and produce multiple grades of quality tea, by late summer the tea was only good enough to make pillow stuffing (😱) so at home I still have a pillow stuffed with dragon well loose leaf tea, it smells so nice. Re: Cost, I have some pu erh tea that is compressed into circular discs wrapped in paper, they look so posh and I have seen people put them on their display cabinet. No idea about the cost as I mostly get the good tea as gifts, but now I’m too scared to open mine!
Yuk! Who would be so uncivilized as to pollute any tea with milk.
Tea bags contain broken tea leaves, sometimes with twigs as well. So adding milk will improve the flavour 😉

Also the bags will protect the leaves from getting burnt by boiling water, just being controversial here! So, green (and white) tea should be brewed at lower temperature, around 85C. Black tea at around 90C. In Japan people use a water heater and keep the water at 90C to brew tea. Never brew tea with boiling water!

The Chinese will actually throw away the first brew, to get rid of any bitterness from the dust stuck on the surface of the leaves. If in a restaurant, they use the hot water/tea to clean the plates and cutleries. Second and third brew are the best.

To be even more pedantic, you shouldn’t reboil the water as it will lose more oxygen and tea needs oxygen to develop the flavour - I guess maybe why the Japanese never actually boil the water, they just heat it until a set temp (in most houses I have been in it was 90C).

These are old grandmother’s tales that were told to me, but apparently Twinnings agree too!

But I agree that the beauty of drinking tea is not on finding the best quality leaves and brewing it the perfect way, but more on the spirit of camaraderie associated with drinking tea. Having a cuppa is more about relaxing, warming your cold hands around the warm cup of tea, sharing stories with friends.
 
Technical backpack for day trips with backpack cover and internal compartment for the hydration bladder. Ideal daypack for excursions where we need a medium capacity backpack. The back with Air Flow System creates large air channels that will keep our back as cool as possible.

€83,-

WGroleau

Wandering Weirdo aka 伟思礼
Nov 23, 2015
1,026
1,371
Time of past OR future Camino
2015–2018 (partial)
As a hardened tea-drinker my heart would sink to see Liptons being the only tea on offer. I'm not particularly nationalistic but any non-British (maybe Irish, don't have much experience with it) tea would send me into a depression. It's one of the few things we do better than anyone.
I fid it amusing that we (myself included) tend to think that what we are accustomed to is better than the methods of the people we got it from.
 
  • Like
Reactions: henrythedog

J Willhaus

Veteran Member
Nov 3, 2014
6,494
23,151
Laramie, WY
Time of past OR future Camino
2016, 2022, 2023, 2024, planned 2025
It is difficult at times where I live to buy black tea in the US unless it is an Iced Tea bag meant for cold brew. My husband does drink Constant Comment which is a black tea with orange spice blend. We do see sometimes see English Breakfast and Earl Grey, but many times my choices are limited to a variety of herbal teas without caffeine. I don't care for green tea. Loose leaf tea is only available at a specialty store or a supermarket of very large size even then with limited choices. In the winter we drink hot tea with honey, but the remainder of the time it is iced tea without sugar.

In the winter at albergues, I try to have ginger, lemon, or Jasmin tea available if I can find it.
 

Greg Wilson

New Member
Apr 19, 2018
19
35
Bangor County Down
Time of past OR future Camino
Ingles Sept. 18? or Easter 19
Might be Hornimans. I misread.
I‘m a committed tea drinker and would like to pass on my experience of tea drinking on overseas travel. I drink tea several times a day by the pot, not too strong, without milk or sugar and occasionally add a wedge of Orange, do try it, very refreshing! My tea of choice is single estate Darjeeling loose leaf black tea which is great to come home to after time away. it’s sad that you have no teapot so sadly you have to use tea bags. I’m not familiar with the supermarkets in your area but I hope you can purchase Liptons Yellow label tea bags, its a universal blend of black tea very popular wherever I’ve travelled throughout Europe, Middle East and Far East, which you can make as weak or strong according to individual taste. I call it my overseas choice because its not sold in English shops, more’s the pity. Like all things it’s individual taste that counts and you can never please everyone. PG Tips isn’t bad if you can get it but if you can offer a modest selection of what is available to you I’m sure most of your guests will be happy. G’luck mate!
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).

wynrich

Active Member
Jun 9, 2018
258
579
USA
Time of past OR future Camino
CF13 &14, CP16, VF17, CN18 &19, CF22, CE23, CN24
When we were in Palencia in March, about to start our camiino, in our hotel I asked for black tea with hot milk. To my surprise, they brought a little pot with hot steamed milk with the tea bag on the side. No water. So, I steeped the tea bag in the hot milk. I like my tea with lots of milk and it was very good.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Taswegian Traveller

Mycroft

Veteran Member
Jan 7, 2011
820
1,166
It is difficult at times where I live to buy black tea in the US unless it is an Iced Tea bag meant for cold brew. My husband does drink Constant Comment which is a black tea with orange spice blend. We do see sometimes see English Breakfast and Earl Grey, but many times my choices are limited to a variety of herbal teas without caffeine. I don't care for green tea. Loose leaf tea is only available at a specialty store or a supermarket of very large size even then with limited choices. In the winter we drink hot tea with honey, but the remainder of the time it is iced tea without sugar.

In the winter at albergues, I try to have ginger, lemon, or Jasmin tea available if I can find it.
I admit it has been decades since I was in Laramie, but if the population is >30,000 I wonder why it is hard to get good black teas there. Bigelow is trash--they like to use the 'fines' swept from the floor, or so I have read, and that is why they are about the cheapest of the name-brands on the shelf. I can understand why your husband likes Constant Comment, but see if you can find the original version from Good Earth.
Twinings make a pretty good lemon ginger tea, since you mention it.
I suppose God invented online shopping for these occasions.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Taswegian Traveller
New Original Camino Gear Designed Especially with The Modern Peregrino In Mind!
Ideal sleeping bag liner whether we want to add a thermal plus to our bag, or if we want to use it alone to sleep in shelters or hostels. Thanks to its mummy shape, it adapts perfectly to our body.

€46,-

Taswegian Traveller

New Member
Nov 16, 2019
12
35
Australia
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino del Norte (Aug/Sept 2020) - postponed to ?
I am personally a coffee snob and only like one kind/brand of coffee at home so I can understand preferences with tea would be similar. I only like coffee with cream although I drink it with whole milk or as coffee con leche here in Spain.
Thanks for opening up this discussion about tea, really helpful for a wannabe peregrinas starting the CdN next April. I am someone who is not fully conscious until a mug of tea has been imbibed first thing, and use a range of brands plus (shock horror) soy milk!! 😆 So it probably doesn’t matter what brand of tea anyway!

Just a small segue with your mention of coffee and cream - am assuming if fresh milk is rare, is that the case with fresh cream too? I also love to have a daily coffee and also use cream, one of my (many) daily indulgences 😋😋
But like OP have mentioned, I just go with the flow when travelling and have what is/isn’t available and that’s just fine. You don’t want everything the same as home otherwise why would you travel 😉😆??!!
 
Last edited:

Taswegian Traveller

New Member
Nov 16, 2019
12
35
Australia
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino del Norte (Aug/Sept 2020) - postponed to ?
👍🏻 I held back for soooo long to jump in on the tea discussion 🙊

Indeed! I went to a tea plantation for dragon well tea, and they really pay attention to how they grow tea! Workers must come by bicycles so as not to pollute the trees, and tourists with cars can only come past certain hours. They have multiple harvests and produce multiple grades of quality tea, by late summer the tea was only good enough to make pillow stuffing (😱) so at home I still have a pillow stuffed with dragon well loose leaf tea, it smells so nice. Re: Cost, I have some pu erh tea that is compressed into circular discs wrapped in paper, they look so posh and I have seen people put them on their display cabinet. No idea about the cost as I mostly get the good tea as gifts, but now I’m too scared to open mine!

Tea bags contain broken tea leaves, sometimes with twigs as well. So adding milk will improve the flavour 😉

Also the bags will protect the leaves from getting burnt by boiling water, just being controversial here! So, green (and white) tea should be brewed at lower temperature, around 85C. Black tea at around 90C. In Japan people use a water heater and keep the water at 90C to brew tea. Never brew tea with boiling water!

The Chinese will actually throw away the first brew, to get rid of any bitterness from the dust stuck on the surface of the leaves. If in a restaurant, they use the hot water/tea to clean the plates and cutleries. Second and third brew are the best.

To be even more pedantic, you shouldn’t reboil the water as it will lose more oxygen and tea needs oxygen to develop the flavour - I guess maybe why the Japanese never actually boil the water, they just heat it until a set temp (in most houses I have been in it was 90C).

These are old grandmother’s tales that were told to me, but apparently Twinnings agree too!

But I agree that the beauty of drinking tea is not on finding the best quality leaves and brewing it the perfect way, but more on the spirit of camaraderie associated with drinking tea. Having a cuppa is more about relaxing, warming your cold hands around the warm cup of tea, sharing stories with friends.
Very informative, thank you! And I have seen the kettles with different water temperatures here in Australia for very particular folk 😉
 
  • Like
Reactions: LavanyaLea

Anamiri

Veteran Member
Feb 7, 2018
1,761
5,218
New Zealand
Time of past OR future Camino
2016, 2017, 2019 Camino Frances
Yuk! Who would be so uncivilized as to pollute any tea with milk.
I love my tea with milk- but not steamed milk (real not soy etc), I learned to wait until they put in the boiling water (or not in many cases) and then ask for milk. Asking for it all it in one sentence often gave me a steamed milk version - which is not great.
I had good tea in a lovely place in Viana that also did the foot washing and a meditation - a treat.

Random information -I've noticed that adding milk makes it a lot easier to clean the cups. Strong black tea (my husband) stains the cups. Also if you spill your tea, having added milk makes it easier to get out of the carpet.
 
Last edited:
Very light, comfortable and compressible poncho. Specially designed for protection against water for any activity.

Our Atmospheric H30 poncho offers lightness and waterproofness. Easily compressible and made with our Waterproof fabric, its heat-sealed interior seams guarantee its waterproofness. Includes carrying bag.

€60,-

J Willhaus

Veteran Member
Nov 3, 2014
6,494
23,151
Laramie, WY
Time of past OR future Camino
2016, 2022, 2023, 2024, planned 2025
Whole milk is available in the carton at most breakfasts. I buy the individual creamer packs from Eroski (10 little cups) for when I am walking and carry them in a small hard plastic cup in my pack along with individual butter packs for making bocadillos.

As a hospitalero, I buy the small cooking cream cartons for my coffee and keep them in the fridge.
 
  • Thank you
Reactions: Taswegian Traveller

StuartM

Active Member
Nov 1, 2012
594
854
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino Frances (2012)
I fid it amusing that we (myself included) tend to think that what we are accustomed to is better than the methods of the people we got it from.
Sadly, the methods of the people we got it from now seems to be using a mass produced teabag from Unilever rather than the locally produced tea. The times you get locally produced tea done in the traditional manner it's always lovely but in my experience it's harder and harder to come by. Last time I was travelling in Asia if I asked for tea it was generally one of those Liptons yellow teabags in a cup of lukewarm water that was served.

I have never met anyone who thought Liptons produced nice tea, it amazes me that the company sells anything. Which is sad as the company was founded in my home town and my parents and grandparents always talked fondly of Liptons shops, it was a quality brand at one point before the money men got their claws into it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Bala and MikeJS

wayfarer

Veteran Member
Aug 24, 2008
5,899
17,349
Co. Clare. Ireland
Time of past OR future Camino
2012, 2013, 2014.
Sadly, the methods of the people we got it from now seems to be using a mass produced teabag from Unilever rather than the locally produced tea. The times you get locally produced tea done in the traditional manner it's always lovely but in my experience it's harder and harder to come by. Last time I was travelling in Asia if I asked for tea it was generally one of those Liptons yellow teabags in a cup of lukewarm water that was served.

I have never met anyone who thought Liptons produced nice tea, it amazes me that the company sells anything. Which is sad as the company was founded in my home town and my parents and grandparents always talked fondly of Liptons shops, it was a quality brand at one point before the money men got their claws into it.
This is why I love Barry's tea, its a family run company who import and blend their tea.
 
Ideal sleeping bag liner whether we want to add a thermal plus to our bag, or if we want to use it alone to sleep in shelters or hostels. Thanks to its mummy shape, it adapts perfectly to our body.

€46,-

StuartM

Active Member
Nov 1, 2012
594
854
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino Frances (2012)
This is why I love Barry's tea, its a family run company who import and blend their tea.
My local supermarket is a small, family-owned independent chain. They started out in the 1850's as tea & coffee importers and it's still one of their main focuses. I buy my loose tea from them. For teabags I buy Yorkshire, they're still an independent and tastes decent.
 
  • Like
Reactions: wayfarer

Marcus-UK

Old Git
May 13, 2015
363
654
Birmingham
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino Ingles 2016 Camino Portuguese 2017
I fid it amusing that we (myself included) tend to think that what we are accustomed to is better than the methods of the people we got it from.


My very first summer job was making Tea and fetching sandwiches/Pop/Biscuits for mainly Irish bricklayers who were being paid bonuses for the amount of bricks laid so they rarely stopped for a break. I used to brew the tea up in a large billy using the instruction to throw in a whole packet of loose leaf tea plus a 2ilb bag of sugar and wait for the correct tar like consistency! It was then strained into the bricklayers enamel billy cans and I used to deliver it to the building sites along with cans of evaporated milk. After finishing one run I would collect empty billies clean them and start again. At the end of the week if the tea was good and food delivered correctly the brickies used to share some of their bonus with the Gofer Lads and it could be quite generous.

I used the same recipe for Tea 10 years later while in the Army (albeit with Tea Bags) and actually got a smile my company sergeant major!
 
Technical backpack for day trips with backpack cover and internal compartment for the hydration bladder. Ideal daypack for excursions where we need a medium capacity backpack. The back with Air Flow System creates large air channels that will keep our back as cool as possible.

€83,-

Embee12

Active Member
Nov 13, 2021
186
230
California, CA, USA
Time of past OR future Camino
First time: Fall 2022
I had tea on my mind, also, because I'm not a coffee drinker (caf or decaf) nor do I drink caffeinated tea. (Thus, I will miss the famous cafe con leche!) Will I ever be able to find decaf green tea or rooibos anywhere? Markets? Restaurants? If I were to arrive at a cafe, say, or at breakfast at a lodging with my own bag of tea and ask for a cup of hot water plus milk, would that be very strange? I would purchase something, too...
 

Most read last week in this forum

Netflix Brazil are planning to make a film version of Paulo Coelho's book "The Pilgrimage". I've started reading the book several times and never managed more than a few pages before giving up. I...
Just finished walking the Camino Ingles/Camino Finisterre ( now languishing in the Seminario Menor in Santiago) I witnessed something a few days ago that I simply have to share. Walking with two...
As I've been reflecting on my Camino's, I've been creating a list of memorable climbs on the routes that I've walked. Some were long, steep, long and steep. Sometimes it's the conditions or the...
I can imagine that Ivar might wonder how the years have galloped by since he devised the project that 20 years ago became the Forum. It is of course a tribute to original values and ensuing...
For the foodies! https://english.elpais.com/lifestyle/2024-06-06/disfrutar-the-new-best-restaurant-in-the-world-is-in-barcelona.html?outputType=amp# And no, there’s no pilgrim discounts!
I know many like to avoid crowds, but some may like to ‘get involved’, so to advise/warn there are some big football matches being played by the Spanish National team in Euro 2024 coming up that...

❓How to ask a question

How to post a new question on the Camino Forum.

Similar threads

Forum Rules

Forum Rules

Camino Updates on YouTube

Camino Conversations

Most downloaded Resources

This site is run by Ivar at

in Santiago de Compostela.
This site participates in the Amazon Affiliate program, designed to provide a means for Ivar to earn fees by linking to Amazon
Official Camino Passport (Credential) | 2024 Camino Guides