pilgrimglenn7
Active Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- st james way and portugese
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thanks so much nidarosa i really appreciate itThis is a great planning tool: https://godesalco.com/plan/frances
It looks like Cacabelos would be a good starting point for the 200 and it's a nice place with a choice of accommodation. Nearest the last 100 is usually Sarria.
nidarosa many thanks again mateI have always walked, not cycled it, but here is another good planning tool for accommodation and map/profile of the route: https://www.gronze.com/etapa/ponferrada/villafranca-bierzo
If you can't see the profile, click the + sign under the map. Yo won't be able to ride the trail up to O Cebreiro on a bike though no matter how electric it is, you have to take the road.
As I remember from four years ago there was a sign painted right on the road telling walkers and riders which way each should go at the junction.Yo won't be able to ride the trail up to O Cebreiro on a bike though no matter how electric it is, you have to take the road.
If hills are a problem, the last 100 km will be a lot better than the last 200. The last 200 include the climb up to O Cebreiro, one of the biggest climbs after the Pyrenees; and the subsequent descent to Triacastela. There isn't anything near as challenging in the last 100, which most people start at Sarria.Hey All
hey again i have decided after talking with my GP Doctor and my Physiotherapist i have decided with their reasoning as my Dr has done the trail to go from Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port on a battery assisted leg powered E Bike and ride leg power only for last 200 kilometers to Santiago de Compastela. Then 4-6 days to do the ride on same bike to Muxia to Fisterre to Santiago de Compastela to finish
A few questionshow hard is the last 200 kilometers and what town is the town to stay in closest to the 200? i heard there is one at 203 kilometers away and what type of accommodation is there until i get to santiago? and how long should it take me as i have a few health issues.
Also what is last 100 kilometer like and what is the town to start from here to the end please.
I want to thank everyone who has asked my questions so far and will continue to answer my questions
What is the gradient of the hills and how long are the hills?
As vegetarians what fruit is available in may june please? and how much are meals? are any places that have pilgrim meals do vegetarian options for same price?
I am planning for may june 2020
Thanks again all
Buen Camino
thanks so much Trecile much appreciative mateThere's a subforum here for biking the Camino
thanks much appreciative for your comment David TallanIf hills are a problem, the last 100 km will be a lot better than the last 200. The last 200 include the climb up to O Cebreiro, one of the biggest climbs after the Pyrenees; and the subsequent descent to Triacastela. There isn't anything near as challenging in the last 100, which most people start at Sarria.
Hello Pilgrimglenn7. I am so pleased to see that you are going to do the Camino on an e-bike. I am in the process of buying one for myself because otherwise it would simply be a case of giving up on cycling altogether.Hey All
hey again i have decided after talking with my GP Doctor and my Physiotherapist i have decided with their reasoning as my Dr has done the trail to go from Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port on a battery assisted leg powered E Bike and ride leg power only for last 200 kilometers to Santiago de Compastela. Then 4-6 days to do the ride on same bike to Muxia to Fisterre to Santiago de Compastela to finish
A few questionshow hard is the last 200 kilometers and what town is the town to stay in closest to the 200? i heard there is one at 203 kilometers away and what type of accommodation is there until i get to santiago? and how long should it take me as i have a few health issues.
Also what is last 100 kilometer like and what is the town to start from here to the end please.
I want to thank everyone who has asked my questions so far and will continue to answer my questions
What is the gradient of the hills and how long are the hills?
As vegetarians what fruit is available in may june please? and how much are meals? are any places that have pilgrim meals do vegetarian options for same price?
I am planning for may june 2020
Thanks again all
Buen Camino
Thanks or Muchas Gracias Mi Amiga FreeflyerHello Pilgrimglenn7. I am so pleased to see that you are going to do the Camino on an e-bike. I am in the process of buying one for myself because otherwise it would simply be a case of giving up on cycling altogether.
I agree that O'Cobreiro is a hard hill to get up and I had to walk. My husband, as fa as I recall, rode all the way up as did many of the really dedicated cyclists (I was chased at one stage by a cow who I think was probably thinking I had some food on me). If your bike has a "walk assist" mode on it you may well find you can still get up there pushing it because, although it's heavy, the motor will give some assistance.
I rode the Camino de Santiago in 2013 with my husband (on ordinary bikes). We did start from Bayonne and I've been racking my brain to recall what the final 200 kms were like. We generally kept to the roads and were very often riding alongside the trail anyway.
I discuss the stages of the ride we did from Ponferrado to Santiago in my blog (www.cyclingsofties.blog). Do have a look as it might give you a flavour of what I found the terrain like. My husband was 72 and I was 65 at the time.
Most of all, keep your promise to yourself and you will never regret it. It will be hard, but you will be surprised at how many inner resources you have hidden away, just waiting to be discovered. You meet some amazing people and each of them have their own stories to tell.
When my husband said he fancied doing the Del Norte camino this year I decided then that I would need an electric bike. I pick it up in about five day's time!
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