• For 2024 Pilgrims: €50,- donation = 1 year with no ads on the forum + 90% off any 2024 Guide. More here.
    (Discount code sent to you by Private Message after your donation)
  • ⚠️ Emergency contact in Spain - Dial 112 and AlertCops app. More on this here.

Search 69,459 Camino Questions

Bit of help needed

Decci81

New Member
Time of past OR future Camino
Portugal
Hey there,it's my first time trying this but I did the walk from Sarria last year in early April with two friends and were planning to do a similar length in late April this year,unfortunately I get to do all the planning for stops/distance. We enjoy the 25/30km walk but enjoy a pint after,I was hoping someone could help me with where to start or destinations on way on the Portuguese way
 
3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
If you want to only qualify for the the Compostela you can start in Valenca/Tui, two lovely small towns, separated by a river, the first in Portugal, the other in Spain. For that you are looking at 5 or 6 stages depending on how you chose to break off the distance.

There is also the Variante espititual which ads a daay but includes a boat ride.

I would recommend you buy the latest edition of Brierly's Guide to the Portuguese and take it from there. In the 2016 edition he does not talk about the Variante, but every albergue seems to have flyers about it. You decide to take it or not upon leaving Pontevedra.

And if you buy the book from the forum you will get a free credencial. Pay for an extra two for your friends and you're set.
 
Idem like Anemone says ! And walking into Santiago from the Portugues is so much nicer and greener than the walk from the Frances.
 
Guides that will let you complete the journey your way.
If you want to only qualify for the the Compostela you can start in Valenca/Tui, two lovely small towns, separated by a river, the first in Portugal, the other in Spain. For that you are looking at 5 or 6 stages depending on how you chose to break off the distance.

There is also the Variante espititual which ads a daay but includes a boat ride.

I would recommend you buy the latest edition of Brierly's Guide to the Portuguese and take it from there. In the 2016 edition he does not talk about the Variante, but every albergue seems to have flyers about it. You decide to take it or not upon leaving Pontevedra.

And if you buy the book from the forum you will get a free credencial. Pay for an extra two for your friends and you're set.
Thanks very much for your reply and help I'll definitely do that
 
Hola - for a fraction of the cost you can download the guide published by the Confraternity of Saint James which includes the Variante Espiritual - it is available here in the resources section of the forum. You can print it or it works splendidly on mobile devices.
Sorry to be a torture but I'm struggling to get to that guide,would you have a link by any chance and thanks for your help
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
This discussion is on the wrong subforum. This subforum is about the caminho Português Interior which is a totaly different route through Portugal and Spain.
The CP Interior route goes from around Coimbra via Viseu and Lamego to Ourense in Spain and continues from there to Santiago.all at the eastern-inland part of Portugal.
 
Last edited:
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
Hey there,it's my first time trying this but I did the walk from Sarria last year in early April with two friends and were planning to do a similar length in late April this year,unfortunately I get to do all the planning for stops/distance. We enjoy the 25/30km walk but enjoy a pint after,I was hoping someone could help me with where to start or destinations on way on the Portuguese way
Porto / Matosinhos is a good starting point - might take about 10-12 days to get there at that distance per day route, and it's wonderful.
The variante espiritual is a really wonderful part of it. And for me, the boat ride from Vilanova to Padron was not something to avoid but was one of the highlights - according to folks at the Vilanova hostal, you skip a very long stage of walking alongside the highway. We learned about the mussel industry, saw dolphins playing and jumping in the ria, and you pass (in our case, wonderfully, through a morning mist) 39 crosses erected in honor of St. James' passage along that same route.
 
This discussion is on the wrong subforum. This subforum is about the caminho Português Interior which is a totaly different route through Portugal and Spain.
The CP Interior route goes from around Coimbra via Viseu and Lamego to Ourense in Spain and continues from there to Santiago.all at the eastern-inland part of Portugal.
With flights and work commitments we will probably fly in and out of Santiago on a Saturday and get the quickest way to our start point,it was sarria last year and I was able to handily enough work out distances and towns to stop in but I'm not finding it as easy this time
 
With flights and work commitments we will probably fly in and out of Santiago on a Saturday and get the quickest way to our start point,it was sarria last year and I was able to handily enough work out distances and towns to stop in but I'm not finding it as easy this time
There is a direct busconnection from Santiago to Vigo and Porto every day.
From Vigo you could take the train to Tui or Valença do Minho.
If I were you I should start in Valença to experience a bit of Portugal.
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
Don't know where you fly from but Porto in Portugal is a good connection from many airports in Europe and easy to get from there to the north of Portugal by train or bus.
 
Don't know where you fly from but Porto in Portugal is a good connection from many airports in Europe and easy to get from there to the north of Portugal by train or bus.
It's Dublin but the flights to Santiago work out the same distance as Porto I think,so I'm thinking taxi straight out of there to our our start point,not very Camino but we'll taxi to it I'd say,realistically I have one week and I'm trying to get the guys the best Camino I can
 

Most read last week in this forum

I’ll be finishing the Caminho Português next month. Last year I wore Hoka Challenger 6 ATR shoes. I did have some blisters and foot pain, but a lot could have been due to the 30+km days from...
We arrived in Porto by train from Lisbon yesterday afternoon. Long haul from Australia via Singapore, Milan and Madrid departed April 23. Our first encounter with other pilgrams was when 3...
Hi everyone, I did the CF in 2022 and found the planning quite easy as there were albergues all the way so yiu can walk as much or as little as you please and there is always somewhere to stay. I...
Hello pilgrims, I have unfortunately hurt my knee(s) on the second day of walking from Porto. I pushed through some more kilometers, but I had to take a break in Marinhas. I tried everything to...
We arrived in Lisbon yesterday, 48 hrs (by choice via Singapore, Milan and Madrid) after leaving home from regional South Australia. Train to Porto tomorrow hitting the pilgram path on Saturday to...
I have a new copy of the guide to Camino Portuguese by Kat (I think) XX. My question is: is there anyone who is going to Lisbon/ Porto who could pop it in the Albergue municipal/ or use it and...

❓How to ask a question

How to post a new question on the Camino Forum.

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
Back
Top