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That sound very nice!We did the Portuguese along the sense literal plus the spiritual variant. Loved it! Hiking was easy, fish was amazing
For me, time is not an issue. If I do the Portuguese way, I would do the whole way, probably carry on to Finisterra. I went to Muxia last time and missed out Finisterra.Hi Wei Ho, that's a lovely painting
Most people start the Portugues in Porto, and it takes around 10 days. If you start the Norte from Irun, it will take around 35 days of walking. So I guess time constraints, etc, will need to be factored into your decision. How much time do you have? Is it important to finish in Santiago?
Happy to discuss.
Hi Mark, the Norte sounds perfect for me apart from the possibility of short of beds in albergue along the way. I met a guy on the Frances way last October he said he walked part of the Norte before switched to Frances due to bed shortages. Seems there was pilgrims surge on the Norte last year.The Norte really is spectacular. I'd just add two things:
1. There's lots of road and pavement walking on the official camino route. Make sure you take the coastal alternatives when you can (do a search for "coastal alternatives to the Norte's asphalt" on this forum, peregrina2000 has compiled a list).
2. There might not be the crowds of the Frances, but there are far fewer albergues (sometimes only one per stage, and with only 20 beds...) - so on occasion you need to flexible with accommodation. You can normally get a pension/ hostal/ hotel/ hostel for quite a reasonable price, and they offer pilgrim discounts. But I'd definitely advise budgeting a bit extra for this.
I am thinking of bring a ultra light tent for the Norte. Don’t know if this is practical.The Norte really is spectacular. I'd just add two things:
1. There's lots of road and pavement walking on the official camino route. Make sure you take the coastal alternatives when you can (do a search for "coastal alternatives to the Norte's asphalt" on this forum, peregrina2000 has compiled a list).
2. There might not be the crowds of the Frances, but there are far fewer albergues (sometimes only one per stage, and with only 20 beds...) - so on occasion you need to flexible with accommodation. You can normally get a pension/ hostal/ hotel/ hostel for quite a reasonable price, and they offer pilgrim discounts. But I'd definitely advise budgeting a bit extra for this.
Hi,For me, time is not an issue. If I do the Portuguese way, I would do the whole way, probably carry on to Finisterra. I went to Muxia last time and missed out Finisterra.
Glad to hear that. How was the accommodation situation on the Portuguese way? I will met to stay in albergue wherever it is possible.Hi,
We did the Portuguese route in 2016 from Lisbon to Fatima then Porto to Santiago. It’s also a beautiful walk and easier for us than the Frances. Lots of friendly people. SeaFood was great. If you are walking for religious reason, this is a nice spiritual walk with a number of significant churches to the faith. We plan to do the Norte in 2020.
In 2016, there were few, sometimes only one per town except for Santarem. From Porto, the number of Albergue picks up a little but still nothing compared to Camino Frances. You can check gronze.com and use google translate. Im pretty sure accommodations has changed a lot after 3 years. Buen Camino..Glad to hear that. How was the accommodation situation on the Portuguese way? I will met to stay in albergue wherever it is possible.
Hi,Hi Mark, the Norte sounds perfect for me apart from the possibility of short of beds in albergue along the way. I met a guy on the Frances way last October he said he walked part of the Norte before switched to Frances due to bed shortages. Seems there was pilgrims surge on the Norte last year.
Hi, I'm grappling with the same choice and I look like settling on the Norte from Irun, then changing onto the Primitivo through to SDC in May/June. By doing this route, I think I get the best out of the coast and the mountains without the crowds. I've watched a few youtube video's of the Portugues route and for me, its just not as inspiring as the northern route. I'm more interested in the scenic beauty, some solitude, time for reflection and physical challenge of the Camino, rather than a religious experience. If I get time, I plan on getting a bus through to Finisterre and Muxia for a couple of days. Happy to discuss.
Thanks
M
The challenge should be funNorte is "tough" no matter how good of condition one might be in. IMO they do not compare to one another.
Hi Mark, thank you for your message. I rplied to you a few days ago and just now realized that my reply was posted to somebody else.
Lovely painting.Hooked! Considering take the Camino again. This time, probably Norte or Portuguese in September/October. Which one you would do if it were you? I know that both are very nice, but when you have to choose one, which one you would choose?
The painting is from my Camino Frances last year.
View attachment 55685
That is beautiful!!Hooked! Considering take the Camino again. This time, probably Norte or Portuguese in September/October. Which one you would do if it were you? I know that both are very nice, but when you have to choose one, which one you would choose?
The painting is from my Camino Frances last year.
View attachment 55685
Thank you Bob! The photo looks beautiful. I guess it is from Norte.I’ve completed both - San Sebastián to Santiago in six weeks and Lisbon to Porto to Santiago in six weeks. El Norte may be like the first car you buy, the most memorable for only that reason. El Norte may be more physically challenging but not bad for a 66 years old with bad knees from basketball late into life. Portuguese seemed to have closer facilities and historical towns to linger in. Either will be great.
View attachment 56096
It was a bit of a bed rush but it was not that I was thinking of. More of a feeling of doing it for sports reasons then anything else. People asking you how far have you walked, how fast not with a curious intent more to be able to brag them self (hard when they meet me who always do double "normal distances" ;-) ). A lot of people I met was taking badly about CF as it was to easy they did CN because it was harder... I missed open churches, pilgrim masses in the small towns etc. Of course I met lovely pilgrims as well but not as often as I have on the previous caminos. Less people walking by themself on Norte as well. Lots of friends doing an event together. But hey that is just my feeling, others might have a totally different experience.By saying competitive feeling, do you mean people rush for beds? I met a pilgrim who had just switched fro Norte to Frances. He told me that the number of pilgrims walking the Norte increased by 30% last year. You have to arrive at albergue before 11:00 am to secure a bed.
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