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Registration and Passport Information for Portuguese Coastal Camino in Porto

MonaN

New Member
Time of past OR future Camino
Future Sept-Oct 2022
Hi there, we are starting the Portuguese coastal Camino on Sept 1 in Porto. Can someone tell me location of Cathedral where we can register for the Camino and get our passport and first stamp? Thanks
 
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.
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.
Ideal pocket guides for during & after your Camino. Each weighs only 1.4 oz (40g)!
As a minor note, nobody registers for the Camino; they just go ahead and do it. But as noted above, the cathedral in Oporto provides pilgrim credentials.
Thank you! Can we get the pilgrim passport at the Cathedral too? And would you know if there are specific hours to get credentials!
 
Thank you! Can we get the pilgrim passport at the Cathedral too? And would you know if there are specific hours to get credentials!

The Cathedral in Oporto is open from 9.00 am to 6.30 pm. I don't know if t hose hours are the same as getting credentials but they should be.

A pilgrim passport is a common name for the credential. I prefer not to use passport as the term as there is a suprising number of people who confuse their country's passport and a pilgrim's passport, but that's me.
 
The Cathedral in Oporto
Sorry for going way off track here and for being pedantic, and I'm not intending to single you out, but this seems as good a place to any to put this note about the slightly confusing name of Portugal's second-largest city.

The name of the city in Portuguese is Porto. In Spanish the name is Oporto and in English both names have been used but Oporto is erroneous and is less and less used in English these days (e.g. the English page on Wikipedia for the city is titled Porto, and Oporto redirects there).

The confusion about the name comes from the Portuguese masculine definite article 'o', which is used before Porto because 'porto' is also a noun, meaning port. So for example, 'Our destination is Porto' in Portuguese would be 'O nosso destino é o Porto', whereas to say the same thing for Lisbon (Lisboa, which is not otherwise a noun), it would be 'O nosso destino é Lisboa', without the article.

The 'o Porto' aspect then led to foreigners calling the city Oporto, which is not its name, just the same way that the most famous city in Brazil is not Orio de Janeiro, even though 'rio' is also a noun in Portuguese (meaning river) and the same article usage applies before it (e.g. 'O nosso destino é o Rio').
 
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Thank you! Can we get the pilgrim passport at the Cathedral too? And would you know if there are specific hours to get credentials!
Hi @MonaN, yes you can buy your credential(s) at the cathedral. You buy them inside where you also pay for entry to the Cathedral (well worth the couple of Euros extra). The views from the top are stunning and the tile work is in itself worth the entry fee.

Ps. You don’t have to go in
 

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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.
Hi @MonaN, yes you can buy your credential(s) at the cathedral. You buy them inside where you also pay for entry to the Cathedral (well worth the couple of Euros extra). The views from the top are stunning and the tile work is in itself worth the entry fee.

Ps. You don’t have to go in
You have to buy your credentials? My apologies but I didn't realize churches charged for this.
 
You have to buy your credentials? My apologies but I didn't realize churches charged for this.
@MonaN the only things that come free on the Caminos are the sun, rain, and scenery, the friendships and the lasting memories. And the occasional fuente along the way.

As an aside you don’t need to pay to get into the Cathederals as a general rule, typically it’s only the larger ones with museums attached.

All the best for your first Camino.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
@MonaN the only things that come free on the Caminos are the sun, rain, and scenery, the friendships and the lasting memories. And the occasional fuente along the way.

As an aside you don’t need to pay to get into the Cathederals as a general rule, typically it’s only the larger ones with museums attached.

All the best for your first Camino.
The Compostela is free (although there is a charge for a separate distance certificate).
 
@MonaN the only things that come free on the Caminos are the sun, rain, and scenery, the friendships and the lasting memories. And the occasional fuente along the way.

As an aside you don’t need to pay to get into the Cathederals as a general rule, typically it’s only the larger ones with museums attached.

All the best for your first Camino.
Thank you!
 
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Hi @JoJoPee there are three ways to do it.

1. Inside some credentials there is a QR Code. Scan that, it will take you to the Pilgrims Office website. Complete the the info and you’ll get a QR Code to show security at the front door of the pilgrims Office. (Can’t do it more than 3 days in advance). You’ll use it inside the pilgrims office to get your Compostela.

2. Log in to the pilgrims Office website and follow the same steps in 1..

3. On the day you want to collect your Compostela. Walk up to the Pilgrims Office, scan the QR Codes on one of the signs. Follow the steps in 1.

Once you have your QR Code the security guard lets you in. A lady gives you another QR Code, that’s just a queue number. Line up until your turn.

The QR on your phone is what you scan (or the Pilgrims Office Volunteers). From this your data you input is used to print your Compostela.

You’ll also be asked if you want a mileage Compostela, think it costs €3.

You’ll then be directed where to pay.

PS if you say you were doing your Camino for religious reasons, you get a slightly different Compostela.

Don’t forget, don’t register more than 3 days in advance (the system won’t store your info for longer). So I’ve been told.


Hope this helps.

Buen Camino
 
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Hi @JoJoPee there are three ways to do it.

1. Inside some credentials there is a QR Code. Scan that, it will take you to the Pilgrims Office website. Complete the the info and you’ll get a QR Code to show security at the front door of the pilgrims Office. (Can’t do it more than 3 days in advance). You’ll use it inside the pilgrims office to get your Compostela.

2. Log in to the pilgrims Office website and follow the same steps in 1..

3. On the day you want to collect your Compostela. Walk up to the Pilgrims Office, scan the QR Codes on one of the signs. Follow the steps in 1.

Once you have your QR Code the security guard lets you in. A lady gives you another QR Code, that’s just a queue number. Line up until your turn.

The QR on your phone is what you scan (or the Pilgrims Office Volunteers). From this your data you input is used to print your Compostela.

You’ll also be asked if you want a mileage Compostela, think it costs €3.

You’ll then be directed where to pay.

PS if you say you were doing your Camino for religious reasons, you get a slightly different Compostela.

Don’t forget, don’t register more than 3 days in advance (the system won’t store your info for longer). So I’ve been told.


Hope this helps.

Buen Camino
Thank you!
 

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