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WeatherSpark is a good site for thisGoogle searches can show you average temperatures and rainfall for pretty much any city, region, or country.
Thank you. great website!WeatherSpark is a good site for this
Hi Veronica! Welcome! I'm walking my first Camino in Sept/Oct from St. Jean. I had a lot of weather questions, too. When in Sept do you start and how long are you walking?Hello! I am Veronica from California, USA and I am planning my first solo trip along the CF, starting from Leon this September. I am looking for insight about the weather and how much rain (if any) I could expect.
Hola! I plan to begin from Leon, my start date I hope to be Sept 18th (give or take 1 day). I am trying to estimate how many Km to walk on average per day still...Hi Veronica! Welcome! I'm walking my first Camino in Sept/Oct from St. Jean. I had a lot of weather questions, too. When in Sept do you start and how long are you walking?
I love Weatherspark and here is another good weather site-
Time and Date
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Climate & Weather Averages in Villoría de Órbigo, León, Spain
Climate data and weather averages in Villoría de Órbigowww.timeanddate.com
September Climate & Weather Averages in Leon
High Temp: 73 °F
Low Temp: 50 °F
Mean Temp: 62 °F
Precipitation: 0.42"
Humidity: 60%
Dew Point: 48 °F
Wind: 6 mph
Pressure: 30.06 "Hg
Visibility: 12 mi
The closer you get to Oct the wetter it becomes.
Thank you. Sounds like no matter what prepare for cold and rain, even if it is September...ELTiempo.es is also a very good weather-app.
Just remember that no matter how much you research the weather, you may be in for some surprises.
Buen Camino!
Absolutely. The coldest day on my summer 2017 Camino was at O Cebreiro in August. I hadn't brought gloves so I wore my socks as mittens.Thank you. Sounds like no matter what prepare for cold and rain, even if it is September...
Do you have an "end" date or is that open? Just however long it takes?Hola! I plan to begin from Leon, my start date I hope to be Sept 18th (give or take 1 day). I am trying to estimate how many Km to walk on average per day still...
I am closely watching and reading to decide when to begin my walk. As I am now seeing how crowded May is on the CF, I am thinking to push my start date back to last week of September and plan for a 15 day walk with 2-3 travel days getting to Leon and returning from Santiago. I am trying to gage how late in September I should plan... What is unclear to me is as a traveler from Leon (not start from SJPP) will I be as heavily impacted by the pilgrims starting in SJPP that will start their journeys in early September. I am trying to time it right as I do not wish to have to pre-book my stays.Do you have an "end" date or is that open? Just however long it takes?
I'm sorry to say that I think there is a definite risk in a late September start in Leon of joining up with that peak group of early walkers who started in SJPP in early September. It likely won't be as bad as it would be a few weeks earlier in SJPP. Partly because not everyone will necessarily make it all the way to Leon. And partly because Leon, as a reasonably large sized city, won't be the bottleneck that Roncesvalles/Zubiri/etc are at the beginning of the Frances and people will spread out in the surrounding towns following Leon more than they do immediately after SJPP.I am closely watching and reading to decide when to begin my walk. As I am now seeing how crowded May is on the CF, I am thinking to push my start date back to last week of September and plan for a 15 day walk with 2-3 travel days getting to Leon and returning from Santiago. I am trying to gage how late in September I should plan... What is unclear to me is as a traveler from Leon (not start from SJPP) will I be as heavily impacted by the pilgrims starting in SJPP that will start their journeys in early September. I am trying to time it right as I do not wish to have to pre-book my stays.
I wouldnt worry too much as you're starting from Leon. You wont really hit the crowds until Sarria.I am closely watching and reading to decide when to begin my walk. As I am now seeing how crowded May is on the CF, I am thinking to push my start date back to last week of September and plan for a 15 day walk with 2-3 travel days getting to Leon and returning from Santiago. I am trying to gage how late in September I should plan... What is unclear to me is as a traveler from Leon (not start from SJPP) will I be as heavily impacted by the pilgrims starting in SJPP that will start their journeys in early September. I am trying to time it right as I do not wish to have to pre-book my stays.
Thanks so much for taking the time to write/respond. This is very helpful information. Much appreciated!Hi Veronica. I walked the exact same route from Leon to Santiago last September (2022). So perhaps these thoughts might be useful:
1. Dawn and midday are both deceptively late! Because Spain uses the Central European time zone, sunrise will be around 07:40 to 08:00, and solar noon is slightly after 14:00, in local civil time. (This was a surprise to me on my first morning!) I found it light enough to start walking at about 7am, though many started from 6am onwards.
2. The morning from 7am will be cool, perhaps cold in the mountains - but when walking I was happy with T shirt and shorts. The best time to walk is before 14:00, by which time it can be seriously hot on sunny days. About half of days were somewhat cloudy for me, which made for nicer walking. I had one walking day with heavy rain, heading from Astorga to Rabanal del Camino, and one evening of heavy rain in Villafranca, but I still sat outside for dinner under umbrellas. Evenings can get very cold, especially in the mountain stops (e.g. Rabanal, O Cebreiro).
3. For the number of days walking. There are 13 stages listed on Gronze - it seems sensible to add a couple of days, so your 15 sounds right to me. I encountered accommodation bottlenecks at various points, so my stopping points were often not ideal. (I was reserving one night ahead.) I also had some foot problems, also leading to shorter distances.
4. Rabanal del Camino is a particularly beautiful village to stop at - and I was fortunate that I had to, because I couldn't reserve anywhere at Foncebadon (which is also pretty). I also recommend Villafranca and Portomarin.
5. You mention not wanting to pre-book. I reserved 1 night ahead. Mostly this was fine - moving my Foncebadon stop back to Rabanal was a nice bonus. However, reserving 1 night ahead was useless for anywhere close to O Cebreiro, anywhere near Portomarin, and to a lesser extent for the whole of Sarria-Santiago. Consider booking ahead for those - if I was doing this section again, I might work out my dates for those and book weeks ahead. One advantage of a 2 week Camino is that you know your end date, so it is easy to calculate arrival dates backwards at least to Sarria, so you have the option to do that. Some of my friends a stage or two behind me had to taxi 20 or 30 miles off the route at Sarria to get accommodation, as the town was stuffed to capacity.