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Walking route from Ponferrada to A Coruña?

PaintedLady

New Member
Time of past OR future Camino
25 September-30 October
Anyone found a route from Ponferada to Lugo and on to A Coruña?
Hoping to leave Camino Frances route at Ponferada and head NNW up to Camino Ingles and on to Santiago de Compostela.
 
Technical backpack for day trips with backpack cover and internal compartment for the hydration bladder. Ideal daypack for excursions where we need a medium capacity backpack. The back with Air Flow System creates large air channels that will keep our back as cool as possible.

€83,-
ALSA bus. Several departures per day - some direct, some with a change in Lugo. Search for "Coruña" rather than "A Coruña" in the drop-down destination list.

Moderator note - thread title changed by moderator after this post was made
 
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€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
Thanks. I would like to walk this route. No bus.
You'll need to research the Via Kunig https://viakunig.eu/mapa/ which will get you to Lugo. Onward to A Coruna will require a good mapping app and some careful planning. There is no designated route so you'll be improvising. You might like to look at the Camino Verde to Friol and perhaps even Sobrado dos Monxes. From either you'll be heading north-west and on your own. Google Maps suggests a couple of lines to follow https://www.google.com/maps/dir/Lug...e!2m2!1d-8.4115401!2d43.3623436!3e2?entry=ttu but, as usual has you walking on roads. Mapy.cz or Maps.me will give off-road options. There may even be some wikitracks out there. Worth an afternoons surfing anyways.

Good luck & happy planning
 
You'll need to research the Via Kunig https://viakunig.eu/mapa/ which will get you to Lugo. Onward to A Coruna will require a good mapping app and some careful planning. There is no designated route so you'll be improvising. You might like to look at the Camino Verde to Friol and perhaps even Sobrado dos Monxes. From either you'll be heading north-west and on your own. Google Maps suggests a couple of lines to follow https://www.google.com/maps/dir/Lugo,+Spain/A+Coruña,+Spain/@43.1786209,-8.3139898,10z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m14!4m13!1m5!1m1!1s0xd31ce80b130876d:0x1f305fbf2867050c!2m2!1d-7.5567582!2d43.0097384!1m5!1m1!1s0xd2e7cfcf174574d:0x6a47350d095cdfee!2m2!1d-8.4115401!2d43.3623436!3e2?entry=ttu but, as usual has you walking on roads. Mapy.cz or Maps.me will give off-road options. There may even be some wikitracks out there. Worth an afternoons surfing anyways.

Good luck & happy planning
Wonderful. Thanks for the leads.
 
The app mapy.cz is great for mapping out walking routes.
Here's a suggested route between Ponferrada and Lugo.

Screenshot_20230823_063729_Mapycz.jpg
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
The Historic route for doing so would look something like this :

Ponferrada - A Coruña.jpg

Me ? I think I would DIY a route up there northwards from Melide, though Sarria > Lugo etc is possible.

Heading directly north from Ponferrada would involve some more serious backpacking-style mountain hiking in wilderness.
 
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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.
The Via Kunig is an established route. Other potential routes between Ponferrada and Lugo are available to anyone who has a map and an inclination. The OP’s challenge is getting from Lugo to A Coruna by any possible route that doesn’t involve slogging the available road route. A decent mapping app, previously cited, will help but but I’m minded of the likely local response to any request for help and suggestions “por Que?”
If you’re on pilgrimage to the bones of Santiago why would you not simply walk to Santiago. And why would you not walk by the most direct route to those bones. Of course, if you’re just out for a stroll around Galicia then where you go and how you get there is entirely up to you.
A Coruna has been a major port for at least 1500 years. The distribution web from the harbour to the interior is well established but is likely represented by N roads not pilgrim friendly tracks
 
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The Via Kunig is an established route. Other potential routes between Ponferrada and Lugo are available to anyone who has a map and an inclination. The OP’s challenge is getting from Lugo to A Coruna by any possible route that doesn’t involve slogging the available road route. A decent mapping app, previously cited, will help but but I’m minded of the likely local response to any request for help and suggestions “por Que?”
If you’re on pilgrimage to the bones of Santiago why would you not simply walk to Santiago. And why would you not walk by the most direct route to those bones. Of course, if you’re just out for a stroll around Galicia then where you go and how you get there is entirely up to you.
A Coruna has been a major port for at least 1500 years. The distribution web from the harbour to the interior is well established but is likely represented by N roads not pilgrim friendly tracks
It is a good question. I will be carrying the memories n wishes of 2 special people, hence visiting Ponteferrada (Knights Templar) and bringing the Scottish clan from Coruña to Santiago.
 
I wish you well. The Templars weren’t in Ponferrada for long but they were there. The retreat to Coruna is a later part of history. The Black Watch played their part in that part of the great game as did other highland regiments. May you find that which you seek
 
A Coruna is les than 100k from SDC so you might need to think about how to get the stamps to show a contiguous journey if you are taking a unique route.
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.

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