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Camino Day 10 & 11


Yesterday I woke up to the smell of smoke. There are several wildfires now I'm Northern the and the smoke has been blowing into Galicia for the past two days, creating a haze in the atmosphere. It feels awful to know that the beautiful country I just walked through is being damaged.

I continued traveling with the woman I met at the monastery. We walked from the monastery at Armenteira down along a gorgeous wild-looking river and through vineyards to Villanova de Arousa (23km). We had hoped to catch the boat that afternoon but instead we watched it pull away from the dock just as we came into view of the harbor so we checked into the municipal albergue in the local albergue.

Today we caught the boat at 1:30 and traveled up the Arousa river to Pontecesures. I left my companion at the monastery in Hebron and continued another 15km to O Faramello so that I would have less to walk tomorrow.

Everything feels more intense now that's I'm so close to finishing. Tomorrow I will walk the remaining 15km to Santiago de Compostela.

(Pictures aren't uploading, will try adding tomorrow)



Camino Day 8 & 9




Camino Day 7


Tui to Mos, 21km. Another beautiful stretch of forest. I stopped early today because I had a big day yesterday and the next stretch of road is supposed to be very hilly.

I had a nice moment in the early morning, running into some bagpipers playing in the middle of the forest. It was cool because you could hear them for a long time before you could see them so there was a stretch that felt very fairy-like and mysterious

in reply to Jen Blight

To be fair, there's some selection bias in what I post. Sometimes it looks like:


Camino Day 6


I'm in Spain now!

Today I turned off the Coastal route and walked inland along the Minho river, culminating in the medieval cities of Valença (on the Portuguese side) and Tui (on the Spanish side), for a total of 29km. I chose to take the cycling path along the river most of the way rather than the official route which runs through several towns. On the way, I came across a huge open air market and bought myself a Weird Little Guy (pretty sure it's Saint Anthony)

The cities were particularly cool. The route runs directly through the old Valença fortifications and as you approach the bridge you can see Tui cathedral on the hill above the river.

Tui is 118km from Santiago. Meaning that I have gone 142km already but also that tomorrow I start collecting my stamps to qualify for the Compostela rather than because it is fun.



Camino Day 4 & 5


Castelo do Neiva to Carreço and Carreço to Seixas. Both 22km stages.

As I've gotten farther from Porto the towns have gotten smaller and more of the route had consisted of forest paths and walled alleys, typically routing into town whenever there's a Big Old Church to get a stamp at

The past two days I've been traveling with other solo women that I met on the road, one from the UK and the other from Lithuania, both friendly and enthusiastic. B, who I spent both days with, was excited to learn it was my birthday and told everyone we ran into at the hostel (something I wouldn't have done myself). A big group of us went out for dinner and everyone sang happy birthday in their native language.

I've enjoyed the sense of community among the pilgrims; the one thing everyone has in common is that we're all on a Big Adventure.



Camino Day 3


Shorter day today. Walked 18km from Apulia to Castelo de Neiva.

Still spending the majority of the day in or near towns but the towns are getting smaller with stretches of greenery in between



Camino Day 2


Today was more coastal boardwalks, then through a mid-size city, then more coastal boardwalks, then some back roads in farm country. The albergue that I planned to stay at filled up by 3pm and I ended waling an additional 8km, making this a 28km day in total from Labruge to Apulia.

I'm second guessing some of my decisions. I stuck with the coastal route today (meaning I'm committed for the next couple of days) but I had the opportunity to take a more inland route and now I wonder if that would have been more "nature-y". I could have stopped in the city and saved my legs. I could have gotten more stamps if I had planned differently, etc.

Tomorrow will be a shorter day so I can recover. My host says it's easier to find albergues between here and the Spanish border

in reply to Jen Blight

Are you communicating mostly in Spanish/Portuguese? Or do people know some English?
in reply to Jen Blight

People in Lisbon and Porto mostly knew English and the albergue hosts so far have used English. Some of the people in the towns I'm going through only speak Portuguese and it's not similar enough to either French or Spanish for me to understand so there are interactions that consist entirely of Gesture and Context Clues


Camino Day 1


Started from the Sé do Porto and walked as far as Labruge on the Sendo Litoral route for a total of ~24km. The route goes along the coast and is a mix of sidewalk and boardwalk. It was foggy throughout the morning and then cleared up in the afternoon but stayed cool all day. The coast was beautiful.

My feet hurt. I'm going to try to do a similar mileage tomorrow and hope I acclimate to walking

in reply to Jen Blight

Thanks! I've done longer individual days (including with more weight/altitude change) but this trip will be the longest total distance I've covered


Little known fact: Warhammer was invented by Portuguese Catholics