The End

It was a great trip! Here are our passports or “credentials”. Since of course Jay and I were traveling together, they are virtually identical.
When you are walking a camino you use these to gainLes mer
Day 12, To Santiago

Camino Portuguese day 12: to Santiago
Today was the final day of this Camino and it also was the most difficult. We knew it would be a difficult day (over 25k) and up up up virtually all the way.Les mer
Day 11, To Padrón

Camino Portuguese Day 11: To Padron.
As we get closer to Santiago the crowds on the Camino have continued to increase, yet we seem to run into our friends we have met during our Camino around everyLes mer
Day 10, To Caldas de Reis

Camino Portuguese Day 10: to Caldas de Reis
Another really good day on the Camino! We’ve walked a little over 25k today, but that included a little walking around. The day started with a foggyLes mer
Day 9, To Pontevedra

Camino Day 9: to Pontevedra.
I would say today was one of my favorite days so far. It was a beautiful walk today to Pontevedra. Much of it was on natural trails. It also was not too long (about 20k),Les mer
Day 8, To Casa di Mina (Redondela)

“The walk continues…. Day 8: Today we walked from Porriño to Redondela.” That was all I wrote for my initial social media post I tried to do each evening before going to bed. I was obviouslyLes mer
Day 7, To O Porriño

Camino Portuguese day 7: to O Porriño
Today was an especially long day, it was just over 31k or about 19 1/4 miles. For you step counters, todays walk was just less than 45,000 steps. That’s aboutLes mer
Day 6, To Albergue Quinta Estrada

Camino Portuguese day 6: to Albergue Quinta Estrada Romana
Today was supposedly a shorter day (about 19k). However, it was a very vertical day, with lots of up up ups and down down downs. That didLes mer
Day 5, To Labruja

Camino Portuguese Day 5: To Labruja.
Today started with a nice breakfast at our albergue, Casa da Fernanda before heading out on our 24k (about 17 miles and just over 40k steps) day. It was rainy inLes mer
Day 4, To “Casa da Fernanda”

Another beautiful day on the Camino Portuguese. We left our room in Barcelos at 8am and stopped by the bar next door for a croissant and coffee. Tonight we are staying at our first real Albergue; CasaLes mer
Day 3, To Barcelos

Camino Portuguese Day 3: to Barcelos.
It was a great day today. Nice weather and a nice walk. We left Arcos in the fog but things cleared up fast. We ended up going off the “normal” path for anLes mer
Day 2, To Arcos

Portuguese Camino Day 2: To Arcos
Today started off with more walking on boardwalks by the ocean, mixed in with the typical Portuguese stone black and white cobblestone walkways.
Once we got to VilaLes mer
Day 1, To Labruge

Day 1
Today we left our place “The Lost Inn; Porto” about 7:45am. It was a mostly beautiful day, passing lighthouses and abandoned forts under sunshine mixed with occasional rain. Much of theLes mer
Porto Arrival

It’s been a couple of great days hanging out with Jay in Porto waiting for our bodies to get accustomed to the time change. We spent the days exploring the city. Porto is a wonderful city known forLes mer
Pilgrim’s Passport

This is my Pilgrims’s Passport (or Credential) that I got stamped at albergues, hostels, or hotels where I stayed as well as bars, cafes, and cathedrals to document my Camino across Spain for theLes mer
Day 37: To Santiago!

The Way.
In a logical sense, today was like any of the other 37 days I have been walking from Saint-Jean-Pied-du-Port France to Santiago. Just another 20-kilometer (12 mile) day of my 800k (500 mile)Les mer
Day 36: To O Pedrouzo

As I’ve gotten closer to Santiago the trails have been busier and there have been more crafts people and vendors along the trails with a sellos (stamp for your pilgrim’s passport) marketing theirLes mer
Day 35: To Ribidiso.

Almost there… only two nights to Santiago! Today was a long (over 30k) hot day. The guidebooks showed a 26k day (which my feet will tell you is already pushing my limits) but they, well, lied.Les mer
Day 34: To Palas di Rei

It was a foggy morning…
As has become my routine I started my walk shortly before 8am and proceeded over the bridge leaving Portomarin headed to Palas de Rei.
Galicia (the area in Spain where I’mLes mer
Day 33: To Portomarin

I walked out of Sarria shortly after sunrise accompanied by throngs of young people….
I admittedly had a certain trepidation about how the Camino would change after Sarria knowing so many newLes mer
Day 32: To Sarria.

This morning I started my hike walking with Terry, his granddaughter Emma (aka Amish Emma) and her partner Jack and then later joined by (Irish) Emma and Alice.
There is a giant scallop shell fuenteLes mer
Day 31: To Triacastela

Today was a beautiful day. It started with a reunion of more long-lost Camino family for breakfast then on the trail. Amish Emma (she isn’t Amish, it’s a long story) was on a quest for a 4-leafLes mer
Day 30: To O’Cebrerio

Most would say, the second most difficult part of the Camino Francés is the hike up to O’Cebreiro. I would agree. However, if the weather cooperates it is beautiful at the top. My morning startedLes mer
Day 29: To Trabadelo

I left Camponaraya and it wasn’t long before it was obvious, I was back in a wine region. The surrounding vineyards made for a beautiful hike. Before 10am, I was in the town of Cacabelos and stopedLes mer
Day 28: To Camponaraya

It was a stunningly beautiful morning as I left my albergue in El Acebo and headed for Camponaraya. I turned around on the way up the first hill and turned back to take a pic of last night’sLes mer
Day 27: To El Acebo

Physically:
I’m definitely out of the Meseta…
For the past week or so I have been walking through what they call the Meseta. It’s basically a relatively flat agricultural region. Now that’s inLes mer