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How Much Money For Food On The Camino?

Walking the Camino de Santiago is a neat experience, the all-time thing about the Camino is that anybody can do it, you don't have to be an experienced hiker or super athlete to walk it. Camino de Santiago has many different route options from a curt 120 km walk to the long and challenging 800 km and even 1000 km routes depending on how much fourth dimension you lot have, what you want to see, and how far you lot can walk you tin cull whatsoever of the existing routes. I must warn you the Camino might be addictive, many people come back again and again after completing their showtime Camino route. You tin can find many Camino posts on our Camino de Santiago page. We tried to create the best resource that pilgrims tin can use to programme their journeying.

Past the fourth dimension of writing this post we walked vii different Camino routes:

  • Portuguese Camino (from Lisbon) – May 2018
  • Camino Primitivo – June 2018
  • Camino del Norte – Oct 2018
  • Camino Finisterre-Muxía – Nov 2018
  • Vía de la Plata (part of information technology, 214 km from Seville to Mérida) – Apr 2019
  • Camino Inglés – May 2019
  • Camino Francés – September 2019

We couldn't do any Camino routes in 2020 due to the pandemic. In 2021 our daughter was born we didn't become a chance to walk. This yr we're planning to restart our Camino journeying. We're going to walk the Portuguese Camino again this time with our daughter. Now when we live in Portugal nosotros can spend even more time on the Camino de Santiago.

Cambell & Alya on the Camino del Norte walking to Santiago
Stingy Nomads walking the Northern Style of the Camino de Santiago

What is the Camino de Santiago?

The Camino de Santiago or the Style of Saint James is a pilgrimage route to Santiago de Compostela, a city in Galicia (Spain). It's believed that in the cathedral of Santiago the body of the apostle Saint James was buried. The history of the Camino de Santiago goes back to the 9th century when Spanish Male monarch Alfonso Ii completed the commencement-always pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela from Oviedo. Nowadays this route is known as the Camino Primitivo. The Camino de Santiago is non a unmarried road but a network of routes that start in dissimilar cities, mainly in Spain (some in Portugal and French republic), and finish in Santiago.

If you go overwhelmed at the beginning of your Camino planning and have many questions that demand to be answered nosotros created a dedicated post answering the almost FAQs about the Camino de Santiago.

Camino YouTube video thumbnail
Our detailed video with tips for walking the Camino de Santiago

Camino de Santiago routes

As I mentioned above the Camino de Santiago is not a single road, as some people think referring to the most popular route – Camino Frances, merely a network of routes. In fact, you tin starting time walking towards Santiago from anywhere in Europe and it'll be the Camino but outside the established Camino routes information technology volition be difficult to observe an infrastructure for pilgrims; accommodation, route markings, etc.

Camino de Santiago walking routes in Spain and Portugal
Map of the master routes of the Camino de Santiago; Camino Frances, Portuguese Camino, Camino del Norte, Camino Primitivo, Via de la Plata, Camino Ingles and Camino Finisterre

There are several established Camino routes, they all commencement in different cities and end in Santiago de Compostela;

Camino Frances (the French Manner) – the most popular road, about 55% of all pilgrims choose this Camino. The French route starts in Saint Jean Pied de Port, a French town near the border with Spain. Total altitude 790 km. If you're planning to consummate the entire route read our post on how to get to St.Jean Pied de Port. 50% of pilgrims who complete this route walk just the last 100 km from Sarria. The last 100 kilometers to Santiago on any Camino is a required minimum for getting the Compostela (the Certificate of the Camino de Santiago).

Camino Portugues (the Portuguese Way) – the second pop route. It starts in Lisbon only well-nigh people walk it from Porto. Total distance from Lisbon – 616 km, from Porto 260 km or 280 km, depending on the route you accept. There are ii dissimilar routes from Porto; the Littoral route, information technology'southward walked just by four% of the pilgrims, and the Central route, which is walked by 20% of the pilgrims. The Coastal Road goes along the declension from Porto to Vigo, the Central Route goes inland all the way to Santiago.

Camino del Norte (the Northern Mode) – this route is growing in popularity, In 2019 half dozen% of all pilgrims who arrived in Santiago completed this Camino. The Northern Way is a great culling to the French Camino. I've walked both and liked the scenery on the Camino del Norte more. The route starts in Irún, a small-scale Spanish town on the border with France. The total distance of the Camino is 825 km.

Camino Primitivo (the Original Way) – i of the bottom walked Camino routes, well-nigh v% of all pilgrims. It'southward relatively short, 321 km simply it's considered to be one of the toughest routes due to many steep ascents and descents. The Camino Primitivo starts in Oviedo, Kingdom of spain.

Via de la Plata (the Silvery Way) – the longest established route of St.James, about 1000 km, one of the least walked routes, iii%. It'due south not the best route to walk as the first Camino, it has less infrastructure, longer stages, etc. It starts in Seville, Spain.

Camino Inglés (the English Way) – a short, 120 km walk, from A Coruña/Ferrol, Espana. One of the least walked routes (3,5%) on the Camino. It's probably the best option for those who just want to get a gustatory modality of the Camino before embracing a long walk.

In that location are more Camino routes (basically from whatsoever more or less biggish Spanish urban center you can start walking to Santiago); from Valencia – Camino de Levante; from Almería – Camino Mozárabe (joins with Via de la Plata after Merida); from Barcelona – Camino Catalán; from Madrid – Camino de Madrid – the terminal two join with the French Fashion after about two weeks. All these routes combined are walked by less than 1% of the pilgrims a year so yous can imagine how little infrastructure they have.

There is one "special" route Camino Finisterre-Muxía, unlike the other routes, it starts in Santiago de Compostela and goes to Finisterre and Muxía, 2 coastal towns in Galicia. People usually walk it after completing one of the other Camino routes. Full distance from Santiago to Finisterre – 89 km and to Muxía – 86 km.

Beautiful coast of Asturias along one of the Camino routes
Breathtaking scenery on the Camino del Norte, one of the most beautiful Camino de Santiago routes

The all-time months for walking

The best months for doing the Camino depend on the route you choose, some routes are great in summer e.g. Camino del Norte, Camino Primitivo – it's nice, warm, no rain; on some Caminos, the oestrus is unbearable e.g. Via de la Plata, and the Portuguese Camino (Lisbon part) – it's scorching hot, dry with no shadow to hibernate.

The busiest time for virtually of the routes is July and August we've never walked whatsoever Camino during these months because we just don't like it when information technology'south as well busy with besides many people. In our feel, the best walking months in sense of conditions and people are; May, June, September (non for the Via de la Plata, it'due south still too hot in September), and the showtime half of October.

We had bully weather in May on the Portuguese Camino, ok weather in June on the Camino Primitivo (it was warmish only we got a lot of rain which wasn't normal for June), skillful weather in October on the Camino del Norte, and bad (rainy and windy) atmospheric condition in November on the Camino Finisterre. For Via de la Plata we'd suggest late March-April-get-go of May – it's warm, no pelting and not too hot all the same.

Equally for walking the Camino completely off-flavour November – Feb the French Way is probably the best to walk mainly because there is more infrastructure (more albergues) and some of them are opened all year round. On other routes e.k. Camino del Norte nigh albergues are closed for the offseason and you'll have to stay in hotels though it'll be cheaper than in the season.

Atmospheric condition-wise winter is not the best time information technology can rain quite a lot and information technology gets dank (not all albergues take heating), in the mountains you can get snow and some passes might exist closed. If you lot want a very quiet Camino with no people – winter is a good time otherwise try to do information technology between March and the beginning of Nov.

Wheat fields the most common scenery on the Camino
Rolling wheat fields in April on the Sliver Road of the Camino de Santiago

Pros and cons of walking the Camino

We've read and heard some people maxim how much they didn't similar the Camino, that it'southward likewise decorated, too hot, besides much walking on the road, too commercial, etc. but near of the time they didn't even bother of making whatsoever enquiry on the Camino de Santiago, they walked the French Way, the busiest route in high season and later that made their decision about the Camino in general.

We've washed quite a lot of hiking (mostly wild hikes) all over the globe but walking the Camino de Santiago was on our bucket list for quite a while, now afterward walking six Caminos, nosotros're all the same peachy on walking other routes. Here are our pros and cons for the Camino de Santiago.

Pros of walking the Camino

Whatever relatively fit person can walk the Camino. You lot don't need special training and don't have to be a very able-bodied person. For many people, it'll exist challenging especially the commencement week or and then. For those who are used to walking or hiking a lot, information technology'll be easier. The important thing is that it's absolutely doable. If for whatsoever reason yous tin't or don't desire to walk for a month, choose a shorter one or walk the last 100km to Santiago on any Camino.

It's safe, you lot don't walk through the wild uninhabited areas, there are always people towns, villages on the way.

It's easy to plan, the route is marked, the infrastructure is at that place, no need to book annihilation in advance, to arrange special permits you but arrive and start walking.

It's not expensive, you can run across many interesting places and sights without spending a lot of coin.

There are many different routes depending on what yous want to see you tin choose between walking along the coast (Camino del Norte, Portuguese Camino Coastal Route, Camino Finisterre-Muxia), through the mountains (Camino Primitivo), past towns and cities (Camino Frances, Portuguese Camino Central Route) or mayhap pasture fields and vineyards (Via de la Plata, Portuguese Camino from Lisbon).

It gives you a different perspective on so-called slow travel when for a couple of weeks you lot motility merely with walking speed, no cars, or any other motorized transport involved.

You can walk every bit far and as fast as you want, nobody limits you, y'all can take your fourth dimension and walk 15km a mean solar day or try to go for a record and complete it in the shortest menstruum of time.

Walking or cycling instead of driving or using busesreduces carbon footprint.

Cons of the pilgrimage walk

It's not your traditional wild hike, there volition be other people, cars, cities, and noises forth the route. You but accept to understand that the Camino wasn't created as a hiking route, information technology was and it is a pilgrimage, not an outdoor activity. If you desire to do a wild hike (far from infrastructure, cities, people) at that place are plenty of routes in the world, including Espana, where y'all can venture into the wild.

It's busy and commercial merely these mainly refer to the French Manner nosotros didn't notice these on any other Caminos simply even on the French Camino if you walk slightly offseason it won't be that crazy and overcrowded.

It gets monotonous sometimes but not considering the scenery is boring just because you lot do the same routine every day; get upwardly, pack your stuff, first walking, terminate for dejeuner, continue walking, get in at the albergue, shower, unpack your stuff, become to bed and every twenty-four hour period like this. Y'all do go tired of this routine merely information technology's non the Camino's fault.

Sometimes you walk forth the road, on some routes less (eastward.g. Camino Primitivo), on some routes more (due east.g. Camino Frances) simply it'due south not all the way and the roads are commonly not busy highways, rather secondary country roads.

Pilgrim'southward dictionary

Pilgrim – a person who walks or cycles any of the Camino de Santiago routes.

Credential – a printed volume or spreadsheet with pilgrim's data (proper name, land, nascence engagement) and empty spaces for stamps that pilgrims get at every albergue they stay. The Credential is compulsory to take if you desire to stay in public (municipal) albergues and to go the Compostela at the end of the Camino.

One of our Credentials with the stamps we got walking the Camino
Campbell's Credential with stamps from different albergues on the Camino de Santiago

Albergue – a hostel for pilgrims ordinarily with bunk beds and shared facilities (toilet, shower, kitchen, etc.). At that place are public and private albergues, the public albergues are exclusively for pilgrims with Credentials, in the private albergues anybody can stay.

Compostela – a certificate confirming that a pilgrim has completed the Camino de Santiago. Any person that has walked at least the last 100 km to Santiago on any of the Camino routes and has a Credential with stamps can go the Compostela. It can be obtained at the pilgrim'due south office in Santiago de Compostela for free.

Certificate of altitude – similar to the Compostela but information technology has more details your proper noun, the Camino you completed, when, and from where you lot started. Y'all can become it at the pilgrim's part likewise together with the Compostela, it costs 3 Euro.

How much does it price to walk the Camino?

Walking the Camino is not expensive rather cheap, but it depends on how much of your condolement you lot tin can sacrifice. The cheapest way to walk the Camino is;

  • to stay mainly in public (municipal) albergues
  • to make your own food
  • not to stop on the way for coffee, cool drinks, etc.
  • not to go out for beer or drinks

If you stick to these rules your Camino budget will be as little as 15-xx Euro per person per twenty-four hour period. Only think don't cede too much to save more, endeavour to brand your walk enjoyable.

Our upkeep breakup

Accommodation

Usually, pilgrims stay in albergues, their price varies between half-dozen and 7 Euro pp. for public albergues and x-12 Euro pp. for individual albergues. I'd suggest budgeting 8 Euro per person per twenty-four hours for adaptation; sometimes public albergues tin be full past the fourth dimension you arrive, sometimes in that location are no public albergues in a town so you'll have to alter staying in public and private albergues on the way. Hotels – depending on the area and flavor you'll pay betwixt 25 and 50 Euro for a private double room. Co-ordinate to our experience, the boilerplate price is most thirty Euro.

Shopping

The cheapest style of eating is buying food in supermarkets and cooking your own meals. Most of the albergues have a kitchen with at least a microwave, some utensils, and cutlery. To purchase groceries for 2 or 3 meals (breakfast, lunch, and dinner) costs nigh x Euro per person, depending on what you buy and where minor shops are commonly more expensive than big supermarkets.

Eating out

It is more than expensive than cooking. Pop Menú del Día (a set meal; breadstuff, starter, master dish, wine/beer/cool drink, coffee or dessert) costs ten Euro; breakfast (coffee and croissant or toast with jam and butter) – 3 Euro; English breakfast (eggs, bacon, bread, and coffee) – 5 Euro; bocadillo (baguette with jam or cheese) – 2-three Euro; dinner10-15 Euro; a cup of java – between 1ane,5 Euro.

Laundry

To make your pack lighter, carry fewer clothes, wash them more frequently. Many albergues accept washing and drying machines which are quite useful. If you're too tired to launder by hand or your stuff is too dirty and needs a proper launder. Washing usually costs 3-four Euro per load, drying – two-4 Euro. The machines are ordinarily big, some of them can fit upwardly to 15kg if you lot're a group of people you can split the cost.

Most albergues have special washing basins as well if you don't want to spend actress money on laundry you can wash it by hand. Some places have spin dryers that you lot tin use for free to dry your clothes. We unremarkably did big machine laundry once a week and hand-washed minor stuff like socks, underwear, T-shirts, etc.

Ship

Spanish cities and towns are well connected with each other, there are usually different options of getting around eastward.g. local upkeep flights, trains and buses, depending on your destination and time you lot tin choose the most convenient and budget option. Budget flights – if y'all purchase in advance it might cost less than a bus ride just remember that usually merely hand luggage is included in this price.

For a train ride e.g. from Santiago to Barcelona you'll pay 30 Euro (economy class), the double-decker will toll between 30-35 Euro. To get from Santiago to Madrid past train volition cost between 30 and 40 Euro. Notation! Usually, it's cheaper to buy tickets online there are oft special discounts for both trains and buses.

Backpack delivery service

Information technology's upward to you to utilize it or not it's not. If you think walking with a large haversack will be too difficult for you then use the delivery service. And don't worry nearly what other people remember about it, it'due south your decision. Depending on the altitude and the Camino route information technology'll cost between four and v Euro per day per backpack.

Camino de Santiago one week cost, per person

  • Accommodation – eight Euro x 7 days = 56 Euro per calendar week, per person
  • Shopping – 10 Euro ten vii days = 70 Euro
  • Eating out (optional, you tin buy all nutrient in supermarkets) – 10 Euro x 7 days = 70 Euro
  • Laundry – half dozen Euro, tin exist divided between ii or more people
  • Other – 10 Euro, in case y'all need to buy plasters or medicine

Total; 212 Euro pp. per calendar week or 30 Euro pp. per day, plus transport to get to and back. For a comfy walk, we'd propose to upkeep of 30-32 Euro pp. per day including eating Menus, going out for a drink but still staying in albergues. If yous cut off on eating out you can do it for nether 147 Euro pp. per calendar week or xx Euro pp. per day.

You can discover more details on the cost of walking the Camino including money-saving tips, a detailed caption of what you tin get on 20, 30, and 40 Euro per day, and a comparison of the price of different routes in our post The price of walking the Camino de Santiago.

The Cathedral of Santiago and the Plaza Obradoiro, Spain
The Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, the terminate of the Camino de Santiago

Camino de Santiago tips

My main Camino tip is don't chase guidebooks and other people'south itineraries, walk your own stride, don't push yourself as well difficult especially in the commencement, give your body time to adjust, and get used to walking. In the beginning stick to walking 20-25 km a twenty-four hours on average, if y'all're uncomfortable with these distances, cutting information technology downwards to 15 km a day, enjoy the walk, don't rush. It's better to arrive in Santiago a couple of days later but healthy than to make it quicker, but with an injury.

To brand your pilgrimage more comfortable I'd recommend doing some Camino training before starting the walk especially if you're not a very fit person and aren't used to walking/hiking a lot.

If you want to walk the Camino simply don't have enough time to practice information technology in 1 go, split information technology and practice it over months or years. Many people practise information technology this way, they offset the walk, go every bit far as they can (or have fourth dimension) and next time start from where they stopped and so on and so on till they reach Santiago.

Pack low-cal for the Camino, take but essential things. Later on the first day on the Camino, many people reconsider their luggage and get out some stuff in albergues or just throw it away. For men aim for a 6kg haversack, for women – 5kg, it's non too heavy just you all the same can pack all the necessary stuff.

Make sure to accept practiced walking shoes that yous are comfy in, don't wear brand new shoes even if they're very good you'll very probable get blisters.

Don't get out your valuables unattended due east.g. in albergues, restaurants, etc., always take them with you if you leave or lock them in the locker (if it's available). Information technology's quite handy to have a pouch or a small foldable backpack to put your coin, phone, photographic camera in.

We'd suggest ownership a local SIM carte du jour that you can have Internet admission and make a phone phone call when needed e.m. to book an albergue. You can buy a Vodafone SIM card in Spain with 2Gb data, 200 minutes of local calls, and SMS valid for xxx days for xv Euro. We used information technology quite a bit and information technology was merely plenty. Many albergues have wi-fi so yous don't have to utilize your mobile data all the time.

Spain like almost European countries uses Europlug (type C outlets), make sure you take the right adapter for charging your devices.

We drank tap water everywhere in Spain and Portugal and never had whatsoever problems only we met some people from the French Style that got ill from the tap h2o somewhere effectually the Meseta (flat plains in central Spain). If you accept a sensitive stomach you lot tin can carry LifeStraw and utilise information technology to filter tap water it'south much better (cheaper and environmentally friendlier) than ownership a plastic bottle of h2o every solar day.

Most supermarkets and shops in Spain are closed on Sundays if you need to buy something do it on Sat, it's very unlikely y'all'll detect annihilation open on Sundays peculiarly in smaller cities and towns.

It's possible to suit backpack delivery on the Camino if, for some reason you don't walk with your backpack information technology can be delivered every twenty-four hour period from albergue to albergue, there are several companies that offer this service, including the Spanish post office (Correos). The price is betwixt 4-5 Euro per backpack. Note! The commitment usually tin be bundled between private albergues, public albergues don't accept backpacks.

Add a couple of extra days to your itinerary in instance you need some rest forth the manner. Don't worry if you take some days left subsequently finishing the Camino there are many amazing things to practice in Santiago de Compostela to keep you busy.

A stunning sunset in Muxia, the end of the Camino
An incredible sunset at Cape Muxia, the end of the Camino Finisterre-Muxia

Travel insurance for the walk

Walking similar any other outdoor activity involves a run a risk of getting an injury or losing some of the gear. Information technology's recommended to accept travel insurance for the Camino de Santiago. Though Camino is not a high distance hike through remote areas information technology's still a physically challenging experience and injuries are quite frequent. Make sure you will be able to get medical assistance any fourth dimension you need it. It'due south quite handy to have insurance in case of a gear or device break/loss you lot can always merits it back. Information technology makes the walk less stressful when you know you're covered in case of any unpredictable emergencies.

How to plan the pilgrimage?

These elementary steps will assistance yous in planning and preparing for the walk.

Cull the route you want to walk. Don't be afraid to cull an off-the-beaten-rails route, base of operations your choice on what you'd similar to see and experience.

Make sure the time you lot have available is the good flavor to walk the route (non also hot, not too cold or rainy, etc.).

Volume your airplane, train, or bus ticket, and hotel (recommended to exercise if you're planning to walk in peak season – June – August).

Buy travel insurance that covers the catamenia of the walk.

If you think it's necessary to first training (walk more, exercise a couple of hikes, etc.).

Check packing recommendations and brand certain y'all have all the essentials due east.g. shoes, a backpack, a sleeping pocketbook. Don't leave shopping for these till the terminal moment, you'll need some time to get used to new hiking boots.

Get the Credential in your state or check if y'all'll be able to become it at the starting bespeak of your Camino road; some albergues, cathedrals, or pilgrim information offices sell them.

Make a list of things you want to see or places yous want to stop to make sure you lot won't miss something on the style.

Make a typhoon of your walking itinerary (stages) based on places y'all desire to stay, albergues, distances. You don't have to stick to it but it's nice to have some sort of a walking program.

Get a practiced volume/audiobook for reading/listening you lot'll have time for that on the Camino.

When y'all have everything gear up pack your backpack and try to walk with it for a couple of kilometers. If it feels too heavy reconsider your luggage and exit unnecessary stuff dwelling.

Don't start stressing out a week or and then before your flight because yous haven't done this or that, make certain all the essentials (principal gear, documents) are gear up the rest will sort out on the way, how the pilgrims say "The Camino provides".

The Original Way of Santiago is the greenest Camino in Spain
The typical scenery on the Camino Primitivo, the Original Style of the Camino de Santiago

Accommodation on the Camino

Hostels for pilgrims are called albergues. They can be municipal (public) or individual. The municipal albergues are run by the municipality with the aid of volunteers. Private albergues vest to a person or organisation. In high flavour municipal albergues on the popular routes make full quite rapidly if you desire to go a spot y'all must exist there before one pm and wait in the queue. Fifty-fifty if you lot don't become a spot there will exist ane or ii private albergues where y'all can stay for four Euro more.

There are albergues for a donation they can exist private or public, they don't have an established cost, pilgrims donate as much as they want or can. Note! Many people take advantage of this and don't leave whatever donation or give ane Euro. For this reason, there are fewer and fewer donation albergues on the Camino de Santiago. Donation albergues are but for pilgrims with Credentials, can't be booked, commonly take the same facilities equally public and private albergues.

Municipal albergues

  • The price is between 5 and 7 Euro per person.
  • Are exclusively for pilgrims (need a Credential to stay there).
  • Can't be booked, first come first serve principle.
  • Cheque-in normally starts between ane pm and three pm.
  • Check out past 8 am the adjacent morning.
  • Don't let to stay for more i night.
  • Ordinarily, they have disposable bedding included or for 1 Euro extra.
  • Normally have a kitchen, sometimes without utensils or cutlery.
  • Usually, they are quite large, can accommodate between 20-twoscore people average. There are some quite small-scale municipal albergues.

Private albergues

  • Cost between 10 and 12 Euro average.
  • Not simply for pilgrims, more like hostels where anybody can stay.
  • They tin be booked in advance, many albergues are on booking.com.
  • Commonly open for check-in from 1 pm.
  • Cheque out before 9 am-10 am.
  • Let staying every bit long as you want.
  • Normally but non always have better facilities than public albergues.
  • Disposable bedding is included, some places have normal sheets and bedding.
  • Commonly but non always take a kitchen. Some private albergues have a bar and don't accept a kitchen they expect you'll eat at the bar.
  • Normally they are smaller than public albergues, which can adapt x-15 people. There are some massive individual albergues also.

How to find albergues?

No need to worry almost information technology, they will discover yous. The way to municipal albergues is e'er marked, just follow the arrows and very likely yous will end up at the albergue. Nearly private albergues take indications pointing their way (they want you to discover them), some might be slightly off the route merely usually, they are located pretty close to the Camino. In the peak season (July, August) if you want to stay in a specific private albergue (because it's very nice or somebody recommended information technology to you, etc.) it's better to book information technology in accelerate, some albergues can exist found on booking.com, some can be booked over the telephone.

More information on accommodation on the Camino you can find in our comprehensive post Albergues on the Camino de Santiago.

Food on the Camino

It's non a trouble to find places to eat on the Camino, most routes, especially the more pop ones, have plenty of restaurants and bars. Carte del Día is the near pop meal on the Camino. Information technology's a ready carte that includes salad or soup, main dish (meat, chicken, fish), wine/water/cool beverage to choose from, bread, coffee, or dessert. The menu costs betwixt ten and 12 Euro and it's ordinarily a big meal. Many restaurants, confined, and private albergues serve it for lunch, some places offer a dinner card but information technology's a flake more expensive.

Many bars and cafes offer breakfast. Information technology'due south usually a cup of coffee with a sandwich or pastry and a glass of orange juice. In some tourist places, you can observe a big English or American breakfast just it's non something typical in Kingdom of spain. Locals drink a cup of coffee with a cookie or a small-scale pastry for breakfast.

Tapas or pinchos (depending on the region) is very popular in Spain. Tapas or pinchos can be anything; a small portion of paella, a little sandwich, a piece of tortilla, etc. Some bars requite tapas for free with your drink, some charge extra, usually 1,5-2 Euro. Pinchos are typical for Northern Spain (the Basque County, Navarra). You always pay for pinchos, the toll is about two Euro.

I loved pinchos in Logroño (Camino Frances) and in San Sebastian (Camino del Norte). Santiago de Compostela has a couple of dandy tapas bars with the about delicious seafood tapas. Celebrate the end of the Camino by drinking local vino and eating tapas in Santiago. My favorite confined here are Petiscos do Cardeal and Taberna practice Bispo in Rua exercise Franco street.

The main food problem on the Camino is if you stick to a specific nutrition east.g. vegetarian or vegan. In large cities, you can notice restaurants serving vegan or vegetarian menus but in smaller places, information technology might be hard. The best option is to observe a place to stay with a kitchen where you can cook your own meal. Most towns and villages on the route accept supermarkets or grocery shops. Some individual albergues offer communal dinners for donation, these dinners are commonly vegetarian or vegan.

Social life on the Camino

Different people have different experiences, if you're seeking tranquility and desire to have some time for yourself nobody you'll bother or pursue you lot. If yous'd rather take a good conversation on the way or after in albergues you lot'll discover people to talk to. Nosotros saw people walking solitary and keeping to themselves, people forming groups and spending all the time together, etc.

How to set for the walk?

Anybody can walk the Camino, it's non like climbing Mt.Everest or running a marathon just information technology tin can be challenging fifty-fifty for relatively fit people; long distances, walking with a haversack, sleeping in a different bed (usually bunk bed) every night, packing and unpacking a haversack every solar day, using shared facilities (shower, toilet). Some of these challenges crave concrete training, some mental preparation.

If yous're an active person and go running, become to the gym, practice hiking information technology is not necessary to do any special training for the Camino, simply make sure your shoes are comfortable and yous wore them quite a bit. The only affair we'd suggest to practise is to pack your backpack for the Camino and go for a walk or hike with information technology to brand sure information technology's not also heavy and you are comfortable walking with it.

If concrete exercising is non a part of your daily routine it'southward improve to start grooming some fourth dimension beforehand. Start with an piece of cake 5km walk a couple of times a week (without a backpack), so increase your distance to 10km. If you lot have a chance go for a ii-3-day hike to see how comfortable you're walking with a backpack for a couple of days.

If y'all don't take time for grooming the best yous can practice is pack your backpack as low-cal every bit possible and start the Camino by walking short days, not more than 15km. Y'all'll get into it every bit it goes, afterward a week or once you're used to walking you can increase your distance up to 25 km a twenty-four hour period.

Road mark

All established Camino routes are well marked, we rarely had a problem finding the manner. A couple of times in big cities nosotros lost the trek because the route sometimes is marked with metal scallop shells on sidewalks, simply usually, it's very easy to follow. The Caminos are marked with yellow arrows and yellowish scallop shells painted on sidewalks, tiles, walls, poles, etc. In Galicia, the route markers show the altitude left to the cathedral in Santiago.

Safe on the Camino

We've walked four different Camino routes and never felt unsafe; walking out of big cities through so-chosen industrial areas, or walking through the forest, or field, or along the beach. The most unpleasant for me is walking on or forth the road I simply don't like when I hear a car or fifty-fifty worse a truck approaching from backside but even when we had to walk on the road it never felt similar a auto volition drive over us, people endeavour to be careful and slow down if they see a pilgrim on the road. The master "danger" on the Camino is theft, don't leave your valuable stuff unattended anywhere; albergues, restaurants, picnic spots.

One of the main views of St.Jean Pied de Port, Camino de Santiago
St.Jean Pied de Port, a small boondocks in France, the beginning of the French Camino de Santiago

Recommended books and guidebooks

  • A Pilgrim'southward Guide to the Camino de Santiago; Camino Frances by John Brierley, 2019. Paperback.
  • A Pilgrim's Guide to the Camino Portugués: Lisbon – Porto – Santiago/Camino Central, Camino de la Costa, Variente Espiritual & Senda Litoral by John Brierley, 2019. Paperback.
  • A Pilgrim's Guide to the Camino Inglés: & Camino Finisterre Including Múxia Circuit (Camino Guides) 2019 edition by John Brierley. Paperback.
  • Camino del Norte and Camino Primitivo: To Santiago De Compostela and Finisterre from Irun or Oviedo (Cicerone Guides), 2019. Paperback & Kindle
  • Walking guide to the Via de la Plata and the Camino Sanabres past Gerald Kelly. Paperback and Kindle.
  • Kingdom of spain and Portugal map past Michelin. Paperback.
  • The Walk of a Lifetime: 500 Miles on the Camino de Santiago by Russ Eanes. Paperback & Kindle
  • The But Fashion Is West: A Once In a Lifetime Take a chance Walking 500 Miles On Spain'south Camino de Santiago past Bradley Chermside. Paperbakc & Kindle
  • Ordinary Magic; & Kindle

Camino planning resource

  • Make sure to choose the all-time Camino route for you | Many routes of the Camino de Santiago – choose the right one |
  • How and what to pack into your backpack for the Camino? | Camino de Santiago packing list |
  • Join the international Camino community | Camino de Santiago forum |
  • Find out what churches and cathedrals on unlike Camino routes held masses for pilgrims | Mass on the Fashion |
  • Larn more near the history of the Camino | The Camino de Santiago's ancient secret |

Source: https://stingynomads.com/camino-de-santiago-walking-guide/

Posted by: noblesounded.blogspot.com

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