Search 69,459 Camino Questions

New albergue in Santander

peregrina2000

Moderator
Staff member
Plans have been announced for the construction of a new albergue in Santander. The government will pay for the construction, and the church will manage it.

Location is Calle Limón, 7, very close to the cathedral. 48 beds! Construction will begin this summer, after an older building, owned by the church, is demolished.



Any time I post something about the city of Santander, I can’t help but encourage pilgrims to try the beautiful, but longer coastal route. Lots of forum discussion of this alternative. Some walk all the way to Boo in one day, some take a bus to a good starting point, cutting off 5 or 6 km of city walking, and some stop in a casa rural that will let you break it up. I’ve never heard anyone rave about the day out of Santander on the official route, and I have never heard anyone NOT rave about the route along the coast.

Buen camino, Laurie
 
Prepare for your next Camino on California's Santa Catalina Island, Oct 27 to Nov 2
Plans have been announced for the construction of a new albergue in Santander. The government will pay for the construction, and the church will manage it.

Location is Calle Limón, 7, very close to the cathedral. 48 beds! Construction will begin this summer, after an older building, owned by the church, is demolished.



Any time I post something about the city of Santander, I can’t help but encourage pilgrims to try the beautiful, but longer coastal route. Lots of forum discussion of this alternative. Some walk all the way to Boo in one day, some take a bus to a good starting point, cutting off 5 or 6 km of city walking, and some stop in a casa rural that will let you break it up. I’ve never heard anyone rave about the day out of Santander on the official route, and I have never heard anyone NOT rave about the route along the coast.

Buen camino, Laurie
Muchas Gracias Laurie. Santander itself is beautiful and a great base to spend a day.
Maggie
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
Plans have been announced for the construction of a new albergue in Santander. The government will pay for the construction, and the church will manage it.

Location is Calle Limón, 7, very close to the cathedral. 48 beds! Construction will begin this summer, after an older building, owned by the church, is demolished.



Any time I post something about the city of Santander, I can’t help but encourage pilgrims to try the beautiful, but longer coastal route. Lots of forum discussion of this alternative. Some walk all the way to Boo in one day, some take a bus to a good starting point, cutting off 5 or 6 km of city walking, and some stop in a casa rural that will let you break it up. I’ve never heard anyone rave about the day out of Santander on the official route, and I have never heard anyone NOT rave about the route along the coast.

Buen camino, Laurie
Laurie - I plan to start a 2-week walk on del Norte in mid-September, starting in Santander. I will walk the coastal route and most likely stay at the casa rural in Soto de la Marina (I will be doing approximately 15 km days at that point). What is the food situation in that 33 km section between Santander and Boo? Are there other lodging options in that section? Thanks, Tim
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
Plans have been announced for the construction of a new albergue in Santander. The government will pay for the construction, and the church will manage it.

Location is Calle Limón, 7, very close to the cathedral. 48 beds! Construction will begin this summer, after an older building, owned by the church, is demolished.



Any time I post something about the city of Santander, I can’t help but encourage pilgrims to try the beautiful, but longer coastal route. Lots of forum discussion of this alternative. Some walk all the way to Boo in one day, some take a bus to a good starting point, cutting off 5 or 6 km of city walking, and some stop in a casa rural that will let you break it up. I’ve never heard anyone rave about the day out of Santander on the official route, and I have never heard anyone NOT rave about the route along the coast.

Buen camino, Laurie
Happy to read!! Much needed improvement! The last time was low season so was not soo bad but I would not stay there again!!
 
Laurie - I plan to start a 2-week walk on del Norte in mid-September, starting in Santander. I will walk the coastal route and most likely stay at the casa rural in Soto de la Marina (I will be doing approximately 15 km days at that point). What is the food situation in that 33 km section between Santander and Boo? Are there other lodging options in that section? Thanks, Tim
I walked the coast out of Santander and stopped a little farther in Liencres, where I stayed at a hotel called Calad de Liencres. My Wikiloc tracks said that it was about 27 km for that day. The following day to Santillana del Mar was also about 27km. There were a couple of places to stop to eat along the way to Liencres.

I posted on a couple of threads at the time.

 

Most read last week in this forum

I will be walking the Camino del Norte, starting in Bilbao in early September. Once I reach Villaviciosa just shy of Gijon, I know that there's a point where you have the option to continue on the...
Greetings forum friends. My fella and I are heading for the CdN in Sept/Oct (7 years after we met walking the CF). We're looking forward to finding our way along the North of Spain, starting from...

❓How to ask a question

How to post a new question on the Camino Forum.

Forum Rules

Forum Rules

Camino Updates on YouTube

Camino Conversations

Most downloaded Resources

This site is run by Ivar at

in Santiago de Compostela.
This site participates in the Amazon Affiliate program, designed to provide a means for Ivar to earn fees by linking to Amazon
Official Camino Passport (Credential) | 2024 Camino Guides
Back
Top