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Connecting coastal and inland route on Portuguese

The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
One option might be to follow the Río Miño along the Portuguese side from Caminha to Valença / Tui. It's a nice walk and there are footpaths alongside the river for much of it.

Of course, in six days (depending on your walking speed) you could reach Redondela anyway, which is where the Coastal merges with the Central.
 
At this page you can see all the connecting camino's:
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
At this page you can see all the connecting camino's:
Of course not! We are not limited to these few.

Walking the connection route near the Minho is precisely what the threadopener asked for. Walking the asfalted cycling route along the Minho is a bit easier, the marked camino has more cobblestone roads and more (little) hills. The youth hostel in Vila Nova de Cerveira is good value for money.

Viana de Castelo to Ponte de Lima is another option (I don't know if it is marked).
 
3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
At Vila nova de Cerveira we stayed at the excellent Casa de Gwendolyn an excellent albergue
 
If you can read Dutch!
To be able to read maps is a good start!
As with any other site about caminos, it is not 100% all caminos.
It's an ongoing process. If they get knowlegde about a new trail, one other has already been altered and others start marking new routes which can be found only in a regional newspaper and by people who pass by and starts asking "what are these yellow arrows for?".
Hopefully one day you can say it shows all ways that had been in place e.g. 2018 exactly how they had been in that year.
 
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.
To be able to read maps is a good start!
As with any other site about caminos, it is not 100% all caminos.
It's an ongoing process. If they get knowlegde about a new trail, one other has already been altered and others start marking new routes which can be found only in a regional newspaper and by people who pass by and starts asking "what are these yellow arrows for?".
Hopefully one day you can say it shows all ways that had been in place e.g. 2018 exactly how they had been in that year.
I shouldn't have used "all" indeed. But it looks like it gives an impression of most of them
 

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