- Time of past OR future Camino
- Some in the past; more in the future!
Tomorrow Wendy and I are starting not quite a Camino de Santiago, but a walking adventure nevertheless: the Caminho Real 23 on the Portuguese island of Madeira.
The caminhos reais (royal paths) are a series of paths linking population centres in Madeira that were created before automobiles and that have since been made redundant by highways. The 23 goes all the way around the perimeter of the island, so we thought it would be a great way to get to know Madeira as this is our first visit to the island. The route is shown on this stylised map on Journey Era, a website by Jackson Groves that is one of our main information sources for this fairly unknown hike.
We are taking it a bit slower than Jackson and doing it in nine walking days. We pre-booked all accommodation because of the difficulty in finding reasonably-priced places to stay in Madeira in summer, and are taking a rest day in Santana as well. It’s about 180km and there’s about8000m 11,500m of ups (i.e. almost as much as more than the height of the world’s tallest mountains), so we don’t expect it to be easy going, but hopefully the views and scenery will make it worthwhile.
We were pleasantly surprised to find out that there is an ‘association’ for the hike (made up of husband and wife Miguel and Isabel Gouveia). From them we procured credentials and matching Caminho Real hiking shirts (photo coming at some point!), and they will meet us again tomorrow morning to give us our first stamp. There are 37 places to receive stamps along the way, and we are told that these are actual postage stamps (selos in Portuguese, like the Spanish sellos, rather than carimbos).
We have spent the last three days in the capital Funchal, sightseeing in town, going canyoning yesterday, and preparing for the hike. Our start and end point will be the Funchal cathedral, built in the last throes of the Portuguese Middle Ages in the late 15th and early 16th centuries:
It has a beautiful Mudéjar ceiling that is unlike anything I can remember seeing in Portugal:
Another noteworthy place in Funchal is the Fort of São Tiago (!), so named because it was built during the 60 years of Spanish rule over Portugal from 1580-1640. Here’s a view of one of the turrets:
So with our time in Funchal coming to an end, it’s time to get on our (proverbial) bikes and start walking!
The caminhos reais (royal paths) are a series of paths linking population centres in Madeira that were created before automobiles and that have since been made redundant by highways. The 23 goes all the way around the perimeter of the island, so we thought it would be a great way to get to know Madeira as this is our first visit to the island. The route is shown on this stylised map on Journey Era, a website by Jackson Groves that is one of our main information sources for this fairly unknown hike.
We are taking it a bit slower than Jackson and doing it in nine walking days. We pre-booked all accommodation because of the difficulty in finding reasonably-priced places to stay in Madeira in summer, and are taking a rest day in Santana as well. It’s about 180km and there’s about
We were pleasantly surprised to find out that there is an ‘association’ for the hike (made up of husband and wife Miguel and Isabel Gouveia). From them we procured credentials and matching Caminho Real hiking shirts (photo coming at some point!), and they will meet us again tomorrow morning to give us our first stamp. There are 37 places to receive stamps along the way, and we are told that these are actual postage stamps (selos in Portuguese, like the Spanish sellos, rather than carimbos).
We have spent the last three days in the capital Funchal, sightseeing in town, going canyoning yesterday, and preparing for the hike. Our start and end point will be the Funchal cathedral, built in the last throes of the Portuguese Middle Ages in the late 15th and early 16th centuries:
It has a beautiful Mudéjar ceiling that is unlike anything I can remember seeing in Portugal:
Another noteworthy place in Funchal is the Fort of São Tiago (!), so named because it was built during the 60 years of Spanish rule over Portugal from 1580-1640. Here’s a view of one of the turrets:
So with our time in Funchal coming to an end, it’s time to get on our (proverbial) bikes and start walking!
Last edited: