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A week after the Camino

Time of past OR future Camino
September 5 2014
I leave SjPdP on the 5th of september and need to be in Paris on the 24th October. I think I will have plenty of time after the Camino but where do I go. Travel through France back to Paris? Travel to Madrid and fly to Paris? Bus to Bilbao and San Seb and make my way up to Paris? What have people done in the past? What advice can people give for a solo food and wine lover?
 
Join the Camino cleanup. Logroño to Burgos May 2025 & Astorga to OCebreiro in June
Hi David,
My two friends and myself will be leaving SJPDP on the 5th also. We are spending the 5th at Orrison. We are leaving from Lisbon on October 23rd. We are hoping to have a week or so in Portugal. Hope to see you somewhere along the way!
Buen Camino
Debbie
 
Aena operates Spains airports. There is information about airlines and destinations. The Vigo airport site indicates Air France flights direct from Vigo to Paris Charles de Gaulle. The Santiago airport site indicates Vueling flights to Paris Charles de Gaulle.

Santiago Airport
http://www.aena-aeropuertos.es/csee/Satellite/Aeropuerto-Santiago/en/Santiago.html

Vigo Airport
http://www.aena-aeropuertos.es/csee/Satellite/Aeropuerto-Vigo/en/Home.html

Other flight options include Santiago to Paris via Barcelona, London, or Madrid.

Renfe Operates trains from Santiago to Irun and Barcelona (Sants). SNCF operates trains from Irun and Barcelona to Paris. Time of travel is about the same either way.

Renfe
http://www.renfe.com/

SNCF
http://www.sncf.com/

There are buses but that's pretty slow by comparison. ALSA operates buses from Santiago to Irun. I haven't figured out how to get from Irun to Paris by bus but it is possible.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
You should be in Santiago by October 8th or so. Spend a day or two in Santiago seeing your Camino buddies arrive, and then walk to Finisterre and Muxia, which will take 3 - 5 days. The food and wine are nothing extra special but plenty of good Spanish wine and food is available and it's a great way to end your Camino. Then, since you are a food and wine lover, go to Madrid (we trained but there are busses and planes) for a few days; all sorts of great food and wine there. Then, if you can afford it, plan to spend the rest of your extra time in Paris (I'd fly), unless you are planning to stay there after the 24th and will have plenty of time then to enjoy French food and wine.

Karl
 
I spent time in Santiago catching up with fellow pilgrims and then flew to Barcelona. The big city was hard to cope with after the peace of the Camino. But then I bussed to the small seaside town of Tossa del Mar and that was the perfect wind down .I was on my own and am a foodie. It is a great place to wander on your own and the food was lovely. Grilled sardines on the beach. It was a good way to reconnect with the world.
 
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.

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