Sláine
New Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Cyclist-Camino del Norte July 2014, Camino Portugues Easter 2015
Hi all,
I will be in Pontevedra for a football tournament at the start of the Easter hols and will make my way back to base in Madrid via the Camino Portugués (or Camino de Madrid if previous idea not feasible). As I am going the 'wrong way' with a dire sense of direction this will be a challenge to follow the arrows backwards! However, I am confident that the Camino will provide as ever and Portugal and it's people are more than worth the mindbending!
I would like to cycle the route back from Santiago to Lisbon. I am looking for a good source of information as to gradient, on/off road routes and accomodation. I will be on a decent mountain bike this time although I managed to complete the Camino del Norte in July 2014 on a very regular city bike. I can cycle 50 km a day average with sight seeing or 100 km at a push to reach Lisbon in time to get home! As a previous coastal dweller at home I would like to follow the coastal route for the wind in my wheels and hair for as long as possible also. I will start and travel alone but am looking forward to the characters that I will meet en route also!
Any recommendations for cycling Camino Portugues; websites, blogs, vlogs, other forum users or even books welcome etc. I have found walkers to be very willing to help but cycling their routes is sometimes impossible on a bike.
Thanks/Muchas gracias. In return I can offer some experience of my first Camino on wheels last year-Camino del Norte and in two words: 'Do it!' Why? Because it is sometimes tough but mostly gorgeous alternative to queueing/shuffling along stretches of the Camino Francés that I saw towards the end of my trip. If you love the beaches and mountains, with splashes of cider and rain this is for you! Its the green, Celtic heart of Spain.
I also used to live in Santiago so am not foregoing the delights of a visit to this city but will visit my Gallego friends instead before exploring their cousin civilisation next year. In any case, I like to go off the well beaten path, it's where peace and adventures collide!
2 legs good but 2 wheels better
Sláine
I will be in Pontevedra for a football tournament at the start of the Easter hols and will make my way back to base in Madrid via the Camino Portugués (or Camino de Madrid if previous idea not feasible). As I am going the 'wrong way' with a dire sense of direction this will be a challenge to follow the arrows backwards! However, I am confident that the Camino will provide as ever and Portugal and it's people are more than worth the mindbending!
I would like to cycle the route back from Santiago to Lisbon. I am looking for a good source of information as to gradient, on/off road routes and accomodation. I will be on a decent mountain bike this time although I managed to complete the Camino del Norte in July 2014 on a very regular city bike. I can cycle 50 km a day average with sight seeing or 100 km at a push to reach Lisbon in time to get home! As a previous coastal dweller at home I would like to follow the coastal route for the wind in my wheels and hair for as long as possible also. I will start and travel alone but am looking forward to the characters that I will meet en route also!
Any recommendations for cycling Camino Portugues; websites, blogs, vlogs, other forum users or even books welcome etc. I have found walkers to be very willing to help but cycling their routes is sometimes impossible on a bike.
Thanks/Muchas gracias. In return I can offer some experience of my first Camino on wheels last year-Camino del Norte and in two words: 'Do it!' Why? Because it is sometimes tough but mostly gorgeous alternative to queueing/shuffling along stretches of the Camino Francés that I saw towards the end of my trip. If you love the beaches and mountains, with splashes of cider and rain this is for you! Its the green, Celtic heart of Spain.
I also used to live in Santiago so am not foregoing the delights of a visit to this city but will visit my Gallego friends instead before exploring their cousin civilisation next year. In any case, I like to go off the well beaten path, it's where peace and adventures collide!
2 legs good but 2 wheels better
Sláine