- Time of past OR future Camino
- Some in the past; more in the future!
After 36 days on the Caminho Nascente, eight days on the Torres and a rest day today in Braga, we are ready to start walking the Caminho da Geira e dos Arrieiros tomorrow!
This is a camino that has been generating some buzz on the forum lately (mostly from @Isca-camigo!). The camino follows a Roman road that once linked Braga with Astorga and the name Geira e dos Arrieiros basically means the camino of the Roman road and the wine carriers. (And as we found out today, Geira is pronounced with a soft G).
From what we know, not all of the camino is way-marked but the official website has lots of information, including tracks, and we have the guidebook. Actually we’re quite well stocked with books and paraphernalia all of a sudden!
The camino is 239km in length from Braga to Santiago and 10 stages seems to be the standard way to divide it. Although looking at some stage guides, the typical 10-stage plan doesn’t include an overnight stop in Ribadavia, which we’d definitely like to do as it sounds like one of the highlights, so we might be looking at 11 stages.
There is a short and a long option for the first stage tomorrow, and we’re taking the short option to Caldela. We’re told it’s not a great stage (mostly on asphalt through some urban areas coming out of Braga), but that the camino gets much better after that as it goes through Portugal’s only national park (Peneda-Gerês) and passes many Roman milestones and other sites of interest.
Another thing to note about the first stage is that the camino passes the amazing early medieval chapel of São Frutuoso on the outskirts of Braga (25 minutes’ walk from the cathedral). The chapel has very limited opening times (2-4:30pm Tue-Sun), however, so it would need to be visited the day before from Braga rather than on the camino. I visited the chapel last year and was so impressed that I created a whole thread about it! Here’s a photo:
Finally, we are watching the weather forecast carefully as there are storms forecast for the coming days. It has only rained on us three times in our 40 walking days so far (and all three times it rained in the morning but completely cleared and became sunny in the afternoon), so we’re hoping our good luck continues. But we’re close to Galicia now, so we have to be prepared for anything!
This is a camino that has been generating some buzz on the forum lately (mostly from @Isca-camigo!). The camino follows a Roman road that once linked Braga with Astorga and the name Geira e dos Arrieiros basically means the camino of the Roman road and the wine carriers. (And as we found out today, Geira is pronounced with a soft G).
From what we know, not all of the camino is way-marked but the official website has lots of information, including tracks, and we have the guidebook. Actually we’re quite well stocked with books and paraphernalia all of a sudden!
The camino is 239km in length from Braga to Santiago and 10 stages seems to be the standard way to divide it. Although looking at some stage guides, the typical 10-stage plan doesn’t include an overnight stop in Ribadavia, which we’d definitely like to do as it sounds like one of the highlights, so we might be looking at 11 stages.
There is a short and a long option for the first stage tomorrow, and we’re taking the short option to Caldela. We’re told it’s not a great stage (mostly on asphalt through some urban areas coming out of Braga), but that the camino gets much better after that as it goes through Portugal’s only national park (Peneda-Gerês) and passes many Roman milestones and other sites of interest.
Another thing to note about the first stage is that the camino passes the amazing early medieval chapel of São Frutuoso on the outskirts of Braga (25 minutes’ walk from the cathedral). The chapel has very limited opening times (2-4:30pm Tue-Sun), however, so it would need to be visited the day before from Braga rather than on the camino. I visited the chapel last year and was so impressed that I created a whole thread about it! Here’s a photo:
Finally, we are watching the weather forecast carefully as there are storms forecast for the coming days. It has only rained on us three times in our 40 walking days so far (and all three times it rained in the morning but completely cleared and became sunny in the afternoon), so we’re hoping our good luck continues. But we’re close to Galicia now, so we have to be prepared for anything!
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