Ahhhs
Active Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- SJPdP to Santiago, May 2015
Porto to Santiago, April 2016
Muxia-Finisterre-Santiago, April 2016
Camino Del Norte, April 2017
I just finished the walk from Muxia to Finisterre and back to Santiago. It was a lovely walk. I thought it would be nice to finish (again) in Santiago but walking "backwards" from Finisterre on this route with very few waymarks was a real challenge.
Not reading the backwards arrows or markers (the few that there were). Those were easy. It was the lack of ANY markings on many intersections that was very confusing. If there was a marker it was on the path that you were coming out of so you could not tell which of the identical three paths facing you was the correct one. So you pick the one that seems the most likely, look for boot prints in the dirt, and travel a ways hoping to see a clue that you are going the right way. It's pretty easy to guess wrong. The Brierly guide I had was little help.
The few pilgrims I met going back to Santiago all had the same problem. One technique is to wait at an intersection and hope to see another pilgrim coming toward you to see where they came from. I talked to someone who sat at an intersection for 45 minutes and no one came by. Locals do try to help (if there happen to be any nearby) but I did get a few wrong directions from them as well.
Plus most of the people you meet at cafes or Albergues are going "the other way" so meetings are brief.
I would suggest to people interested in this route (especially newbies) to start in Santiago. Or get better maps or apps or gps to avoid getting lost and adding all those extra kms to your walk.
Ultreia and Buen Camino one and all.
Not reading the backwards arrows or markers (the few that there were). Those were easy. It was the lack of ANY markings on many intersections that was very confusing. If there was a marker it was on the path that you were coming out of so you could not tell which of the identical three paths facing you was the correct one. So you pick the one that seems the most likely, look for boot prints in the dirt, and travel a ways hoping to see a clue that you are going the right way. It's pretty easy to guess wrong. The Brierly guide I had was little help.
The few pilgrims I met going back to Santiago all had the same problem. One technique is to wait at an intersection and hope to see another pilgrim coming toward you to see where they came from. I talked to someone who sat at an intersection for 45 minutes and no one came by. Locals do try to help (if there happen to be any nearby) but I did get a few wrong directions from them as well.
Plus most of the people you meet at cafes or Albergues are going "the other way" so meetings are brief.
I would suggest to people interested in this route (especially newbies) to start in Santiago. Or get better maps or apps or gps to avoid getting lost and adding all those extra kms to your walk.
Ultreia and Buen Camino one and all.