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Off again in july..planning to leave Granada 8th july walking to Merida then train to Seville then walk from there to Salamanca. Guessing it won't be too busy
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Thanks..i don't mind the hot..lets me avoid winter in ozProbably not busy but hot, hot, hot! Buen Camino.
Thanks for the reply. I have walked from granada twice before..always in summer. I much prefer solitary routes,none of the tsunami of people found on othersHi,
I walked Alméria to Merida in Oct. -Nov. 2018. Temperature was often in mid 20s centigrade even then. There is little or no shade and some every long stages. I met very few peregrinos as it is a very solitary Camino. The heat will be your main problem during your walk-hope you enjoy high temperatures!
I much prefer solitary routes,none of the tsunami of people found on others
20 per year sounds ideal!...I hadn't heard of this one but just looked it up and noticed it joins the Portuguese but the earlier part from Salamanca looks great. Already made arrangements for this year but will certainly bear it in mind...thanks againFor solitary walking have you considered the Camino Torres? Pilgrim numbers are pretty low – probably around 20 per year so you are very likely to have the camino to yourself, as I did. Great walking, sometimes in quite remote areas, and some interesting and historic towns (Almeida, Trancoso, Lamego, Amarante, Guimaraes, Braga). I loved it.
Thanks for that...not looking forward to the last stretch into moclin...first time i did it it was not well marked and pouring with rainFor solitary walking the Mozarabe is just as fine. I walked it for 12 days in March up to Baena and never met anybody on the road (There was this elderly Dutch couple I would bump into in the albergues later on the trek three or four times, though)
Off again in july..planning to leave Granada 8th july walking to Merida then train to Seville then walk from there to Salamanca. Guessing it won't be too busy
………….just looked it up and noticed it joins the Portuguese but the earlier part from Salamanca looks great.
you seem like a kindred spirit wanting to avoid the crowds. Last time I did the Portuguese I noticed an appreciable increase of pilgrims from Porto and much more from Tui. Thanks for the inputI, too, thought it might be a bit crowded after the junction at Ponte de Lima, so I caught a bus to Porto and followed the Senda Litoral and Camino Espiritual from there. I enjoyed both. Numbers on these caminos were rather like my experience on the VDLP a few years ago – very few pilgrims on the trail, but occasionally up to about 30 in albergues.