Ultreia et Suseia!
Camino training yields the best packing list!
- Time of past OR future Camino
- From O Porto in September.
If for whatever reason you can't fulfill the 100k rule to get your compostela or if the pilgrim's office line is too long, don't despair!
Thanks to a tip from @mazzarina I learnt that the Convento de San Francisco de Santiago issues a similar certificate but they are not as stringent with the rules on kilometers or number of stamps per day. This certificate is called the Cotolaya.
All you have to do is go to that church (Rúa do Campiño de San Francisco 3) between the hours of 11am and 12:30pm, and 5pm and 7pm, enter the church, go to the left all the way to the end and ring the bell. There's was hardly anyone there on a day like today where ~3,100 pilgrim's got their compostela.
A Franciscan monk will open the door and issue your Cotolaya and stamp your credencial. If you do this, please don't forget to make a donation because their church needs lots of repairs. It's a modest and quiet church compared to Santiago.
The Cotolaya actually a lovely document!
Today my asthma flared up and I had to call a cab from Teo to Santiago, therefore defaulting the Compostrla rule, but I got my Cotoleya!
The Franciscans started issuing this certificate on 2014 to mark the 800th aniversary of Saint Francis' pilgrimage in 1214. The name Cotoleya comes from a coal dealer by the last name of Cotolay who lived in Monte Pedroso; it is said he hosted the Saint during his pilgrimage. Here's the full story: https://xacopedia.com/Cotolay
Thanks to a tip from @mazzarina I learnt that the Convento de San Francisco de Santiago issues a similar certificate but they are not as stringent with the rules on kilometers or number of stamps per day. This certificate is called the Cotolaya.
All you have to do is go to that church (Rúa do Campiño de San Francisco 3) between the hours of 11am and 12:30pm, and 5pm and 7pm, enter the church, go to the left all the way to the end and ring the bell. There's was hardly anyone there on a day like today where ~3,100 pilgrim's got their compostela.
A Franciscan monk will open the door and issue your Cotolaya and stamp your credencial. If you do this, please don't forget to make a donation because their church needs lots of repairs. It's a modest and quiet church compared to Santiago.
The Cotolaya actually a lovely document!
Today my asthma flared up and I had to call a cab from Teo to Santiago, therefore defaulting the Compostrla rule, but I got my Cotoleya!
The Franciscans started issuing this certificate on 2014 to mark the 800th aniversary of Saint Francis' pilgrimage in 1214. The name Cotoleya comes from a coal dealer by the last name of Cotolay who lived in Monte Pedroso; it is said he hosted the Saint during his pilgrimage. Here's the full story: https://xacopedia.com/Cotolay
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