• Remove ads on the forum by becoming a donating member. More here.

Search 74,075 Camino Questions

Parochial and church run albergues on the Camino Portugues

marciafrost

New Member
Time of past OR future Camino
Camino de Santiago from St Jean - April-May 2013
Are there any parochial or church run albergues on the Camino Portugues, and is so, where are they?
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
Holoholo automatically captures your footpaths, places, photos, and journals.
Thank you, David, I would be grateful if you could please share the details. I am currently walking the Camino Portugues.
 
Thank you, David, I would be grateful if you could please share the details. I am currently walking the Camino Portugues.
We will be starting on may 10 walking from Lisbon. Where did you start from? Would like information if you would care to share. At least on
Accomadations. Thanks
 
Thank you, David, I would be grateful if you could please share the details. I am currently walking the Camino Portugues.
Just north or Porto on the Central route there is the Monastery at Vairão that many people stay at after their first day out of Porto. Just before Padrón there is the monastery at Herbón on a slight detour/alternative track from the main Camino. Those are the two I was thinking of. There may be others.
 
Holoholo automatically captures your footpaths, places, photos, and journals.
Most albergues in Portugal are privat albergues.
I never heard that the church is involved in albergues.
Beside that, the Portugues in general are not interested in the Caminho para Santiago .
Their main interest is in their more important own caminho para Fátima
The monastery in Vairão used to be a former monastry but except for the albergue inside there are no further activities as far as I know .
The monastery of Herbon is in Spain and although it is on the Caminho Português but I haven’t been there, not more than I passed it once because it was full, I heard from others that this is a nice experience to be there.

on the leg from Lisbon to Porto once we stayed at a Casa Diocescana in Albergaria-a-Velha. We stayed with nuns and inside the retaite house was a church and we spoke to a priest .I do not know it still is a place where pilgrims can stay.
 
In Armenteira on the Spiritual Variant, you can stay at a working monastery. The accommodation feels more like a small hotel, but you can eat and attend Catholic services with the nuns there.
 
Just north or Porto on the Central route there is the Monastery at Vairão that many people stay at after their first day out of Porto. Just before Padrón there is the monastery at Herbón on a slight detour/alternative track from the main Camino. Those are the two I was thinking of. There may be others.
Many thanks David, I have booked to stay at a parochial albergue in Redondela, called Santiago Apostol, tomorrow night - found it in John Brierley’s guidebook, and I will try to stay at the monastery at Herbon too. Thank you for your kind assistance.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
Most albergues in Portugal are privat albergues.
I never heard that the church is involved in albergues.
Beside that, the Portugues in general are not interested in the Caminho para Santiago .
Their main interest is in their more important own caminho para Fátima
The monastery in Vairão used to be a former monastry but except for the albergue inside there are no further activities as far as I know .
The monastery of Herbon is in Spain and although it is on the Caminho Português but I haven’t been there, not more than I passed it once because it was full, I heard from others that this is a nice experience to be there.

on the leg from Lisbon to Porto once we stayed at a Casa Diocescana in Albergaria-a-Velha. We stayed with nuns and inside the retaite house was a church and we spoke to a priest .I do not know it still is a place where pilgrims can stay.
Many thanks Albertinho. I shall definitely try the monastery at Herbon. And have booked at a parochial albergue, Santiago Apostol, in Rondendela
 
Many thanks David and all, I have booked to stay at a parochial albergue in Redondela, called Santiago Apostol, tomorrow night - found it in John Brierley’s guidebook, and I will try to stay at the monastery at Herbon too. Thank you for your kind assistance.
 
The distinction between municipal and parochial is pretty blurred on the Português, unlike the generally more clear-cut differences between the two on the Spanish Ways, because church life is more deeply interwoven into village life in Portugal than Spain.
 
Ideal sleeping bag liner whether we want to add a thermal plus to our bag, or if we want to use it alone to sleep in shelters or hostels. Thanks to its mummy shape, it adapts perfectly to our body.

€46,-
Many thanks David and all, I have booked to stay at a parochial albergue in Redondela, called Santiago Apostol, tomorrow night
I was given room on the floor there last year, finding everywhere in Redondela to be jam-packed full, and many pilgrims preparing to spend a night outdoors or moving onwards by taxi.

I never saw the dormitories, but the common areas are quite pleasant.

I think it's technically "ecclesial" rather than "parochial" as such, although it was originally created by the Parish.
 
Understand one of the reasons of where this is coming from: when confronted with an albergue not accepting forwarded luggage, some pilgrims send it to a local bar instead, where it’s picked up by the hiker and wheeled into an albergue. This prevents that type of behavior by guaranteeing that the person seeking entry into one of these albergues has truly walked with their bag that day, not simply came up with a way to circumvent existing prohibitions.

Paradors don’t accept pilgrims who don’t have plenty of €€€ and cannot pay the nightly rate, yet no one gets upset at them. I may want to walk 50km every day but my body won’t accept that. When it rains, I get wet and when it’s hot, my bald head will burn if I don’t have a hat. There are a lot of things on the Camino that one accepts as part of the journey and you plan for those issues.
 
Understand one of the reasons of where this is coming from: when confronted with an albergue not accepting forwarded luggage, some pilgrims send it to a local bar instead, where it’s picked up by the hiker and wheeled into an albergue. This prevents that type of behavior by guaranteeing that the person seeking entry into one of these albergues has truly walked with their bag that day, not simply came up with a way to circumvent existing prohibitions.

Paradors don’t accept pilgrims who don’t have plenty of €€€ and cannot pay the nightly rate, yet no one gets upset at them. I may want to walk 50km every day but my body won’t accept that. When it rains, I get wet and when it’s hot, my bald head will burn if I don’t have a hat. There are a lot of things on the Camino that one accepts as part of the journey and you plan for those issues.
I think maybe you meant this for a different thread (perhaps the one about some albergues on the Camino Frances not accepting delivered suitcases)?
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
some pilgrims send it to a local bar instead, where it’s picked up by the hiker and wheeled into an albergue.
Probably for the other thread -- but one huge reason for some of the Albergues to no longer accept pack transport is that there had been a marked increase in theft of the cash left by pilgrims in the little envelopes to pay for the transport and write their name and destination.

Switching pick-up points to bars avoids that problem, as the packs are never left unattended.
 

❓How to ask a question

How to post a new question on the Camino Forum.

Most read last week in this forum

I saw a video with a rather harsh criticism of a small, municipal albergue on one of the less traveled caminos. They paid 9€. I thought: What does it cost a small municipality to renovate and keep...
I was hoping to do a walk over ninety days so I researched a long stay visa. This walk would have gone through four countries but the majority of the time would have been in France. So I applied...
"A complete guide to the world's greatest pilgrimage"[sic] by Sarah Baxter. In a British newspaper, The Telegraph. A right wing daily that does print interesting articles and essays...
I've been trying to figure out how to use the Gronze app and as a first step I need to translate into English - I searched topics on the Forum, thought I found what I was looking for, and Yay! I...
My wife and I are planning to buy a house in the north-west of Spain for our retirement. Today, while scrolling through the ads, I noticed this: https://www.idealista.com/inmueble/106560131/...
Hi all - I have often wondered about the whole cutting grams, going as light as .. (I do it too!!) .. thinking about the "real" world with soldiers on the march and what they carry .. Roman...

Featured threads

❓How to ask a question

How to post a new question on the Camino Forum.

Featured threads

Forum Rules

Forum Rules

Camino Updates on YouTube

Camino Conversations

Most downloaded Resources

This site is run by Ivar at

in Santiago de Compostela.
This site participates in the Amazon Affiliate program, designed to provide a means for Ivar to earn fees by linking to Amazon
Official Camino Passport (Credential) | 2024 Camino Guides
Back
Back
Top