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Porto To Santiago, April 2017

long trails

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Time of past OR future Camino
Frances 2012
Hello from Lisbon! I am due to start walking from Porto in a couple of days and thought I'd try and add some helpful information for future pilgrims as I travel towards Santiago. I am planning for about 10 days.

I was on the Via de la Plata before, but stopped after one week. To cut a long story short, there were just too few other pilgrims and I found it a lonely walk. I would never have made it to Santiago along that route, so decided to hop over from Merida to Lisbon (only 20 EUR on a 4.5 hour bus).

I take the train tomorrow to Porto (only 24 EUR booked today on the very good CP train app) and will have a couple of days in the wonderful city where I plan to set some kind of world record for eating the most Pastéis de natas.
 
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I take the train tomorrow to Porto (only 24 EUR booked today on the very good CP train app) and will have a couple of days in the wonderful city where I plan to set some kind of world record for eating the most Pastéis de natas.

Bom Caminho @long trails, but gorging on Pasteis de natas is easy, let's see if you are able to manage more than one Francesinha and we will expect to see the photographic evidence.
 
In case anyone is wondering why I am not walking from here imn Lison. Well I met someone recently who said its a very lonely walk up to Porto and most of it is by road. There is very little infrastructure too apparently, and what they said seems to tie in with what I have read.
 
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I can understand your apprehension about walking from Lisbon but for what it's worth I loved the Lisbon to Porto section when I walked it with my 24 year-old daughter in March 2016. There are some beautiful towns like Tomar, Santarem and Coimbra. We met lovely pilgrims along the way and enjoyed their company, as well as hours of solitude during quiet stretches. It certainly is quieter than the Porto to Lisbon section but I would happily do it again. Like all things on the Way, everyone has their favourites. Enjoy your journey!
 
Hello from Lisbon! I am due to start walking from Porto in a couple of days and thought I'd try and add some helpful information for future pilgrims as I travel towards Santiago. I am planning for about 10 days.

I was on the Via de la Plata before, but stopped after one week. To cut a long story short, there were just too few other pilgrims and I found it a lonely walk. I would never have made it to Santiago along that route, so decided to hop over from Merida to Lisbon (only 20 EUR on a 4.5 hour bus).

I take the train tomorrow to Porto (only 24 EUR booked today on the very good CP train app) and will have a couple of days in the wonderful city where I plan to set some kind of world record for eating the most Pastéis de natas.
Hope you survive the pastry challenge and meet up with some good companions on the way.
 
I take the train tomorrow to Porto (only 24 EUR booked today on the very good CP train app) and will have a couple of days in the wonderful city where I plan to set some kind of world record for eating the most Pastéis de natas.

Bom Caminho @long trails, but gorging on Pasteis de natas is easy, let's see if you are able to manage more than one Francesinha and we will expect to see the photographic evidence.
Good grief, do yourself a GIANT favour and don't eat even one Francesinha! They are a complete travesty and have nothing to do with Portuguese cuisine, and whoever dreamt up the name must have hated France! The only truly terrible meal I've had in over 15 visits to Portugal was a Francesinha. Eat almost anything else and you'll enjoy it. If you have time, go to the Cafe Majestic on Sta Catarina and nurse a coffee to take in some wonderful decor. I've never seen such happy cherubs as there. Don't let the look of the place intimidate you: they don't care if you want to just have coffee, or if you want to have a big meal. Bom caminho!
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
I much prefer the food in Portugal compared to it's larger neighbour. So much so, that I am probably going to stop on the Portuguese side of the border on the 5th night rather than staying in Tui.

In Porto now, wonderful weather and forcast looks very good. Like this city so much that I might stay an extra day and start walking on Wednesday!
 
Good grief, do yourself a GIANT favour and don't eat even one Francesinha! They are a complete travesty and have nothing to do with Portuguese cuisine, and whoever dreamt up the name must have hated France! The only truly terrible meal I've had in over 15 visits to Portugal was a Francesinha. Eat almost anything else and you'll enjoy it. If you have time, go to the Cafe Majestic on Sta Catarina and nurse a coffee to take in some wonderful decor. I've never seen such happy cherubs as there. Don't let the look of the place intimidate you: they don't care if you want to just have coffee, or if you want to have a big meal. Bom caminho!
You can do both and have a Francesinha at the Majestic Cafe a much more refined version and utterly delicious . Here is a picture of one I had for those not familiar with the Francesinha
 

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A selection of Camino Jewellery
I take the train tomorrow to Porto (only 24 EUR booked today on the very good CP train app) and will have a couple of days in the wonderful city where I plan to set some kind of world record for eating the most Pastéis de natas.

Bom Caminho @long trails, but gorging on Pasteis de natas is easy, let's see if you are able to manage more than one Francesinha and we will expect to see the photographic evidence.

I ate a Francesinha on a dare from my girlfriend. Bread, ham, linguica, fresh sausage (chipotle), steak or roast meat (?!?), cheese, tomato and beer sauce. It’s the orange sauce it swims in that makes it extra “especial”! Quite possibly the worst thing I have ever done to myself. ;)
 

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longtrails, one of your blog posts (VLDP Day 5) has a screen print from a GPS tracking app. Which one is this? Would be curious to get your feedback on it, how long you've been using it, etc. BTW, couldn't find a way to comment directly from your blog but that could just be me. Thanks.

And in the name of everything that's holy, stay away from Francesinhas. Just double up on port instead.
 
I ate a Francesinha on a dare from my girlfriend. Bread, ham, linguica, fresh sausage (chipotle), steak or roast meat (?!?), cheese, tomato and beer sauce. It’s the orange sauce it swims in that makes it extra “especial”! Quite possibly the worst thing I have ever done to myself. ;)

Thanks for sharing your excellent photo @Ray J - eating a Francesinha it must surely be a one in a lifetime experience (never to be repeated!). When I ate mine, it was in a cafe in Matoshinos and the lovely woman who brought the mountain of food was most concerned that I enjoy every bit. Bom Caminho
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
Alright, if we're sharing pictures . . .
Not as saucy.
Mine's from Cafe Santiago, Porto.
I can't believe you guys finished your's. I didn't even come close.
 

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Alright, if we're sharing pictures . . .
Not as saucy.
Mine's from Cafe Santiago, Porto.
I can't believe you guys finished your's. I didn't even come close.

Hah! Me, either - I think I packed it in about halfway through. Usually famished while hiking, this was the first time on the trail I couldn't finish a meal. :D
 

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