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Taking the Invierno off the road

peregrina2000

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Today’s Diario de León reports that the Xunta is going to allocate 40 million euros to improve the trails on the Invierno, with the goal of taking the camino off the road.

The Xunta has done a study designating all of the stretches where the Camino goes along the side of roads, whether they are provincial, regional or national.

How this will be done is anyone’s guess, and it is not described in the article. But given the Xunta’s track record, I think it’s likely that they will be putting in off road asphalt or crushed gravel paths. I hope that I am wrong. That would be safer maybe, and safety is important, but not what most pilgrims would prefer. I am hoping that the Camino Associations in the area will be involved in the process and that something will be done other than turning the Invierno into a 150 km stretch of paved via verde paths.
 
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We’ve had many discussions on the forum about this phenomenon, but since the forum upgrade seems to have messed with the search function, I can’t post links here. Basically, people with far more knowledge than I about trails tell me that this is not the preferred way to maintain trails in the natural environment. I think almost every unpaved inch of a camino in Galicia is improved along these lines, but your picture, @unadara, shows that the trend is spreading east!

The one small solace is that as the years pass, the trail darkens in color and gets a layer of more natural material above it, but it is still not like walking on a real earthen trail.
 
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I haven’t walked walked it yet! But this week they are “improving” the forest path from Pendes to Potes.
Is this what you mean, @peregrina2000, when you say "crushed gravel" (see the photo)?

I am used to infrastructure "improvements" in Spain, and I agree that they often have quite confused ideas about it...

However, I am also used to the fact that in Spain it is one thing to allocate funds, and another to DO the works. Just the process of apply for the permits and making the tender usually takes YEARS. So you have plenty of time to make your own way without this kind of ugliness...
 
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The fairly recent protests in Galicia are placed firmly in context here. Just imagine what €40,000,000 might do for local communities rather than spending it on keeping Peregrinos trail runners out of the mud or the roadside fag packets. If Turismo de Galicia’s idea of keeping Peregrinos safe is represented by that stretch of Autopista Peregrino paralleling the AP-9 into Sigüeiro on the Inglés…. May the gods protect the Invierno from Turismo de Galicia
 
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The reason I took the photo is because one of my friends is a manager in Irish Cement and I was sending it home asking would it ever catch on in Ireland. We love our forest trails and hate it when they are upgraded to allow trucks in for felling. But I literally stopped and stared as I could not believe how difficult it was to descend on it. To spend public money in this way is shameful. As we say at home How many people asked for this? Probably none.
 
The fairly recent protests in Galicia are placed firmly in context here. Just imagine what €40,000,000 might do for local communities rather than spending it on keeping Peregrinos trail runners out of the mud or the roadside fag packets. If Turismo de Galicia’s idea of keeping Peregrinos safe is represented by that stretch of Autopista Peregrino paralleling the AP-9 into Sigüeiro on the Inglés…. May the gods protect the Invierno from Turismo de Galicia
I saw graffiti in a small village on the Invierno a few weeks ago, I wish I had taken a picture. Basically it said ‘shame on you, the authorities (listing the various ‘authorities’), putting all this money on the camino which doesn’t need it but letting our villages go to absolute ruin.
You ARE guilty.’
It was poignant.
 
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So terribly sad to see. Take a Camino stage off the shoulder of a highway yes, but please don't "improve" dirt paths through forests and farmland. That picture @unadara says it all 😠.

That huge some of money could be much better allocated and actually benefit the pilgrim and local population. It really baffles me how the Xunta gets away with these "improvements".

This reminds me how I felt the morning of the climb after leaving Castrojeriz and seeing a "yellow brick road" (cement slabs) lay before me during the entire decent. This was in 2018 and was for me the second time walking the Francés from Sjpd to Santiago. In 2010 it was just a dirt path, not in the least dangerous. In the Basque region I had also witnessed some "improvements" and couldn't understand why a cement path was warranted on a flat section in the woods. And of course we all know what has happened to Foncebadón.

The pilgrim community can mobilize to make changes or actually avoid them, we've seen that with the Cruz de Hierro but too often it is a fait accompli.
 
I know the Invierno numbers are stepping up (no pun), but it seems at a slow rate. I know its exposure is partially in trying to divert some of the the Sarria crowds to the Invierno. Having just walked a large part of it, I don't see how trail "improvements" will lure many more pilgrims, especially first timers, to this much less traveled route unless funds for more infrastructure are added, which would help newbies feel more confident to consider walking it. I never would have walked it on my first Camino.
 
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Today’s Diario de León reports that the Xunta is going to allocate 40 million euros to improve the trails on the Invierno, with the goal of taking the camino off the road. The Xunta has done a...

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