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Which route has fewest cobblestones

jimrobert

New Member
Time of past OR future Camino
2024
Hello, I am trying to determine which route(s) is best for me. I have the stamina for the distance, but do to a disability I struggle with cobblestones and am looking for the route with the fewest cobblestones for a 100km trek ending in Santiago de Compostela. That being said, I would prefer to limit walking on roads. thank you for your replies.
 
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.
Hello, I am trying to determine which route(s) is best for me. I have the stamina for the distance, but do to a disability I struggle with cobblestones and am looking for the route with the fewest cobblestones for a 100km trek ending in Santiago de Compostela. That being said, I would prefer to limit walking on roads. thank you for your replies.
Then don't choose the Camino Portugues in Portugal. Lots of them there until the Spanish border.
 
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.
Also, avoid any variants to walk on a “Roman road” as those have degraded over the past thousand years leaving just the larger rocks, so it’s like walking a cobblestone path.
 
In my mind cobblestones are more associated with the Portuguese Caminhos
And really only in Portugal itself. I was so relieved to cross over the bridge into Spain and say goodbye to (most of) the cobblestones.

@jimrobert - I don't think that cobblestones are a problem on any routes on the final 100 km into Santiago.
 
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.
Then don't choose the Camino Portugues in Portugal. Lots of them there until the Spanish border.
So true! I had done 2 previous Caminos with ZERO foot problems. My third was Camino Portuguese. Due to the cobblestones, I lost 2 my 2 big toenails. They bruised from hitting so much stone and pavement. A fellow pilgrim lost 6 toenails!
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
Hello, I am trying to determine which route(s) is best for me. I have the stamina for the distance, but do to a disability I struggle with cobblestones and am looking for the route with the fewest cobblestones for a 100km trek ending in Santiago de Compostela. That being said, I would prefer to limit walking on roads. thank you for your replies.
I made all the "big ones" and in my oppinion is the Camino de Madrid (until Sahagun) the best way, very few cobblestone and asphalt, but this way didnot ends in SdC
 
Hello, I am trying to determine which route(s) is best for me. I have the stamina for the distance, but do to a disability I struggle with cobblestones and am looking for the route with the fewest cobblestones for a 100km trek ending in Santiago de Compostela. That being said, I would prefer to limit walking on roads. thank you for your replies.
I hate to be a bit analy retentive but stone surfacing in Portugal are “setts” not cobblestones, which are naturally shaped stones, and much more rounded and would be even harder to walk on.
 
I hate to be a bit analy retentive but stone surfacing in Portugal are “setts” not cobblestones, which are naturally shaped stones, and much more rounded and would be even harder to walk on.
Ah, precision. That’s what this forum so frequently lacks 😉

Anyone any idea what the polite term for those slippery as the descent into hell, ankle turning b*ggers is in Portuguese?
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
'Cobbles' on the Portuguese ended my 2017 Camino with trashed Achilles in both legs. It was to be for my 75th birthday. I was in reasonably good condition, but no amount of taping, insole changes, lacing changes, wearing of ankle braces could make it work. I started in Lisbon, walked a few days in the heat (also a condition I do not do well in), then alternated bus and walking to Porto for the final restart. Made to Pedra Furada before overcoming my excess tenacity and male ego. Took a cab to the nearest rail, rail to Lisbon, rescheduled my flites and went home to heal (took 6 months before I could comfortably do above 10k).
BTW I got some reimbursement from my travel insurance--would have gotten more if I had seen and been diagnosed by the Hotel doctor in Parque das Nacoes.

Glad to know they are setts so I quit badmouthing cobbles.
 
I agree with @Keyser. I recall no cobblestones to walk on in Portugal, but had many varieties of setts. They normally do not bother my feet, except in Lisbon on a rainy day when they seriously became like a sheet of ice. I had to walk very slowly and lift each foot carefully.
Screenshot_20231030-055645~2.pngScreenshot_20231030-055944~2.pngScreenshot_20231030-055844~2.png
 
I made all the "big ones" and in my oppinion is the Camino de Madrid (until Sahagun) the best way, very few cobblestone and asphalt, but this way didnot ends in SdC
It can if you walk continue to walk from Sahagun to Santiago. Their are a number of route choices that can get you there. :)
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
I’ve only walked the Portuguese Caminos and I didn’t find the setts worse than any other paved surface. But it sounds like there are more paved surfaces on the CPs?
 
Hello, I am trying to determine which route(s) is best for me. I have the stamina for the distance, but do to a disability I struggle with cobblestones and am looking for the route with the fewest cobblestones for a 100km trek ending in Santiago de Compostela. That being said, I would prefer to limit walking on roads. thank you for your replies.
The Aragonnes has a lot of rocky trails
 

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