Camino Frances Walking Tour

DAY 1: Arrival in Triacastela

From your point of arrival, use the public transport information we provide to make the journey to Triacastela.

DAY 2: Triacastela to Sarria

Via San Xil: 18km • 5 - 7 hours • (↑) 390m

Via Samos: 25km • 6 - 8 hours • (↑) 580m

To start your Camino de Santiago tour you have a choice of two route options. The San Xil route guides you on shaded woodland paths and tracks up to the 910m-high plateau of Alto do Riocabo before descending via small settlements towards Sarria. The other, longer route leads you through small picturesque villages, before descending into Samos, home to a famous 6th century monastery; one of the oldest in the Western world. From Samos you follow a combination of tracks shaded by trees and small country roads, passing many small chapels on your way to Sarria.

DAY 3: Sarria to Portomarín

22km • 6 - 8 hrs • (↑) 510m

Leaving the lively town of Sarria behind, you pass through charming countryside along quiet country tracks and paths weaving through fields and woodland. The route passes through many peaceful, rural communities, offering countless opportunities for taking relaxing breaks at cafes, restaurants and “honesty stalls”. As you descend into the valley of the river Miño and cross over the Belezar reservoir you can often enjoy stunning views of Portomarin, a picturesque town that was rebuilt in the 1960s on a nearby hill after the original town was flooded.

DAY 4: Portomarín to Palas de Rei

24km • 6 - 8 hrs • (↑) 600m

Today you are following in the footsteps of Spanish kings and Roman emperors. After enjoying the morning views of the Embalse de Belezar and climbing through the woodland near Portomarin, the route guides you through small villages over the hills of the Sierra Ligonde. Here you pass two former pilgrim’s hospitals that are said to once have sheltered such illustrious guests as Charlemagne, Emperor Charles V and his son Phillip II of Spain. The walk then descends to Portos, where you have the option to take a detour to the ancient seat of the Knights of Santiago at Vilar de Donas. A final gentle ascent brings you to the little hill of Alto Rosario where pilgrims used to pray the rosary and from where you soon arrive in Palas de Rei.

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