Portuguese Camino – Walking Backwards😁

All Caminos seem to lead to Santiago de Compostela.  Three Portuguese Caminos – the Coastal Route, the Central Route and the Liturgical Route – all travel through Portugal towards Santiago and all three routes converge in Tui, a Spanish town on the border with Portugal, separated by the Mino River which forms a natural boundary between the two countries.

After our spectacular Camino del Faro along the Galician Coast in Spain (https://marienoonan.website/2023/09/17/camino-del-faro-the-lighthouse-way/), we wanted to hike some more before flying back home from Lisbon. The Portuguese Central Route seemed interesting although we would be trekking in the ‘wrong’ direction, away from Santiago del Compostela. We travelled by bus from Finisterre (where we ended the Camino del Faro) to Tui which took three buses but our packs were light and almost welded to our backs now after carrying them along the Galician Coast. We stayed in a lovely albergue in Tui, Convento del Camino, a former convent and a gorgeous building from the 16th century which oozed history with thick walls, a beautiful courtyard garden and a large kitchen.  The place was full of character even if the plumbing was a bit whiffy at times. All accommodation was mixed dorms (€16 a head) and everyone staying was walking the Camino and heading north towards Santiago …except us who were going south. It was a very social place with lots of chat about blisters, band aids, foot pain and of course life. The majority of the guests, a good 70%, were women and most were over 50. In the 10 bed dorm, Caoimhín snored for the first few hours and kept the other nine people awake, including me. I slept after a while, cosy in my top bunk and might even have joined the snoring brigade.

 

In the morning, there was lots of rustlings of bags and creaking of bodies as  people descended from bunks and straightened upright. Breakfast was €2.50 – as much tea/coffee as you could drink, toast, butter, marmalade, juice, apples and little sweet buns.  Most people were washed, fed and ready to leave before 8am. On the street pilgrims emerged from laneways and thick hostel doors and joined a flow of people, hatted with boots and backpacks, all walking against us. There was a mist rising from the river as we make our way to the bridge to cross into Portugal where 8am became 7am – Portugal was one hour behind Spain and the same time as Ireland. The iron bridge was very impressive especially with the mist rising from the river, shrouding everything in wispy serenity. The trees had that deep green with pale curling edges, whispering that autumn had arrived.  We walked along laneways and cobbled paths, by vineyards and little towns with manicured gardens and church-bells that rang out the hours. At one intersection, a man in a car gestured to us that we were walking in the wrong direction, another man trimming a hedge told us that Santiago was the other way and pilgrims coming towards us were bemused, baffled or even concerned that they might be going in the wrong direction when they saw us approaching them.

 Coming from the south, the camino was well marked with the shell symbols but we kept having to turn around to find them to make sure we were going in the opposite  but right direction for us. We were vaguely following blue arrows which seemed to point us in the right direction, totally clueless as to where they were leading, until we discovered that the blue arrows led to Fatima. So from then on, when people asked where we were going, we just said ‘Fatima’.  Of course, people, especially Americans wanted to know how far was Fatima, how long was it going to take us and why we wanted to go there. The morning became hot and we welcomed the shady parts along by rivers and streams, crossed by small roman cobblestoned bridges over the river Coura. We reached Rubiaes, a small one-horse town which was like a mirage in the dense heat (about 30degrees).  We turned away from the Camino and stopped at the first restaurant we saw which didn’t look promising, dusty with one man sitting at a table outside. But it was a different story inside, noisy with TVs and the clatter of cutlery, the smell of garlic and onions, and teeming with people. We grabbed a shaded table outside and ordered fish &rice and chicken& chips and get enough food to feed a football team plus a basket of bread, a jug of wine, a large bottle of water, one chocolate mousse and one coffee (all for€18). Although Rubiaes was the end of the day’s stage, we thought that we might walk further but after that feed, all we wanted to do was lie down. We booked accommodation there and then, a private room with breakfast and ensuite bathroom for €40 and trudged with full stomachs the two kilometres to get there.


We listened to the tinkling bells around the necks of the sheep and goats in the field next to our accommodation in our blue bedroom – blue walls, blue sheets but with a sunny balcony where the clothes that we washed in the bathroom, dried in less than an hour. The enormous blister on my right big toe was becoming so huge that it seemed to have a life of its own but thankfully it wasn’t painful. The room was stuffy during the night and a couple of mosquitoes buzzed and feasted on my arms. The landlady was even crankier than I was in the morning, serving up the ‘orange juice’ with a neon glow, plastic cheese and stale bread. A couple of Irish women, a Dutch couple and a few Americans were also staying, all hiking towards Tui.

Our second day took us from Rubiaes to Ponte de Lima, a section with a steep climb if you were hiking in a northly direction but the path for us was stony, wooded for the first half and mainly downhill. There was dappled sunshine from the start and the church bells were ringing out as we walked along an ancient Roman road, so important in medieval times as a link between the two great rivers, the Mino in the north and the Lima in the south. There was a chainsaw vibrating somewhere in the woods but there was also stillness and birdsong. Near the highest point was a granite cross, strewn with stones, photos, notes and other offerings – a place to leave your burdens and worries and walk away lighter.  Some of the pilgrims going in the opposite direction seemed weary and we didn’t tell them that their uphill struggle had only started. Walking through the pine and eucalyptus forests, I imagined for a moment, the horror of wildfires with exploding trees and devastation but the day was beautiful, warm and blue skied.  By the time we got to Ponte de Lima at about 1 pm, the temperature was again about 30degrees and shade was limited. The town which was named after the long bridge over the river Lima, was really charming, full of old buildings and one of the oldest towns in Portugal. We stayed in the Old Village Hostel which had great facilities, kitchen and excellent staff with free tea, coffee and biscuits. It was again full of hikers and almost everyone was up for breakfast at 6.30am. The kettle had just boiled when there was a power cut and we were plunged into darkness. While the rest of us looked for the torchlight on our phones, a German oriental woman wearing a pair of silver pumps, because she had left her hiking boots in Lisbon with the rest of her luggage, went upstairs and came back with a scented candle from her bag. She was a very talkative woman and was thoroughly enjoying the camino, walking about 5 kms a day (in her silver shoes) and then getting a taxi or bus to the next stage. One of the huge attractions of this camino was its sociability, everyone had a shared purpose, something in common.  As we were walking against the flow, we got a good look at the pilgrims. There were people of all nationalities, shapes, sizes and fitness levels, many elderly and some struggling. We wondered what compelled so many people to commit to trekking long distances, to enduring the hardship of calloused feet and hard beds. There was certainly a religious element for some but for most, it was a physical challenge with a spiritual element, a walking in nature,  it was something that could be undertaken on your own or in a group.  

Wine Country😍

 On our third stage, we were on the road before 7am with the gorgeous coolness of dawn. This was a long 35kms stage for us from Punte de Lima to Barcelos. The grape harvest was in full swing with tractors trundling along and lots of grape-pickers in the fields.  There was a mixture of asphalt and cobblestones and again people wondered why we were walking in the wrong direction. There were signs of religion everywhere with little shrines outside houses and crosses at every intersection. When we stopped to eat egg sandwiches at the side of the road at about 9.30am, a dog followed us and then people coming from the opposite direction, started asking us if was our dog because a dog named Doris was missing and its owner was frantically searching for her. But before we could find the owner, the dog took off again, ignoring our calls of Doris, Doris. At some stage, we missed the Camino signs that we were following backwards and ended up ‘lost’ in a vineyard, then clambering over  walls, sneaking through a couple of gardens and eventually picking up the trail. When we finally got to Barcelos, we were exhausted, as much from the heat as the trekking. Barcelos, an ancient city with a fourteenth century bridge, was known for being the cradle of the Rooster of Barcelos, the emblem of Portugal and symbol of good faith and justice. Thankfully there weren’t too many roosters crowing during the night and we slept the sleep of the just…and the tired.

The Portuguese Rooster of Barcelos

The Portuguese Camino was a lovely experience, trekking through charming  farming countryside, forests and beautiful towns from Barcelos to Tui (Many said that this was the best section of the Central Portuguese Route as the section from Oporto to Barcelos follows a highway and industrial area) Although it couldn’t be called crowded, there were still lots of pilgrims on the route and it was very social especially in contrast to the Camino del Faro where we met a total of six other hikers in eight days of walking and where we trekked most days in solitude in dramatic isolation. Both caminos were gorgeous and rewarding but completely different.

A train took us from Barcelos to Oporto and there we boarded another to Lisbon, a city that we visited for the first time with hills, yellow trams, tree lined squares and earthquake tales

Portuguese Camino – Walking Backwards😁

Camino del Faro- The Lighthouse Way

Mention the words ‘Camino’ and ‘Spain’ in the same sentence and most people will think about the Camino de Santiago, the incredibly popular pilgrimage way of St James. But there are others far less trodden paths🥾.  We have just completed the spectacular Camino del Faro (The Lighthouse Way), a 200 Kms trek in Galicia along the Coste del Morte (Death Coast), linking the towns of Malpica and Finisterre and walking from lighthouse to lighthouse.

Camino del Faro (Lighthouse Way)

Our journey began with a late Ryanair flight from Dublin to Santiago de Compostela, arriving at about 11.30pm. Yellow bus signs on the ground at the airport Arrivals directed us to a bus stop outside the terminal where the 6A took us to the centre of town in about 35 minutes for one euro😃. The streets were quiet and shuttered and a couple that we saw in the airport queue, followed us to the same hotel, Hotel Windsor, a no-frills place but very clean, very central with loads of hot water. 

The following morning we discovered that the buses to Malpica, our starting point, were infrequent with just two buses a day…we had  missed the first one and the next one was at 1pm. We wandered around the Cathedral area which was crowded with tourists, walkers,  pilgrims and the ubiquitous shells from jewelry to tablecloths to masonry etchings – pilgrimage is big business in this part of the world. Confessions were available in multiple languages but few were availing of the opportunity.

Malpica♥️

Getting to Malpica involved a change of bus at Carballo but both buses were comfortable, efficient and cheap with the two and a half hour journey costing less than a fiver each and we paid the drivers on the buses.  Malpica was a surprise…a really gorgeous little town that we had never heard of until we investigated this trek, with a prom that curved around s turquoise bay.  We booked into JB Hostal with a large sunny seaview room, 55 euros a night. (In Spain, hostals are guesthouses, different to hostels with dormitories). The seafront was teeming with surfers and little cafes with cold beer and good wine🥂.  The beach was dangerous for swimming so we wandered down to the pretty port area to find the start point of our camino. This  first lighthouse was a disappointment…hardly visible and behind a big seawall with a No Trespassing Sign (in Spanish) – very little English spoken or understood here.

Malpica Port

It was barely light when we crept out of our guesthouse at 7.45am without breakfast(not included). We were smothered in sunscreen,dressed in shorts and carrying all our belongings on our backs. Apart from a few dog walkers, the whole town seemed to be sleeping. We passed a holy well, pristine white-sand beaches and a church on a cliff, stark against a backdrop of  barbie- pink heathers. We walked to the incessant sound of the restless sea, relatively benign and blue on this gorgeous early September. day.  The first restaurant we came too -after 3 hours walking – was closed until 1pm. Although we had some stomach rumblings, we pushed on as we didn’t want to hang around for 2 hours until it opened. We didn’t know then that we wouldn’t find another one😬

Leaving Malpica, Day 1
Water along the Way

There were chest high ferns and boulders like giant marbles to clamber over in search of the green dot, which denoted our path but which was sometimes quite elusive🟢. At a little port area where we sat to have a meagre snack of nuts and bananas, a light drizzle started, welcome and cooling at first until it got heavier and became  a drenching deluge.  There was neither shade nor shelter. The wind howled around Nariga Lighthouse, tossing rain and foam at us from all directions. We trudged along like drowned rats until we reached Ninons Beach, a secluded remote beach and the end of Day 1. We hadn’t any accommodation booked,  assuming that we would find something along the way but the coast was  isolated…we didn’t meet a soul that first day in 22 Kms of hiking. We decided to call a taxi to take us back to Malpica. That’s when we discovered that there was no signal in Ninons😁 so we squelched another kilometer uphill to make the call. The phone signal kept dropping but a taxi materialized out of the rain…like an apparition because Caoimhin wasn’t sure that he had got the message through. Back in Malpica, our shoes were sodden and everything we were wearing dripped a muddy trail up the stairs. Although we had rain covers for our backpacks, we discovered that  everything in them was also wet.  But after a hot shower, the sun came out, the outside tables were wiped down, the wine was still cheap and I ate a basket of bread and probably the best mussels I have ever tasted😍.

 Day 2 started with wet shoes and damp clothes. We had bought a lavender spray in the Chino shop to mask the stench of damp but it was so synthetic that it smelt almost toxic. Our taxi dropped us back to Ninos Beach where we climbed through gorgeous eucalyptus forests (their scent wasn’t strong enough to mask the lavender 😏). Shining granite rock shimmered in the sunshine along this walk to Ponteceso with many diverse landscapes from rocky cliffs, salt marsh, sand dunes and river estuary, a haven for birds. This stage was beautiful but long (almost 27 Kms). When we came to the seaside town of  Corme at the 17kms mark, we were ready for a break.The first place didn’t do food until evening time so we had a cold beer and moved on to another establishment where we ate fish salad and patatas bravas. Although the sun was hot and relentless for the last stage we still managed to get wet feet, walking on boardwalks submerged by the incoming tide along the estuary. 

Roncudo Lighthouse, Day 2

When we reached the hostel, my feet were shriveled and blistered, I had  a welt on my hand from clutching the walking stick and an ache across my shoulders from the backpack. This Camino began to feel like a pilgrimage of sorts. In a local bar, the friendly owner insisted on plying us with free tapas which we were almost too exhausted to eat. But things improved from this point and day 2 of multi-day hikes is well- known to be the tough one.

We discovered that socks could be dried very effectively by wrapping them around a hairdryer sprout ( if you were fortunate enough to have access to a hairdryer) and stuffing shoes with old newspapers(periodicos viejos) helped a lot. Comped plasters and Vaseline were a balm for feet and a hotel in Laxe with a bath worked magict to ease tired muscles.  The hikes became easier as our bodies – and minds-  adjusted.  We carried food supplies, pockets stuffed with bread and cheese,  a supply of biscuits, bananas, nuts and chocolate and an emergency can of sardines. Most days the only people we saw were solitary locals, clambering over rocks far below us, splashed with foaming water, gathering gooseneck barnacles from the heavily oxygenated waters – a treacherous occupation. We always trekked in hope of a cafe. A local woman, who was hanging out her washing, offered us life-saving coffee  when we were disappointed yet again that a cafe/bakery marked on our map was closed. This lovely woman filled our water bottles and even offered us beer and food. Wonderful hospitality. 

 Sometimes our Camino veered inland where we walked through woodland to the sound of birdsong, hiked by streams where old water mills were covered in moss and past high villages where stone houses looked abandoned surrounded by fields of withering corn and orchards of dripping fruit. But mainly our path hugged the coast faithfully, often just a narrow ribbon clinging to steep cliffs with dizzying drops. 

The Costa del Morte is not called the Death Coast for nothing. The coast was littered with stone crosses, bargains made with the heavens or erected as platitudes to the sea, or places to remember the dead. There were  tales of shipwrecks, drownings, smugglers and pirates. On a lonely headland,  the doomed victims of ill-fated ships were buried in a place called the English Graveyard.  A stunning sculpture near the Lake Lighthouse of a woman gazing out to sea, captured the anxiety and agony of waiting. An isolated church on a hilltop was a place where local women used to go in times of storm to pray for a change of wind to bring their men home. 

As we hiked further west, the coast became wilder and even more remote. On our fifth day,  after days of sunshine, the forecast was bad and didn’t disappoint. The cold blue-green of the sea, mesmerizing and dangerous, turned an ominous gray. We watched two surfers paddling on their boards out to churning waves that crashed on jagged rocks and marveled at their stupidity -so small and insignificant. Even the seagulls were sheltering from the elements, hunkering down on the beaches. The wind became ferocious,  the rain came at us sideways and we could barely stand upright but we got a tiny glimpse of what this coast might be like in bad weather and it was awe-inspiring.

After six days walking, we arrived in Muxia, a pretty little town with safe beaches, a lighthouse and a place of legends. It was here that the Virgin Mary arrived in a stone boat to encourage Saint James to continue in his work.  Large stones near the church were reputed  to be part of Mary’s boat and to have magical properties.The Barco festival was starting the following day so we decided to take a rest day and stay an extra night. Muxia  is on the Camino de Santiago so was busier than anywhere else we stayed. We discovered that Spanish festivals only get going around midnight and continue until at least 5am and nobody even thinks of eating until 10pm. Unfortunately, we couldn’t stay awake for much of the festivities🥳. Muxia was badly affected by The Prestige disaster in 2002, which leaked thousands of litres of crude oil into the sea all along the coast here.

Although it hardly seemed possible, the scenery got even more spectacular as the days progressed. The penultimate day was the ‘queen of the mountain stage’ with steep climbs and stupendous views. We trekked to Tourinan Lighthouse, which was supposedly the most westerly point in Europe and got the last rays of sunlight in the Spring Equinox. On the eighth and final day, it almost felt as if we were in the landscape, part of it and not just looking at it, at one with the sea and the wind (or maybe that was just exhaustion or relief with our end goal within reach 🙏).

Fisterre, the end of the known world for the Romans, was a strange little town, full of weathered people with walking sticks, limps and flip flops. It was the endpoint for pilgrims on the Camino de Santiago as well so it didn’t have to try very hard to attract visitors. But the landscape around the Finisterre lighthouse, a couple of kilometers hike outside the town, was worth the entire Camino, a fitting place to finish. This was a wild landscape of mysticism, of drowned cities and submerged mountains, of altars to the sun and timeless rituals with tales of sterile couple becoming fertile after sleeping on one of the large rocks on the hill overlooking the sea and healing miracles.

So we made it, 200kms in eight stages. We carried out own packs and booked our accommodation as we went along, usually walking from stage to stage but getting taxis to our accommodation if we couldn’t find anything near the end stage.  The Camino del Faros was probably the most spectacular hike that we have ever done.  It was quite challenging at times (more than we had anticipated but we hadn’t done a lot of training). Each day on its own would not have been difficult but the cumulative nature of hiking relatively long distances day after day exerted a toll.  The bigger the challenge, the greater the reward 🌞 and  the rewards were huge. There were no stamps to collect in a pilgrimage passport, nothing to ‘prove’ that we had trekked along the way. The benefits of this Camino were all internal – solitude,  genuine communing with nature and an appreciation and respect  for the power of the sea -to mould and erode, to give bounty and to take it away. If you like the great outdoors, like to go a little off the beaten track, then this is the hike for you.

The end of the world 🌍
The End – Faro de Finisterre

Link below to a fabulous website with lots of details.

Camino del Faro- The Lighthouse Way