Into Galicia

A walk on parts of the Lisbon-Porto leg of the Portuguese Caminho in 2016 proved at times to involve more of the twenty-first century than what I would have preferred of the fifteenth, too little of other pilgrims’ camaraderie that I had so much enjoyed on other walks. But as I moved north I continued to find enough of the origins of the Way to make me want to search for more. So I returned in 2017 to attempt to complete the full route beyond Porto, and found precisely what I had sought the year before.


‘Why do you do the Way?’ she asked, not in disbelief, as some seem to do, but with sincere curiosity, perhaps to help understand her own motivation. So I tried to answer, but stumbled over too many explanations: the challenge, adventure, culture, history, solitude, community, friendships that develop from those long pilgrimages. Later it occurred to me that I could have left it at that: it is, in fact, the relationships that one makes on the Way that can turn it into an exceptional experience.
— Into Galicia

My walk over the Lisboa-Porto section of the Portuguese Caminho had impacted me. If not, why would I want to tell the story and why did I want to go back?

Undoubtedly because I wanted to finish what I had started, discovering northern Portugal and then crossing into a part of Galicia that I did not know and arrive in Santiago de Compostela by that route. But also because I remembered how my toughest experiences were compensated by some of the most pleasant, and the two complementing, balancing each other: as when long walks under intense heat would be relieved by a refreshing shower, cold beer, fine meal and deep sleep, and hours of loneliness on a path with few companions were suddenly brightened by the kind greeting of a 83-year-old barefoot woman working her field of cabbages, how the anxiety of trying to negotiate through the noise and danger of highways could gradually change to the tranquility and safety of a rural road through a pine forest, and a commercial or industrial complex, indistinguishable from anything I could have found at home, vanished as I entered the historic center of a town that still retained some of the culture and customs of Portugal of centuries ago.


“What matters on the Camino is not what one has done over the course of a life, but what one is doing now, in this present moment, and why. In that way the Camino frees you. And it bonds you. It bonds you with those who have shared the experience of the Camino, and it marks moments in your life that you will never forget.”


— Into Galicia