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Walking the Camino del Norte: Arriving in Santiago de Compostela

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The day we completed our pilgrimage on the Camino de Santiago was surreal. We couldn’t believe we were heading out on the last day, the 35th day of our pilgrimage, and that that we would arrive in Santiago de Compostela that very afternoon.

We woke up in Pedrouzo giddy with excitement and literally skipping toward Santiago.

This is the video of our final day on the Camino del Norte

While we skipped and counted down the kilometers to our final destination, we also took some time to reflect.

Leaving Your Burden Behind: A Camino Tradition

The Camino de Santiago is full of tradition and symbolism. But there is one tradition that literally weighed us down as we walked.

You see, pilgrims often carry a rock from home in their backpack as they walk. The small rock symbolizes a burden. And, somewhere along The Way, pilgrims leave their burdens behind.

On the Camino Frances, the most popular route, there is a specific place where pilgrims leave their burden. But on the Camino del Norte, there is not a designated spot.

Instead, rocks are piled on top of mile markers and signs all along the route. Pilgrims on the Camino del Norte do not touch the rocks. They leave those rocks right as they were left, respecting the burden left behind by a fellow pilgrim on the route.

And as we neared Santiago, it was time to leave our burdens behind.

Bye, Bye Burdens: Hello Santiago

It was emotional to set down that rock from my hometown of Vancouver, Wash. A small, smooth rock that my dad had handed me as I packed up my bags.

rock burdon on the camino del norte
My burden

I had chosen to carry with me on the Camino del Norte my guilt over the death of my partner. I carried my guilt for not realizing how quickly he would go; for not, somehow, doing more to help him as cancer ravaged his body; for being irrationally angry at him for leaving me. I carried my survivor guilt. I carried all of my guilt every step of the way.

And then 10 kilometers outside of Santiago de Compostela, I set down my rock on a mile marker where no other burdens yet sat. I set down my guilt for good; I left my burden behind.

It Was Finally Time to End Our Journey on the Camino del Norte

Some people feel overwhelmed with emotion when they arrive in Santiago de Compostela; others feel disappointed.

I felt numb.

Lizz and I both broke down a little as we neared the cathedral where all pilgrimages along the Camino de Santiago end, swallowing back some tears as we realized that we had really done it. But then, in true Lizz and Jen fashion, we got lost.

It was strange, the path was so well marked for so many miles, and then when you arrive in Santiago, the arrows are hard to find. Our emotions subsided as we pulled out our phones and used Google maps to navigate that last kilometer.

But then we finally walked into the cathedral square where we were surrounded by celebrating pilgrims who, like us, discarded their backpacks and wandered through the square giving hugs and high fives.

arriving in santiago
The moment of arrival

We sat and just stared at the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, trying to comprehend what we had just accomplished. We were speechless.

Walking the Camino del Norte Forever Changed Us

Arriving in Santiago marked the end of our physical journey, a 35-day pilgrimage along the Camino del Norte. The Camino tested our bodies and pushed our minds beyond the breaking point and, yet, we still stood there in Santiago.

santiago cathedral

We had seen the breaking point, accepted it, shared in it, laughed through it, and walked past it.

Lizz and I will never again face a burden that we can’t shoulder, carry for a little while, and then leave behind.

I hope you’ve enjoyed taking this journey with us on the Camino del Norte. Please reach out to me if you have any questions about walking the Camino de Santiago. I would love to help you.

Arriving in Santiago de Compostela
All the stamps earned along the way
credentials in santiago
The Camino credentials must be presented to earn your Compostela certificate

Where to Stay in Santiago

We stayed in a rented apartment in Santiago. Here’s a map of available accommodations:

Lessons Learned on the Camino del Norte

  1. Walking the Camino de Santiago will forever change you.

Tips from a Post Camino del Norte Perspective

  1. Staying in Pedrouzo is a good call. The relatively short walk to Santiago is beautiful, level, and perfect for reflection. You will arrive in Santiago tired, but still skipping.
  2. A lot of pilgrims continue on past the cathedral and to Cape Finisterre (Fistera) where the “0” mile marker sits on the coastline, the very coastline that was believed to be the end of the world in medieval times. It adds three to four days onto the walk and, at the time, Lizz and I couldn’t imagine continuing on even one more mile. But if I could do it over again, I would continue on to Finisterre, without a doubt. Since I’m not Catholic or particularly religious, the special mile marker on the coast would mean more to me, I think. I do plan to walk to Finisterre one day.
  3. Take your time assimilating back into the real world. You will need the time to adjust.

Our Final Camino del Norte Stats:

map of the camino del norte
We made it!

Stage Miles: 12

Actual Miles Walked: 15 (24 kilometers)

Bus forward Miles: 0

Total Miles Walked: 440 (708 kilometers)

Miles to go: 0

Additional Camino Resources

01

The Buen Camino app will help you plan stages & find albergues: for iPhone for Android

02

Accommodations: When we didn’t stay in an albergue, we used the Booking.com app to find hotels

03

Travel Insurance: I used World Nomads

04

My Audible membership allowed me to listen to audible books while walking

05

Search for used outdoor gear at GearTrade

06

My Camino Resource Guide has everything you need, including this essential hiking survival kit for your backpack.


About the Author

Hi! I’m Jen!

I’m a freelance writer and travel blogger who quit my nine-to-five after my fiancé, Jeff, died of cancer at the age of 40. When he died, I realized that life is just too short to delay our dreams. Since my dream was to travel and write, I now travel and write full-time. Today I wear hiking boots instead of heels and collect experiences instead of things.


28 Comments

  1. This is so amazing, I’m definitely going to walk this when exams are over to decompress. Weird question, but how did you get back? Did you have to walk it back or was there transport? Thanks for sharing your experience and well done!

    1. While walking back would be a powerful experience, I definitely took a plane from Santiago! I hope you walk, Matilda. Buen Camino!

  2. Anonymous says:

    Hi! i enjoyed your posts about the Camino. I did the Frances ten years ago and it was life changing! curious, which one is next for you?

    1. Thank you! I did the Norte and then the Frances. The Portuguese route is next for my family as I now have a baby with the man I met on my last pilgrimage. We want to show the baby the Camino just as soon as we can!

  3. Franco Sammut says:

    HiJen
    I am so sorry for your loss .My mother lost the fight against cancer too and passed away a few weeks ago, cannot explain the heartache….. and my friends organized the trip for the Compostela as a pilgrim offered in the name of my mother. We are going to do it by bike in seven days where we will be biking around sixty km a day and will be leaving from Leon France. My mother was very religious and she herself been to other pilgrims but not the Compostela.
    I would like to use this opportunity and take a framed photo of my mother with me to leave it in the Cathedral just to say Thankyou for her being so loving to all of my family. I would like to know if this is possible. Kindly advise.
    Any other tips are welcome.
    Thankyou

    Kind regards
    Franco

    1. Hi Franco! I’m so sorry for your loss. I am also sorry for the delay in responding. I hope that you were able to walk and that you brought your framed photograph. I am guessing that you found a place that called to you along the way rather than at the cathedral. I’m not sure that they would let you leave anything inside the Cathedral, but there are so many places along the route (depending on your route) where you could leave it. I can picture you on the Frances route, leaving the photograph at the large cross that marks the highest point on the route and where pilgrims traditionally leave momentos or a stone from home. Buen Camino!

  4. Wow this sounds like an incredible experience – well done! I love how remote it seems, another item on my bucket list I think!

  5. When I was in Namibia, two ladies I was with also completed the Camino de Santiago. And hearing their stories and their fondness of the time on the trail made me put it on my bucket list. What an adventure and I love the story about carrying your burden and then releasing it.

    1. If you do walk the Camino, please let me know. I would love to follow your journey!

    1. Thank you, Sarah! And thank you for reading!

  6. Walking the Camino must be such an extraordinary experience! And how relieved and emotional you must be at the end! Congratulations for achieving this hike!

  7. What a moving story. Thank you for sharing, and well done on such a huge achievement – physically and mentally x

  8. Oh this post just spoke right to my heart! I live in La Rioja basically on the camino trail (it runs right by my apartment!) I see people with their backpacks and hiking sticks all the time. I have yet to walk a lot of it, but it’s so inspirational.

  9. Such a monumental effort completing the 35 day pilgrimage and carrying your rock burden. Well done, and good on you for leaving your burden behind you.

    1. Thank you! We all carry a few burdens with us but rarely get the chance to symbolically set them down. Thanks for reading!

  10. Wow this is so special! I’ve read about so many people walking this route but I never heard about the rock ‘burdens’ they lay down! Great read!

    1. Thanks for reading, Jasmine!

    2. madhu sharma says:

      Wow this is just amazing and so much effort too.i never knew about this before,thanks for great info.

  11. wow what an amazing journey and your story is so touching… thank you for sharing! congratulations on your accomplishment and on being able to leave your burden behind!

    1. Thank you for reading. It was such a physical relief to leave that symbolic burden behind!

  12. Goodness, this post made me well up. Congratulations on getting through both the stress of losing your partner and then this tough adventure.

    I loved these words:
    “We had seen the breaking point, accepted it, shared in it, laughed through it, and walked past it.” I feel like hiking really can help you through the hardest moments.

    p.s. I’m also living in Vancouver at the moment if you ever need a hiking buddy after this Pandemic calms down a bit more. 😀

    1. Hiking does help, indeed! And you would know since you have the best walks in Vancouver at the top of your blog right now. I would LOVE to get outdoors with you…but I’m in the wrong Vancouver. I’m down south in the states. We call it the “first” Vancouver when we are feeling bitter. Ha. But I love your Vancouver and I will absolutely look you up for a walk the next time I come your way!

  13. I’m fascinated by this route and really hope to do it some day. Thank you for all the amazing tips – I love to hear that you feel like it changed you (and for the better!)

    – Lily

    1. The Camino del Norte – northern route – is a great route. Remote. Lovely. Sometimes we missed the party on the Camino Frances…but we made our own party in the end. Please do let me know if you walk the Camino. I would love to follow the journey!

  14. Your videos helped me manage my worries while you were traveling. Thank you for posting and keeping in touch every day. I bawled when I saw this video. I’m grateful the journey put you on a better path. I’m certain that Jeff would want that for you. He was one of those people who made the world a little better. Live like Jeff!

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