From maps, I am guessing the Via de la Plata route starting in Seville, Spain -or- the Portuguese route starting in Lisbon would make sense as the entry points - but since you are flying so far to get back to the mainland of Europe, I guess you could start from any of the other routes. (But those two seem to make logistical sense to me)
@@StingyNomads So, it's not an actual Camino de Santiago route then? (If it does not go to Santiago de Compostela - meaning finishing that last required bit to "count.") No matter what, It seems like you could tie it in via Southern Portugal, even if that first bit would not "count" and you would officially be doing one of the Portuguese routes.
Looks amazing. Thank you for this video and for the information about this camino on your website - invaluable!
Thank you for your feedback. Buen Camino!
One for my bucket list, thank you 😊
Our pleasure! We really enjoyed the Camino Gran Canaria it deserves to be on your bucket list.
Lovely video - I’ve walked a couple of the caminos on mainland Spain and didn’t know this one existed, thanks for sharing.
Glad you enjoyed it. The Camino de Gran Canaria is a great route to walk in winter.
So good.
Is it easy to follow, and do you get stamps on the way
Where would this traditionally connect into the rest of the Camino de Santiago on the mainland? [Also, added to my list, for sure.]
From maps, I am guessing the Via de la Plata route starting in Seville, Spain -or- the Portuguese route starting in Lisbon would make sense as the entry points - but since you are flying so far to get back to the mainland of Europe, I guess you could start from any of the other routes. (But those two seem to make logistical sense to me)
The Camino Gran Canaria is a complete route on its own not an attachment to any other Camino route on the mainland.
@@StingyNomads So, it's not an actual Camino de Santiago route then? (If it does not go to Santiago de Compostela - meaning finishing that last required bit to "count.")
No matter what, It seems like you could tie it in via Southern Portugal, even if that first bit would not "count" and you would officially be doing one of the Portuguese routes.