The Camino Primitivo continues to amaze me.
Today began with a 700-meter climb right out of Salas, something that looked daunting on paper. But out there, immersed in emerald forests and serenaded by birdsong and babbling brooks, the climb passed without struggle. My steps were guided more by awe than effort.
The first five kilometers I walked entirely alone. Fitting, really, for the summer solstice, a quiet path through nature offering the perfect space for gratitude and reflection.



Near the top of the climb, just before La Espina, I began to spot familiar faces. Pilgrims I had seen before offered nods, smiles, and the occasional “Buen Camino.” I stopped at a café, one of the first open ones on this sleepy Sunday and before long, it was full of old acquaintances. We shared coffee, fresh-squeezed orange juice, and tortilla. That shared breakfast became a bonding moment, and we left Espina as a loose-knit group of new companions.
The walk from there to Tineo was a social one. I fluttered from person to person like a Camino butterfly. There was a brother-sister duo from California and Colorado, a father-daughter team from New Jersey, a father-son pair from Norway, a man from Taiwan, and many more.
The Norwegian father and I ended up walking in front, and we eventually stopped at the first bar in Tineo. It was the same bar I remembered stopping at back in 2016 with another band of Camino friends. We sat there for over an hour, talking, laughing, even singing. A WhatsApp group was created, and it has already taken on a life of its own.



Today stirred powerful memories. Almost exactly nine years ago, I was here. And now, once again, this route brings people together. The Primitivo is hard, rugged, technical, and remote but I remember so much of it. Maybe because I am not walking it alone?
Most pilgrims here are veterans. This is rarely someone’s first Camino. Everyone in our group has walked several before, some more than a dozen. They’re trail-savvy and socially vibrant, and each brings a different story to share. Two days ago I met an 83-year-old woman who, just seven years ago, could barely walk. She’s now walking the Primitivo, from France. And just yesterday, I chatted with a 22-year-old who had just graduated and wanted to start adulthood with something meaningful.
As I’ve been writing and reflecting more deeply for the book I’m compiling, I hit a wall with one of the major sections. But today, listening to others share how the Camino has transformed them, many using the exact words and feelings I’ve struggled to express, it clicked. Their honesty mirrored my own inner experience, and it helped me break through the block. My motivation has returned, and with it, a renewed confidence in my voice.
The Primitivo does that. It reveals what matters. It unites strangers. And it reminds me, once again why I love this Camino.






























































































































