Guided Caminos 2027

Walking Together, With Intention

Guided Caminos 2027

Beginning in 2027, Camino Más Allá will offer two guided pilgrimages on the Camino de Santiago. These journeys are designed for people who feel called to walk deeply, deliberately, and with space for real transformation.

Guided Caminos are intentionally small — limited to a maximum of seven participants — to allow for both personal space and meaningful connection. Each day includes time to walk solo as well as opportunities to walk together. We share meals often, stay in thoughtfully chosen accommodations, and gather for reflective conversations along the way. There is no pressure to participate constantly; the rhythm is gentle, flexible, and respectful of each person’s process.

They are not tours in the traditional sense.
They are shared pilgrimages, grounded in preparation, presence, and integration.

Each journey is intentionally small, allowing for personal space, meaningful reflection, and individualized guidance along the way.

Camino Portuguese

May 2027

May 2027
Porto to Santiago de Compostela

The Portuguese Camino is gentle, expansive, and deeply reflective. Walking north along the coast and through inland villages, this route offers space for contemplation, rhythm, and opening.

This journey is well suited for pilgrims who are new to the Camino, navigating transition, or seeking a softer entry into long-distance walking without sacrificing depth.

Overview
Route: Porto to Santiago de Compostela
Duration: Approximately 12–14 walking days
Group Size: Limited
Timing: May 2027

This Camino emphasizes:
Slowing down and listening
Letting go with kindness
Creating space for what wants to emerge
Learning to walk without forcing


Camino Francés

September 2027


September 2027
Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port to Santiago de Compostela

The Camino Francés is the classic pilgrimage. Crossing the Pyrenees and walking across northern Spain, it is physically demanding, emotionally revealing, and profoundly transformative.

This journey is best suited for pilgrims who feel ready to commit to a longer walk and the deeper inner work that often accompanies it.

Overview
Route: Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port to Santiago de Compostela
Duration: Approximately 30–35 walking days
Group Size: Limited
Timing: September 2027

This Camino emphasizes:
Endurance and surrender
Working consciously through challenge
Identity, transition, and reorientation
Preparing for re-entry before arriving home

Because of the length and depth of this route, guide involvement and preparation are more extensive than on shorter Caminos.

How Guiding Works

Guiding on the Camino is not about leading from the front or managing every detail of the day. It is about creating the conditions for a meaningful, personal journey while walking alongside the group with presence, experience, and care.

Each day follows the natural rhythm of the Camino. Pilgrims walk at their own pace. Some walk alone. Some walk together. There is no pressure to stay together, keep up, or perform in any particular way.

As your guide, I am present on the path and available throughout the day. I offer orientation, context, and support when needed, while allowing space for silence, reflection, and personal discovery. I help navigate moments of uncertainty, fatigue, or doubt when they arise, without interfering with the individual nature of the journey.

Group check-ins are offered at natural transition points, often in the evenings. These are simple, optional moments to reflect on the day and acknowledge what is emerging, without analysis or fixing. The intention is to create grounding and continuity, not to direct anyone’s experience.

Guiding is light-touch and responsive. The Camino does the work. My role is to help protect the space so that work can unfold naturally.

What’s Included

Guided Caminos include on-the-path guidance and support throughout the walk.

Daily presence on the Camino with an experienced guide
Orientation and context for each stage of the route
Support navigating challenges as they arise on the trail
Space for individual walking, silence, and personal rhythm
Optional one-on-one conversations as needed
Optional group check-ins at natural transition points
Guidance grounded in experience rather than instruction

This guided experience is designed to support your journey without controlling it. You are free to walk your own Camino, knowing that support, perspective, and steady presence are available when needed.

What a Day on the Camino Looks Like

Mornings begin quietly, with each person setting out at their own pace. Some days we walk together, other days apart. Along the way, we pause — for coffee, conversation, or simply to notice where we are. Afternoons are unstructured, allowing time for rest, journaling, or reflection. Evenings often include shared meals and optional group conversations — a space to check in, reflect, and listen.

The Camino Más Allá Journey

Stage 1 — Practical Preparation
Route guidance, timing, packing considerations, and coordination with trusted local partners to support logistics.

Stage 2 — Setting the Foundation
Pre-Camino coaching conversations to clarify intention, explore what’s being left behind, and prepare for the inner journey.

Stage 3 — Walking the Camino
On-the-ground guidance during the Camino itself — holding space, facilitating reflection, and supporting the group experience.

These stages can be experienced individually or as part of a complete Camino Más Allá journey. Full details are shared during the initial conversation.

Booking & Timing

Guided Caminos are planned well in advance and offered on a limited basis. Once dates are announced, participants are invited to book an introductory conversation. From there, we’ll confirm availability, review the stages of the journey, and determine next steps together.

When The Camino Calls

Some people know immediately.
Others feel it slowly, over time.

When the moment feels right, we can talk through readiness, preparation, and whether walking together makes sense.