When we refer to Primitive Way, we are probably talking about one of the most unknown routes on the Camino de Santiago, however, it was the first to be discovered. And it holds a number of surprises that are worth discovering.
The Primitive Way was, as we mentioned, the path of the first known Way, and it was the one that took Alfonso II the Chaste in the XNUMXth century to visit the tomb of the Apostle Santiago, recently discovered at that time.
On this path of the Camino de Santiago we will find very good signposting; so it will be difficult to get lost in any of its stages. A path that also brings together perfectly passable areas, and of not much difficulty. A route in which the roads are clean, due to the work and the passage of cattle on a daily basis. An area of green landscapes, which despite the mud that receives pilgrims in winter, is well worth visiting.
In this way, the Primitive Way, which follows in the footsteps of the first pilgrim, runs through spectacular areas of Asturias and León, and enters Galicia through others that do not envy it at all. It is a path that is less crowded than others, and that runs through leafy and green areas.