Friday 14 June 2013

For whom does the bell toll?

The bells of the cathedral have sounded in Santiago for many centuries. They chime the hours. They call the faithful to worship. With joyful peals they announce the great feasts of Easter and Christmas. And they toll mournfully to announce the funeral mass of one who has died. The bells have witnessed many things. They hang high above the cathedral where they have watched students cavorting, pilgrims arriving in unending streams, priests and canons often plotting and sometimes praying. They have rung for weddings and marked requiems. They have seen many changes...of archbishops, and centuries and even a millennium. 
Everyday they look down on hundreds of other kinds of changes. The changes which we pilgrims resolve to make in our lives by the end of our pilgrimage. I will be surprised if there is one pilgrim who has arrived in the Plaza Obradoiro who has not in the depth of their hearts promised themselves, and perhaps others, to change in some way. I think this is in the very nature of why we walk to Santiago. Contemplating change in our lives is the very stuff of pilgrimage. For me this has nothing to do with the church and everything to do with the spirit which motivates every pilgrim to put one foot in front of the other on the pilgrimage journey.
We know that journey often starts many months, or even years, before the first actual step. People hear about the Camino from others, a seed is planted and germinates into searching the internet, scouring articles and endless day dreaming.  Mentally rucksacks are packed and unpacked, routes are planned and time off work is negotiated.  Internet search engines are now accustomed to future pilgrims’ keywords: lightest rucksack, warmest sleeping bag, first aid for hikers. But after that first phase of searching for answers to practical questions like “is there poison ivy in Spain?” minds often turn to other aspects of the pilgrimage. “Will the Camino change me or help me to change?” is a question I believe a lot of potential pilgrims ask in the secret of their hearts. 
On one level there are the obvious, and often inevitable, changes in our lives. These are the easiest to talk about.  One of the reasons I started walking was as a bridge from one way of life to another. I wanted to give up the Big Jobs I had been doing in my professional career and lead a simpler way of life. I've met many pilgrims who walk for the same reason.
But there are many other deeper motivations: recovering from a divorce or contemplating one; recovering from serious illness or working through a crisis of faith.
Personally I found it relatively easy to talk to others about this life-style change. What was more difficult to describe was a deep feeling of unease I had about myself. I didn't like many aspects of who I had become. People who knew me would use words like, “driven”, “relentless”, “over-achieving” – and those are the people who like me! Others would describe "arrogance", "impatience", "ruthlessness". If I'm being honest, despite all of the success and material possessions, I still felt as if I didn't have enough, wasn't appreciated enough. The audience didn't applaud enough and if they did it wasn't loud enough. I knew in my heart that my people-pleasing lay deep in my background of proud expectant parents investing all of their hopes in their wonder-child.  But that knowledge on its own didn't lead to change. I think what happened was that my growing dislike of these things in myself became the strongest, if unspoken, motivation for making the pilgrimage to Santiago.
Put simply, I wanted to become a better person. I was slowly becoming aware that at the end of my life there might a list of achievements but these would never satisfy what I really craved. What I came to realise I actually wanted and needed is described beautifully by Raymond Carver in this little fragment:

And did you get what
you wanted from this life, even so?
I did.
And what did you want?
To call myself beloved, to feel myself
beloved on the earth.

To feel myself beloved on the earth...not easy to talk about but in my experience a very common desire shared by many pilgrims.  
These are the things we pilgrims think about as we walk the long miles. They are sometimes the things we share with others. For those who pray they are the subject of petitions. For those who don't they are there to be meditated on and mulled over as the path stretches out before us.

To answer the Googled question directly:  Does the Camino help us to make changes in our lives? My experience is yes it does as surely as the bells ring every day to call pilgrims to the pilgrims' mass. You see I think that through the Camino change is inevitable. Stepping out on Camino is like opening the door to the possibility of change and with only one step we begin the journey. We walk into a world set apart. We walk away from the regular things in life: bills, TV schedules, the office and we travel through a foreign land in the company of other pilgrims. On Camino I can be as alone as I want to be and at first I thought I'd very much prefer my own company. I was surprised at how drawn I was to the fellowship of other pilgrims. Meeting and sharing with others often tests my tolerance. This is very good for me and perhaps is at the root of some of the changes I’ve started to make. But I realise this is now a life-long task and so the pilgrimage has to continue.
For me the biggest lesson of the Camino was that I didn’t have to organise it all, and draw the map, and prepare for all disasters. It wasn’t all my responsibility. All I had to do was start walking.
I wonder if John Donne had been a pilgrim when he wrote:

No man is an island, 
Entire of itself. 
Each is a piece of the continent, 
A part of the main. 
If a clod be washed away by the sea, 
Europe is the less. 
As well as if a promontory were. 
As well as if a manner of thine own 
Or of thine friend's were. 
Each man's death diminishes me, 
For I am involved in mankind. 
Therefore, send not to know 
For whom the bell tolls, 
It tolls for thee.
  

Have I changed? Yes I have. Am I happy with the changes? Not entirely, not yet...but I am definitely going to keep trying. You see I now know with absolute certainty that the bell is tolling for me.       

Sunday 9 June 2013

25,206 thank you’s to the first Amigos of 2013


This year 125 experienced pilgrims will return to Santiago to “put something back” by serving their fellow pilgrims. Some will serve in the Amigos Welcome Service in the Pilgrims’ Office. Others will help out in the Pilgrims’ Office albergue, Fin del Camino and in the Welcome Centre opened by the Dutch Association.  We have 5 apartments to accommodate all of these volunteers who pay for their own flights and subsistence.  May saw the first volunteers arrive. It is always an anxious time. “Will they all turn up?” “Will they all get on together?” “Will any of them be completely crazy?” are just some of the questions which run through the minds of us organisers.
Of course none of them were crazy. They all turned up and we all got on famously.  As the Amigos arrived and began their work welcoming pilgrims to Santiago and congratulating every one of them, volunteers from the amigos association Via Lusitana in Portugal also arrived. They all joined their Dutch colleagues who had started a week before.
I’m not going to single any of them out. Thank you to everybody. During May 25,206 pilgrims were welcomed personally by them. There were many hugs, a few tears, some problems to be solved, many questions to be answered and loads of photographs to be taken of pilgrims with their Compostela. It is great but exhausting work. Like meeting a wave of happiness coming towards  you all day long.  


Here are some more scenes from this first month:







Tuesday 4 June 2013

All the numbers from Santiago...10% increase in pilgrims, USA ranks fourth!

Hola

Greetings from Santiago where, at least for a while, the umbrellas have been put away. The sun is shining. The streets are alive with students and arriving pilgrims. Pilgrims' Masses are full to bursting. After a long and wet and cold period the extended hibernation of winter is over. The city is awake and raring to party. The sounds of street entertainers fill the air. Hoards of Japanese tourists are back piling off of buses to take pictures of any pilgrims who stand still long enough. Every morning for the last week there has been a queue of pilgrims waiting on the doors of the office opening.
Last month the figures for the year to date showed that a significantly smaller percentage of pilgrims had arrived compared to last year. This month that trend is reversed. Numbers are up 10% with the the United States of America now sitting 4th in the ranking of countries.

We are receiving reports of full albergues along the Camino Frances. The pilgrims are coming!

Pilgrim friend Fraluchi has sent me his own analysis:
"Pilgrim arrivals - Santiago de Compostela - May 2013
With 25’206 pilgrim arrivals during the month of May, the year-to-date period closed with 46’155. 
Compared to the 41’935 arrivals for the same period in 2012, this represents a solid 10 % increase.  And compared to 2011, the increase is a whopping 20%!
As could be predicted, the change in number of pilgrims from Spain has been modest: only a 3% increase compared to 2012 and a 3% decreasecompared to 2011. The growth has clearly been in the number of foreign pilgrim arrivals compared to the total arrivals: 61% in 2013, 59% in 2012, 52% in 2011.
Camino Francés pilgrim arrivals totaled 32’155 during the first 5 months of this year, representing 70% of the total. Of these, 8’221 (26%) had started their pilgrimage before Pamplona, and 11’727 (36%) from Sárria. Compared to arrivals during the same period in 2012, these represent an increase of 14% in the number of pilgrims starting before Pamplona, and 24% in the number of starters from Sárria. The “short Camino” seems to be gaining interest!?
Main foreign pilgrims arrived (in order of importance) from Germany, Portugal, USA, Italy, France, Ireland, UK, etc. Particularly pilgrims from the USA have substantially increased  compared to 2012 (2’296 vs. 1’433, +60%). Also the number of pilgrims from Ireland and the UK, compared to 2012, has notably increased (2’534 vs. 1’766, + 43%)

So much for the first 5 months in 2013. It looks like a busy summer coming up!"

Here is the full analysis for the period:  

The total number of pilgrims who have been received in the Pilgrims’ Office in Santiago between 1 January 20013 and 31 May 2013  = 46.155

Routes to Santiago
Camino                 Number of pilgrims
Camino Francés      32155 (69,67%)
Portugues-Camino   7349 (15,92%)
Via de la Plata          2272 (4,92%)
Norte-Camino de     1915 (4,15%)
Primitivo-Camino    1262 (2,73%)
Ingles-Camino         1011 (2,19%)
Muxia-Finisterre      95 (0,21%)
Otros caminos         95 (0,21%)

Ages
Age         Number of pilgrims
30 - 60     26324 (57,03%)
< 30       10496 (22,74%)
> 60       9335 (20,23%)

Gender
Gender      Number of pilgrims
Males       25543 (55,34%)
Females     20612 (44,66%)

Method
Method      Number of pilgrims
On foot     40607 (87,98%)
Bicycle     5248 (11,37%)
Horseback   286 (0,62%)
Wheel chair 14 (0,03%)

Reasons for pilgrimage
Reason                        Number of pilgrims
Religious and spiritual       25051 (54,28%)
Religious                    18688 (40,49%)
Not religious                2416 (5,23%)

Status
Status            Number of pilgrims
Employees         10441 (22,62%)
Retired           7130 (15,45%)
Self Employed     6386 (13,84%)
Students         6353 (13,76%)
Technicians       5163 (11,19%)
Teachers          2483 (5,38%)
Public Workers    2254 (4,88%)
Manual            1707 (3,70%)
Unemployed       1183 (2,56%)
House people      1151 (2,49%)
Directors        813 (1,76%)
Artists          434 (0,94%)
Priests          230 (0,50%)
Farm workers      173 (0,37%)
Religious        117 (0,25%)
Sailors          73 (0,16%)
Sportsmen        59 (0,13%)
Oikoten          5 (0,01%)

Countries
Country     Number of pilgrims
Spain       17869 (38,72%)
Germany     5217 (11,30%)
Portugal    3488 (7,56%)
USA        2360 (5,11%)
Italy       2262 (4,90%)
France      2150 (4,66%)
Ireland     1541 (3,34%)
UK         1089 (2,36%)
Holand      802 (1,74%)
Canada      794 (1,72%)
Australia   760 (1,65%)
Korea       755 (1,64%)
Brasil      678 (1,47%)
Austria     587 (1,27%)
Denmark     487 (1,06%)
Belgium     410 (0,89%)
Suiza       365 (0,79%)
Polonia     353 (0,76%)
Suecia      351 (0,76%)
Finlandia   294 (0,64%)
México      274 (0,59%)
Noruega     265 (0,57%)
Argentina   256 (0,55%)
Venezuela   244 (0,53%)
Japón       237 (0,51%)
Rep Checa   214 (0,46%)
Sudáfrica   174 (0,38%)
Hungría     164 (0,36%)
Colombia    154 (0,33%)
China       146 (0,32%)
Rusia       140 (0,30%)
NewZealand 102 (0,22%)
Eslovenia   99 (0,21%)
Eslovaquia 88 (0,19%)
Ecuador     77 (0,17%)
Bulgaria    75 (0,16%)
Rumania     68 (0,15%)
Lituania    54 (0,12%)
Uruguay     51 (0,11%)
Chile       48 (0,10%)
Ucrania     45 (0,10%)
Perú       44 (0,10%)
Singapur    40 (0,09%)
Malta       38 (0,08%)
Croacia     34 (0,07%)
Filipinas   29 (0,06%)
Estonia     27 (0,06%)
Letonia     24 (0,05%)
Costa Rica 22 (0,05%)
Israel      20 (0,04%)
Andorra     20 (0,04%)
Grecia      20 (0,04%)
Bolivia     19 (0,04%)
Puerto Rico 19 (0,04%)
Malasia     16 (0,03%)
Luxemburgo 16 (0,03%)
Taiwán      15 (0,03%)
Islandia    12 (0,03%)
Guatemala   10 (0,02%)
Cuba       8 (0,02%)
Rep Dom     8 (0,02%)
Líbano      7 (0,02%)
El SalV     7 (0,02%)
India       7 (0,02%)
Irán       6 (0,01%)
Turquía     6 (0,01%)
Indonesia   5 (0,01%)
Paraguay    5 (0,01%)
Panamá      5 (0,01%)
Jordania    5 (0,01%)
Nicaragua   5 (0,01%)
Angola      4 (0,01%)
Albania     4 (0,01%)
Marruecos   4 (0,01%)
Bangladesh 3 (0,01%)
Vietnam     3 (0,01%)
Emirates    3 (0,01%)
Pakistán    3 (0,01%)
Belorrusia 3 (0,01%)
Egipto      2 (0,00%)
Sri Lanka   2 (0,00%)
Tailandia   2 (0,00%)
Túnez       2 (0,00%)
Namibia     2 (0,00%)
Serbia      2 (0,00%)
Armenia     2 (0,00%)
Kazajistán 2 (0,00%)
Afganistán 2 (0,00%)

Starting point
Starting Point    Number of pilgrims
Sarria           11727 (25,41%)
St Jean P Port    5368 (11,63%)
Oporto            2706 (5,86%)
León             2220  (4,81%)
Cebreiro          2004 (4,34%)
Tui               1814 (3,93%)
Roncesvalles      1730 (3,75%)
Ponferrada       1588 (3,44%)
Astorga           1211 (2,62%)
Valença do Minho 1189 (2,58%)
Pamplona          1123 (2,43%)
Ferrol            965 (2,09%)
Le Puy            882 (1,91%)
Burgos            803 (1,74%)
Sevilla           799 (1,73%)
Oviedo - C.P.     685 (1,48%)
Ourense           638 (1,38%)
Vilafranca       498 (1,08%)
Irún             495 (1,07%)
Resto Portugal    437 (0,95%)
Francia - C.F.    397 (0,86%)
Lugo - C.P.       392 (0,85%)
Triacastela       389 (0,84%)
Samos             333 (0,72%)
Ponte de Lima     256 (0,55%)
Lisboa            246 (0,53%)
Resto C. León     216 (0,47%)
Rates, S. Pedro   194 (0,42%)
Logroño           188 (0,41%)
Ribadeo           186 (0,40%)
Oviedo - C.N.     178 (0,39%)
Resto Asturias    163 (0,35%)
Salamanca         156 (0,34%)
Bilbao            140 (0,30%)
Somport           135 (0,29%)
Alemania          132 (0,29%)
Vilalba           128 (0,28%)
Santander         120 (0,26%)
Holanda           113 (0,24%)
Braga             105 (0,23%)
Zamora            100 (0,22%)
Avilés            97 (0,21%)
Sahagún           89 (0,19%)
Vega de Valcarce 84 (0,18%)
Chaves-Portugal   83 (0,18%)
Madrid - C.F.     79 (0,17%)
Barcelos          79 (0,17%)
Porriño           75 (0,16%)
Puebla Sanabria   74 (0,16%)
Gijón             74 (0,16%)
Resto País Vasco 67 (0,15%)
San Sebastián     66 (0,14%)
Finisterra       60 (0,13%)
Resto Asturias    59 (0,13%)
Jaca             57 (0,12%)
Gudiña            55 (0,12%)
Resto Cantabria   52 (0,11%)
Bélgica           52 (0,11%)
Lourdes           50 (0,11%)
Carrión Condes    50 (0,11%)
Frómista         49 (0,11%)
Suiza             49 (0,11%)
Vezelay           47 (0,10%)
Resto Andalucia   45 (0,10%)
Coimbra           44 (0,10%)
Hospital Orbigo   42 (0,09%)
Neda             41 (0,09%)
Cáceres           40 (0,09%)
Fonsagrada        38 (0,08%)
Valencia O.C.     37 (0,08%)
Puente la Reina   37 (0,08%)
Mérida            36 (0,08%)
Muxia             35 (0,08%)
Viana do Castelo 34 (0,07%)
Hendaya           33 (0,07%)
Navarra           33 (0,07%)
Grandas de Salime 32 (0,07%)
Resto Europa      31 (0,07%)
Ponferrada       30 (0,06%)
Sto. Domingo      30 (0,06%)
Granja            30 (0,06%)
Cataluña - C.F.   29 (0,06%)
Baamonde          28 (0,06%)
Rabanal           28 (0,06%)
Francia - C.N     28 (0,06%)
Viseu             28 (0,06%)
Guimaraes         27 (0,06%)
Xunqueira        27 (0,06%)
Com. Valenciana   26 (0,06%)
Granada           26 (0,06%)
Lourenzá          23 (0,05%)
Verín             23 (0,05%)
París             22 (0,05%)
Tineo - C.P.      21 (0,05%)
Resto C. León     21 (0,05%)
Aveiro            20 (0,04%)
Molinaseca       20 (0,04%)
R.Pais Vasco      20 (0,04%)
Fatima            20 (0,04%)
Vigo             20 (0,04%)
Barcelona         19 (0,04%)
Zaragoza          19 (0,04%)
Malaga            19 (0,04%)
A Guarda          18 (0,04%)
Cadavo            18 (0,04%)
Laza             17 (0,04%)
Madrid - V.P.     17 (0,04%)
Abadin            16 (0,03%)
Extremadura       15 (0,03%)
Estella          15 (0,03%)
Esposende        14 (0,03%)
Arles            14 (0,03%)
La Mancha VP      14 (0,03%)
La Rioja         14 (0,03%)
Montserrat       13 (0,03%)
Mondoñedo        13 (0,03%)
Canfranc         12 (0,03%)
Allariz           12 (0,03%)
Monforte         11 (0,02%)
Povoa de Varzim   11 (0,02%)
Austria           10 (0,02%)
La Mesa           10 (0,02%)
Cast. la Mancha   9 (0,02%)
Castrojeriz       9 (0,02%)
Nájera            9 (0,02%)
Huelva            7 (0,02%)
Com. Valenciana   7 (0,02%)
Benavente         6 (0,01%)
Baiona            6 (0,01%)
Roma             6 (0,01%)
FarThe total number of pilgrims who have been received in the Pilgrims’ Office in Santiago between 1 January 20013 and 31 May 2013  = 46.155

In the same period in 2012 - 41,963 were received. This is an increase of 10%

Routes to Santiago
Camino            Number of pilgrims
Camino Francés    32155 (69,67%)
Portugues-Camino 7349 (15,92%)
Via de la Plata   2272 (4,92%)
Norte-Camino de   1915 (4,15%)
Primitivo-Camino 1262 (2,73%)
Ingles-Camino     1011 (2,19%)
Muxia-Finisterre 95 (0,21%)
Otros caminos     95 (0,21%)

Ages
Age         Number of pilgrims
30 - 60     26324 (57,03%)
< 30       10496 (22,74%)
> 60       9335 (20,23%)

Gender
Gender      Number of pilgrims
Males       25543 (55,34%)
Females     20612 (44,66%)

Method
Method      Number of pilgrims
On foot     40607 (87,98%)
Bicycle     5248 (11,37%)
Horseback   286 (0,62%)
Wheel chair 14 (0,03%)

Reasons for pilgrimage
Reason                        Number of pilgrims
Religious and spiritual       25051 (54,28%)
Religious                    18688 (40,49%)
Not religious                2416 (5,23%)

Status
Status            Number of pilgrims
Employees         10441 (22,62%)
Retired           7130 (15,45%)
Self Employed     6386 (13,84%)
Students         6353 (13,76%)
Technicians       5163 (11,19%)
Teachers          2483 (5,38%)
Public Workers    2254 (4,88%)
Manual            1707 (3,70%)
Unemployed       1183 (2,56%)
House people      1151 (2,49%)
Directors        813 (1,76%)
Artists          434 (0,94%)
Priests          230 (0,50%)
Farm workers      173 (0,37%)
Religious        117 (0,25%)
Sailors          73 (0,16%)
Sportsmen        59 (0,13%)
Oikoten          5 (0,01%)

Countries
Country     Number of pilgrims
Spain       17869 (38,72%)
Germany     5217 (11,30%)
Portugal    3488 (7,56%)
USA        2360 (5,11%)
Italy       2262 (4,90%)
France      2150 (4,66%)
Ireland     1541 (3,34%)
UK         1089 (2,36%)
Holand      802 (1,74%)
Canada      794 (1,72%)
Australia   760 (1,65%)
Korea       755 (1,64%)
Brasil      678 (1,47%)
Austria     587 (1,27%)
Denmark     487 (1,06%)
Belgium     410 (0,89%)
Suiza       365 (0,79%)
Polonia     353 (0,76%)
Suecia      351 (0,76%)
Finlandia   294 (0,64%)
México      274 (0,59%)
Noruega     265 (0,57%)
Argentina   256 (0,55%)
Venezuela   244 (0,53%)
Japón       237 (0,51%)
Rep Checa   214 (0,46%)
Sudáfrica   174 (0,38%)
Hungría     164 (0,36%)
Colombia    154 (0,33%)
China       146 (0,32%)
Rusia       140 (0,30%)
NewZealand 102 (0,22%)
Eslovenia   99 (0,21%)
Eslovaquia 88 (0,19%)
Ecuador     77 (0,17%)
Bulgaria    75 (0,16%)
Rumania     68 (0,15%)
Lituania    54 (0,12%)
Uruguay     51 (0,11%)
Chile       48 (0,10%)
Ucrania     45 (0,10%)
Perú       44 (0,10%)
Singapur    40 (0,09%)
Malta       38 (0,08%)
Croacia     34 (0,07%)
Filipinas   29 (0,06%)
Estonia     27 (0,06%)
Letonia     24 (0,05%)
Costa Rica 22 (0,05%)
Israel      20 (0,04%)
Andorra     20 (0,04%)
Grecia      20 (0,04%)
Bolivia     19 (0,04%)
Puerto Rico 19 (0,04%)
Malasia     16 (0,03%)
Luxemburgo 16 (0,03%)
Taiwán      15 (0,03%)
Islandia    12 (0,03%)
Guatemala   10 (0,02%)
Cuba       8 (0,02%)
Rep Dom     8 (0,02%)
Líbano      7 (0,02%)
El SalV     7 (0,02%)
India       7 (0,02%)
Irán       6 (0,01%)
Turquía     6 (0,01%)
Indonesia   5 (0,01%)
Paraguay    5 (0,01%)
Panamá      5 (0,01%)
Jordania    5 (0,01%)
Nicaragua   5 (0,01%)
Angola      4 (0,01%)
Albania     4 (0,01%)
Marruecos   4 (0,01%)
Bangladesh 3 (0,01%)
Vietnam     3 (0,01%)
Emirates    3 (0,01%)
Pakistán    3 (0,01%)
Belorrusia 3 (0,01%)
Egipto      2 (0,00%)
Sri Lanka   2 (0,00%)
Tailandia   2 (0,00%)
Túnez       2 (0,00%)
Namibia     2 (0,00%)
Serbia      2 (0,00%)
Armenia     2 (0,00%)
Kazajistán 2 (0,00%)
Afganistán 2 (0,00%)

Starting point
Starting Point    Number of pilgrims
Sarria           11727 (25,41%)
St Jean P Port    5368 (11,63%)
Oporto            2706 (5,86%)
León             2220  (4,81%)
Cebreiro          2004 (4,34%)
Tui               1814 (3,93%)
Roncesvalles      1730 (3,75%)
Ponferrada       1588 (3,44%)
Astorga           1211 (2,62%)
Valença do Minho 1189 (2,58%)
Pamplona          1123 (2,43%)
Ferrol            965 (2,09%)
Le Puy            882 (1,91%)
Burgos            803 (1,74%)
Sevilla           799 (1,73%)
Oviedo - C.P.     685 (1,48%)
Ourense           638 (1,38%)
Vilafranca       498 (1,08%)
Irún             495 (1,07%)
Resto Portugal    437 (0,95%)
Francia - C.F.    397 (0,86%)
Lugo - C.P.       392 (0,85%)
Triacastela       389 (0,84%)
Samos             333 (0,72%)
Ponte de Lima     256 (0,55%)
Lisboa            246 (0,53%)
Resto C. León     216 (0,47%)
Rates, S. Pedro   194 (0,42%)
Logroño           188 (0,41%)
Ribadeo           186 (0,40%)
Oviedo - C.N.     178 (0,39%)
Resto Asturias    163 (0,35%)
Salamanca         156 (0,34%)
Bilbao            140 (0,30%)
Somport           135 (0,29%)
Alemania          132 (0,29%)
Vilalba           128 (0,28%)
Santander         120 (0,26%)
Holanda           113 (0,24%)
Braga             105 (0,23%)
Zamora            100 (0,22%)
Avilés            97 (0,21%)
Sahagún           89 (0,19%)
Vega de Valcarce 84 (0,18%)
Chaves-Portugal   83 (0,18%)
Madrid - C.F.     79 (0,17%)
Barcelos          79 (0,17%)
Porriño           75 (0,16%)
Puebla Sanabria   74 (0,16%)
Gijón             74 (0,16%)
Resto País Vasco 67 (0,15%)
San Sebastián     66 (0,14%)
Finisterra       60 (0,13%)
Resto Asturias    59 (0,13%)
Jaca             57 (0,12%)
Gudiña            55 (0,12%)
Resto Cantabria   52 (0,11%)
Bélgica           52 (0,11%)
Lourdes           50 (0,11%)
Carrión Condes    50 (0,11%)
Frómista         49 (0,11%)
Suiza             49 (0,11%)
Vezelay           47 (0,10%)
Resto Andalucia   45 (0,10%)
Coimbra           44 (0,10%)
Hospital Orbigo   42 (0,09%)
Neda             41 (0,09%)
Cáceres           40 (0,09%)
Fonsagrada        38 (0,08%)
Valencia O.C.     37 (0,08%)
Puente la Reina   37 (0,08%)
Mérida            36 (0,08%)
Muxia             35 (0,08%)
Viana do Castelo 34 (0,07%)
Hendaya           33 (0,07%)
Navarra           33 (0,07%)
Grandas de Salime 32 (0,07%)
Resto Europa      31 (0,07%)
Ponferrada       30 (0,06%)
Sto. Domingo      30 (0,06%)
Granja            30 (0,06%)
Cataluña - C.F.   29 (0,06%)
Baamonde          28 (0,06%)
Rabanal           28 (0,06%)
Francia - C.N     28 (0,06%)
Viseu             28 (0,06%)
Guimaraes         27 (0,06%)
Xunqueira        27 (0,06%)
Com. Valenciana   26 (0,06%)
Granada           26 (0,06%)
Lourenzá          23 (0,05%)
Verín             23 (0,05%)
París             22 (0,05%)
Tineo - C.P.      21 (0,05%)
Resto C. León     21 (0,05%)
Aveiro            20 (0,04%)
Molinaseca       20 (0,04%)
R.Pais Vasco      20 (0,04%)
Fatima            20 (0,04%)
Vigo             20 (0,04%)
Barcelona         19 (0,04%)
Zaragoza          19 (0,04%)
Malaga            19 (0,04%)
A Guarda          18 (0,04%)
Cadavo            18 (0,04%)
Laza             17 (0,04%)
Madrid - V.P.     17 (0,04%)
Abadin            16 (0,03%)
Extremadura       15 (0,03%)
Estella          15 (0,03%)
Esposende        14 (0,03%)
Arles            14 (0,03%)
La Mancha VP      14 (0,03%)
La Rioja         14 (0,03%)
Montserrat       13 (0,03%)
Mondoñedo        13 (0,03%)
Canfranc         12 (0,03%)
Allariz           12 (0,03%)
Monforte         11 (0,02%)
Povoa de Varzim   11 (0,02%)
Austria           10 (0,02%)
La Mesa           10 (0,02%)
Cast. la Mancha   9 (0,02%)
Castrojeriz       9 (0,02%)
Nájera            9 (0,02%)
Huelva            7 (0,02%)
Com. Valenciana   7 (0,02%)
Benavente         6 (0,01%)
Baiona            6 (0,01%)
Roma             6 (0,01%)
Faro             6 (0,01%)
Córdoba           6 (0,01%)
Italia            5 (0,01%)
Grado             5 (0,01%)
Cataluña - O.C.   4 (0,01%)
la Mancha otros   4 (0,01%)
Reino Unido C.F. 3 (0,01%)
Irlanda C.F.      3 (0,01%)
Valladolid       3 (0,01%)
Fonfría          3 (0,01%)
Valcarlos        3 (0,01%)
Betanzos         2 (0,00%)
Andorra          2 (0,00%)
Grandas          2 (0,00%)
La Rioja         2 (0,00%)
XFonsagrada       2 (0,00%)
Republica Checa   2 (0,00%)
Inglaterra C.F.   2 (0,00%)
Reino Unido       2 (0,00%)
Badajoz           2 (0,00%)
Corredoiras       1 (0,00%)
La Bañeza         1 (0,00%)
Leyre             1 (0,00%)
XSan Sebastian    1 (0,00%)

 o             6 (0,01%)
Córdoba           6 (0,01%)
Italia            5 (0,01%)
Grado             5 (0,01%)
Cataluña - O.C.   4 (0,01%)
la Mancha otros   4 (0,01%)
Reino Unido C.F. 3 (0,01%)
Irlanda C.F.      3 (0,01%)
Valladolid       3 (0,01%)
Fonfría          3 (0,01%)
Valcarlos        3 (0,01%)
Betanzos         2 (0,00%)
Andorra          2 (0,00%)
Grandas          2 (0,00%)
La Rioja         2 (0,00%)
XFonsagrada       2 (0,00%)
Republica Checa   2 (0,00%)
Inglaterra C.F.   2 (0,00%)
Reino Unido       2 (0,00%)
Badajoz           2 (0,00%)
Corredoiras       1 (0,00%)
La Bañeza         1 (0,00%)
Leyre             1 (0,00%)
XSan Sebastian    1 (0,00%)