Villafranca Montes de Oca

Camino Frances

To end of camino
522.0
Altitude
942

Espinosa del Camino

3.40

Villafranca Montes de Oca

11.90

San Juan de Ortega

Services
Bar
Yes
Bus
Yes
Grocery
Yes
Medical Center
Yes

Villafranca Montes de Oca sits at the foot of the Pedraja pass, the last outpost before 12 km of forest walking with no water and no services. This is where you fill bottles, buy food, and prepare yourself.

The town straddles the main road, and a pair of bar-restaurants cater to a mixed clientele of pilgrims and truck drivers. The Albergue San Antón Abad, set back from the road at the far end of town, has a large garden and a bar-restaurant that provides a welcome escape from the road noise.

The Iglesia de Santiago anchors the town. It was built on the site of earlier structures and has a Romanesque font worth a glance. The ruins of the Hospital de la Reina, founded in 1380 by Queen Juana Manuel (wife of Enrique II), sit nearby — a reminder of how important this stop was for medieval pilgrims facing the dangerous mountain crossing ahead.

The town's name translates loosely as "free town of the nettle-filled mountains" — fair warning of what awaits on the climb.

Notice

From Villafranca there are 12 km of camino without a water supply. There is a source called Mojapán along the route, but its reliability varies. Fill your bottles here and carry enough for the full stretch to San Juan de Ortega.

Fiesta

San Antón is celebrated on January 17. A Romería to the Ermita de Oca is held on the second Sunday of August.

History

Villafranca's history is older than its name suggests. It sits on the site of the Roman city of Auca, and from 589 it served as an episcopal seat — the Diocese of Oca, with its first bishop Asterio. That seat held until 1075, when it was moved to Burgos.

The Monasterio de San Félix de Oca, whose ruins lie outside town, dates back at least to 863, when Count Diego Rodríguez Porcelos — the founder of Burgos — donated churches and properties to its monks. The monastery's origins may be even earlier, placing it among the oldest foundations in Castilla.

In the medieval period, the Montes de Oca were feared. The dense forest and confusing paths made ideal terrain for bandits, and the pilgrim guides of the era warned travelers to cross in groups. The establishment of hospices and monasteries along this stretch was a direct response to the danger.

The Road

The climb out of Villafranca into the Montes de Oca is the first real forest walking since the Pyrenees. Turn right uphill toward the church to follow the camino — don't continue along the main road.

The path gains elevation steadily through oak, pine, and beech woodland. The beginning is steep and should be taken at a measured pace. You'll cross a small ravine at the Carratón river with two steep ramps before continuing through forest.

At the Alto de la Pedraja, there are picnic tables for a rest. En route to the alto you'll pass a monument dedicated to men from Burgos whose bodies were dumped here after execution during the Civil War — a sobering reminder amid the forest quiet.

The path intersects with several ATV trails on the descent. It's well-marked but requires attention at junctions. The dense scrubland was notorious bandit territory in the medieval period, and the pilgrim guides of the era warned walkers accordingly.

San Juan de Ortega lies at the bottom of the descent. There are no shops, but two bars serve food.

City Map

Comments

All Caminos App User (not verified)

We spent last night at this hotel and had a wonderful time. Very nice reception, pour room was beautiful and spacious, the bathroom with a bathtub! What a treat after a 34 km walk. Had a great time sitting in the patio having drinks, chatting with other pilgrims. The pilgrim menu was delicious. Everyone in the hotel was friendly and ready to help. Gorgeous grounds. Highly recommended!!

All Caminos App User (not verified)

I found this town to be the least charming place I stayed, though due to the following distance it’s difficult to avoid an over night stop. It just was unpleasant and ugly.

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

Such a great albergue! Loved the single beds with a small wall. First time it felt like there was privacy in an albergue. The showers were good. The grounds are beautiful. Great place to sit and rest after the day’s walk. The pilgrim dinner was good as well. Great wine and stuffed eggplant!

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

Go to Bar Jomer (get a sello it’s Homer Simpson) and order the chicken wings. Also ask for extra picante if you’re having spicy food withdrawals like us. Possibly the best chicken wings I’ve ever had!

We enjoyed staying at Bar Jomer, mostly because of the friendly and entertaining gentlemen that checked us in and served us food and drinks all night. But be warned that if you get a room on the street side of the pension you might as well be sleeping on the highway because the trucks fly by all night and shake the walls. However the lack of sleep will help you get an early start up the mountain in the morning at least. The hotel/albergue in town also looked great.

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

We stayed and ate dinner here (pilgrim menu) and can confirm it is amazing. Really fantastic food and neat, clean, tidy accomodation.

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

This is a find of a place, great welcome, a lovely bar , we ate the pilgrim meal here , it was very tasty & you had a choice in the meals, the little supermarket was across the Rd, we stocked up for the next day here,
We were amazed while waiting for the others from our group, at the amount of Hugh trucks that passed at speed through this little village. The hostel is definitely 5 stars from our group

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

Meson Alba (turn right as you approach town) was open for lunch and dinner. Good selection of food. A little further up the road is a well stocked supermarket.

Camino de Sant… (not verified)

I disagree with the description of featureless hiking. The pine forest is lovely, there are some pretty views, and meadows of flowers. The wide road is shade-less for a few Km after the Alta, but this was a very nice walk into San Juan de Ortega and then Ages

Camino de Sant…

Very good supermarket now open in villafranca

Camino de Sant…

There is no Farmacia in Villafranca