The Edge Camino is a guided Camino de Santiago walk along the Camino Francés, from Sarria to Santiago, designed for people who operate under sustained responsibility and want conditions that support clear thinking again.
This is not a fast-paced tour or a performance-driven retreat. It’s a deliberately paced, fully supported walking experience built around daily movement, limited inputs, and a small, intentional cohort. The structure creates room for perspective—without forcing disclosure, productivity, or outcomes.
Over eight days, we’ll walk approximately 70 miles, completing the final section of the Camino into Santiago. Preparation begins before arrival with structured orientation and readiness support. On the Camino, accommodations, luggage transfers, and logistics are fully handled so attention stays on the walk itself.
The experience is led in its entirety by Tracey Seward, whose background includes decades of leadership and advisory work inside large, complex organizations, alongside extensive experience designing and leading demanding expedition-based journeys. She holds the integrity of the experience before, during, and after the walk—to support clarity that holds when you return.
Guided preparation before arrival, including orientation sessions, packing guidance, readiness support, and practical planning for the Camino.
Private, hand-selected superior accommodations along the Camino route for the full duration of the experience.
Group airport transfer on arrival and departure the day of program end.
Daily breakfast, lunch, and dinner throughout the program, including a hosted welcome dinner and a final celebration dinner in Santiago.
Your luggage is transferred between towns each day so you walk with only a daypack.
The experience is led end-to-end by Tracey Seward, including on-trail leadership, group holding, and facilitated closing.
Local guide coverage for on-the-ground logistics and route support
Official Pilgrim Passport & Camino completion certificate
A facilitated closing in Santiago, post-walk integration session after the walk to help insights carry forward.
Standard gratuities for included services coordinated by the program.
Participants become founding members of The Edge, with ongoing access to the Camino cohort, shared materials, and a private WhatsApp group for connection before, during, and after the walk, and beyond
Flights to and from Santiago de Compostela (SCQ).
Travel insurance is required and must cover trip cancellation, interruption, and medical expenses.
Any hotel nights before Day 1 or after Day 8 of the program.
Alcoholic beverages, snacks, souvenirs, laundry, spa treatments, and other personal activities or purchases outside of the group program.
Transportation outside the included group transfers.
Arrive in Santiago de Compostela (SCQ) and transfer together to Sarria, the starting point of our Camino walk.
After settling into our accommodations, we’ll gather in the early evening to meet one another, review the shape of the week ahead, and set the stage for the journey—pace, expectations, and how the experience will unfold. This time is designed to help you arrive fully, without rushing or performance.
Pilgrim Passports will be distributed, and we’ll orient to the practical rhythm of the Camino before sharing a welcome dinner together. The evening closes early, allowing time to rest and prepare for our first day of walking.
Overnight: Sarria
Included: Airport transfer, accommodations, welcome dinner
After breakfast, we begin walking the Camino, leaving Sarria and moving through villages, forest paths, and open countryside toward Portomarín.
This first day on the trail is about establishing rhythm. The pace is steady and accessible, with space to walk alongside others or spend time on your own. There is no pressure to keep conversation or maintain a particular tempo—movement itself sets the tone.
The walk passes through quiet hamlets and shaded paths beneath oak trees, with stretches along peaceful country roads. Along the way, you’ll notice traditional Galician hórreos (stone granaries) and visit the Romanesque church in the village of Barbadelo—an early marker of the Camino’s long history.
Lunch is included along the route, with time to pause and refuel before continuing on. In the late afternoon, we arrive in Portomarín, settle into our accommodations, and gather for dinner together.
Overnight: Portomarín
Included: Breakfast, lunch, dinner, accommodations, luggage transfer
After breakfast, we leave Portomarín, crossing the River Miño, Galicia’s longest river, before beginning a steady uphill walk toward the Serra de Ligonde. The route moves through open countryside, forested paths, and a series of small rural hamlets.
Along the way, we pass through villages such as Donzar and Ventas de Narón, with the option to pause at several Romanesque landmarks, including the Church of Santa María in Castro de Aor and the Romanesque church in Eirexa, known for its sculpted portal featuring Daniel with animals and the figure of the pilgrim Santiago.
By this point in the journey, walking rhythm often settles in. Pace feels more natural, and there is space for conversation, quiet, or time alone on the trail. Lunch is included along the route. In the late afternoon, we arrive in Palas de Rei, settle into our accommodations, and gather for dinner together.
Overnight: Palas de Rei
Included: Breakfast, lunch, dinner, accommodations, luggage transfer
After breakfast, we leave Palas de Rei and continue walking toward Melide on a shorter day designed to allow a more relaxed pace and additional time to pause along the way.
The route passes through woodland paths, quiet villages, and gentle terrain. With fewer miles to cover, there’s space to linger over coffee stops, walk alongside others, or enjoy longer stretches of quiet on the trail.
We arrive in Melide by early to mid-afternoon, with time to rest and explore the town before gathering for dinner together. This day often feels like a midpoint—physically lighter, mentally more open, and unhurried.
Overnight: Melide
Included: Breakfast, lunch, dinner, accommodations, luggage transfer
After breakfast, we leave Melide and continue walking toward Arzúa, moving through gently descending paths and forest tracks as the Camino Francés carries us forward.
The route passes through small villages and medieval hamlets, including Casanova, Leboreiro, and Ribadiso, crossing streams and shaded paths along the way. We pass through Boente, home to the Church of Santiago, before continuing on toward Arzúa. These stretches of the Camino often feel quietly animated—familiar markers, shared movement, and a growing sense of connection on the trail.
Lunch is included along the route, with time to pause and refuel before continuing.
By mid- to late afternoon, we arrive in Arzúa, known for its local cheese and historic churches, including Santa María and La Magdalena. We settle into our accommodations and gather for dinner together in the evening.
Overnight: Arzúa
Included: Breakfast, lunch, dinner, accommodations, luggage transfer
After breakfast, we leave Arzúa and continue walking toward Amenal, moving through wooded paths, sleepy villages, and gentle countryside. Much of the day unfolds along calm forest tracks and rural roads, with frequent crossings of small streams.
Along the route, there is the opportunity to pause at the Chapel of Santa Irene, known for its distinctive statue of Santiago, and to pass through small hamlets such as Rua. The trail continues through a mix of peaceful country lanes and shaded paths as we make our way toward Amenal.
With a slightly shorter distance, the day allows for a steady, unhurried pace. As Santiago draws closer, attention often sharpens while the rhythm of walking remains grounded. Lunch is included along the route. We arrive in Amenal in the afternoon, settle into our accommodations, and gather for dinner together.
Overnight: Amenal
Included: Breakfast, lunch, dinner, accommodations, luggage transfer
After breakfast, we leave Amenal and walk the final miles into Santiago de Compostela. The route gradually transitions from forest paths to city streets, marking a clear shift from trail to arrival.
This final walking day is intentionally short, allowing space to move at an unhurried pace. Many experience this stretch with heightened awareness—holding both anticipation and reflection as the Camino draws to a close. There is room to walk quietly, alongside others, or simply notice the change in surroundings as Santiago comes into view.
Upon arrival, we make our way to the cathedral area. Pilgrim credentials may be presented to receive the Compostela, and those who wish may attend the Pilgrim’s Mass.
Later in the day, we gather for a facilitated closing session—creating space to mark the completion of the walk and acknowledge what has emerged over the week. Certificates of completion are presented during this time.
In the evening, we come together for a final celebratory dinner, closing the shared journey in Santiago.
Overnight: Santiago de Compostela
Included: Breakfast, lunch, dinner, accommodations, luggage transfer
After breakfast, the experience formally concludes. Departures from Santiago de Compostela take place throughout the day, with transfers provided according to individual travel plans.
This final morning is intentionally unstructured, allowing time to pack, say goodbyes, or spend a few quiet moments in the city before onward travel.
Included: Breakfast, departure transfers
I design and lead intentionally challenging experiences for people who carry real responsibility.
My background spans decades in senior leadership and advisory roles inside large, complex organizations, including Accenture, where I worked with executives navigating change, pressure, and high-stakes decisions. That experience shapes how I lead today: grounded, disciplined, and deeply attentive to the human realities of leadership.
Alongside my corporate career, I’ve designed and led expedition-based journeys in demanding environments. These are not tours. They are carefully constructed experiences—fully supported, deliberately paced, and designed to create space for clear thinking.
I lead each experience end-to-end, before, during, and after the journey. The Edge is the umbrella for this work: small-cohort experiences built for depth, not performance.
I live in Chicago and am a mother of three. The work I lead is shaped as much by real life as it is by professional experience.