There is a potent and mystic bond between Muxía and the Santiago Way. The stages with start or finish in Muxía may not be the most known but, nonetheless, they may be the ones that leave a deeper impression in pilgrims, as its landscape, its Christian and pagan spirituality that surround every step along way and the desire to reach a mental and geographical destination, creates a profound sentiment of gratitude and consciousness inside both soul and memory for those who decide to take this route.
Muxía is part of the Way's epilogue, of that arrival to the figurative end of the earth that is Fisterra, but also of the historic and landscape wealth that enlarge the mysticism of a route throughout the 150 kilometres of this triangle, surrounded by Christian, Celtic and Romanic traditions.
The novelist Manuel Vilar Álvarez, originally from Muxía, portraits in his book O camiño á fin da Terra (The Road to Land's End), the beauty that arises from the blending of culture, religion and landscape for those in search of a life experience along the Way.