• RickSails

WalkThroughWalesOnCambrianWay

A walk from Cardiff Castle through the length of Wales over the highest peaks to Conwy Castle. Læs mere
  • Blorenge trig point check point 5

    21. september 2017, Wales ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

    Thursday: View west from top of Blorenge. In the background is a huge slag heap from the Blaenavon Coal pit. Blorenge is composed of Millstone Grit. It marks the eastern end of the South Wales Coal field. In the photograph chunks of Millstone grit stone can be seen scattered on the ground just behind me.Læs mere

  • Pyscodlyn Farm end of 7th day

    21. september 2017, Wales ⋅ 🌙 10 °C

    Thursday: 10.5 miles / 1000 feet of ascent from Upper Llanover to 2 miles east of Abergavenny completed at end of seventh day of walking. Day of some sunshine and some cloud. Cool in areas exposed to keen north westerly breeze, warm in areas in lee of wind. No rain. Camped at Pyscodlyn Farm (incorrectly shown on OS map as Pysgodlyn) from where some visitors to the Farm kindly gave me a lift to nearby Lamb and Flag pub for food.Læs mere

  • Abergavenny end of 8th day

    22. september 2017, Wales ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Friday: Another good comfortable, warm night's sleep despite it being a cold cloudless night. Cows and Calves mooing in next field woke me in early hours but otherwise fine. Successfully cooked my first 'wild breakfast' of Quaker Oats. On striking camp discovered my walking stick missing. Walked back to last night's pub, Lamb and Flag, where waitress pointed it out having spotted it at start of her shift - phew. Bus into Abergavenny to restock with food and visited Tourist Information to enquire about Offa's Duke Way that had been commended to me. By this time it was too late in the day to tackle Sugar Loaf and with overnight rain forecast, followed by a number of dry days, decided to Bus home and return tomorrow.Læs mere

  • Forest Coal pit end of day 9

    23. september 2017, Wales ⋅ 🌙 12 °C

    Saturday: 4 miles / 1500ft of ascent from Abergavenny up Sugar Loaf and down to Forest Coal Pit completed after ninth day of walking. Warm sunshine all afternoon only cooled for last few hundred feet of ascent of Sugar Loaf by keen southerly wind. Setup my first wild camp 300 metres above Forest Coal Pit, just off footpath, a mile down from top of Sugar Loaf. In what I hope is an inconspicuous location. Cooked my first Wild supper of Bachelor's Pasta 'n' Sauce.Læs mere

  • Capel-y-ffin CP7 end of day 10

    24. september 2017, Wales ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

    Sunday: My first wild camp last night was successful.

    9 miles / 800 feet of ascent from lower slopes of Sugar Loaf to Capel-y-ffin completed at end of tenth day of walking. Weather warm and dry all day until a few minutes after I arrived at B&B when it started to rain.

    Walked 3 miles this morning to St.Martins Church, Cwmyoy in Llanthony Valley aka Vale of Ewyas for the 9.30 morning service. The Church is known locally as the crocked Church because the nave and the tower are at opposite angles from vertical because of land slips.

    Then walked 3 miles along North East side of valley to Llanthony to view magnificent Priory followed by lunch and Cider at nearby Half Moon Inn. Had interesting conversation with a researcher who had been quizing the landlady about the valley history. This was to go towards a Promenade Theatre performance of a play about the valley in which the audience would move along the valley with the actors as each part was played out. Commissioned by Wales Art Council or National Theatre of Wales - I forget which - scheduled for release 2019.

    Then walked final further 3 miles along valley side to Capel-y-ffin to stay at The Grange Trekking Centre. I was going to camp but heavy rain was forecast overnight, and indeed started a few minutes after my arrival, so I accepted B&B offer.

    Capel-y-ffin has 2 places of worship. The very small St.Mary the Virgin Church (Church in Wales / Anglican) and a Baptist Chapel. I walked into St.Mary the Virgin to find the smallest church I have ever seen. 3 rows of Pews and a small balcony, very cosy.

    My walk along the valley was on a way marked footpath on the valley side below the Hatterral Ridge, the top of which is part of the Offa's Dyke Path. The valley side allowed a splendid view across the valley to the parallel ridge on which I could see the patchwork of fields, Farms and Animals that mirrored the ridge I was walking.
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  • Lord Hereford's Knob / Twmpa CP8

    25. september 2017, Wales ⋅ ☀️ 13 °C

    Monday: Lord Hereford's Knob attained together with 4G signal which was welcome after the previous day of no signal. Cairn atop Lord Hereford's Knob (aka Twmpa) with complete white out all around in main picture. Other pictures of scenes on way up Vale of Ewyas.Læs mere

  • Pengenffordd End of day 11

    25. september 2017, Wales ⋅ 🌧 12 °C

    Monday: 9 miles / 1500 feet of ascent from Capel-y-ffin to Pengenffordd completed at end of eleventh day of walking. Weather : I walked in cloud most of the day with occasional sunny intervals. I had planned to camp in The Dragonsback Inn, bit found it only opened Fridays and Saturdays. I arrived on a Monday. While I was contemplating what to do, a local farmer walked passed me. After a short conversation he kindly invited me to wild camp in his field.

    Photos show one of the few breaks in cloud and feature I came across a few times where a crescent is formed by land dropping 12 - 18". No idea what causes this, has anyone?
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  • Back on Ridgeway path

    26. september 2017, Wales ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C

    Tuesday: After 2:30 of walking 3 miles and ascending 1600ft / 420m reached the Cairn in the picture at the top of Y Grib which I left yesterday for my descent to The Dragonsback Inn. Next section is 8 miles of ridge walking south then 2 miles of descent to Crickhowell where I have booked myself into Riverside Campsite.Læs mere

  • Crickhowell end of day 12

    26. september 2017, Wales ⋅ 🌙 13 °C

    Tuesday: 13 miles / 2000 feet of ascent from Pengenffordd to Crickhowell completed at end of twelve day of walking. Weather low cloud most of the day, hazy sunshine from late afternoon. Camped at Riverside campsite, Crickhowell.

    Completed the Black Mountains ridge of Pen Y Manllwyn > Waun Fach (check point 9) > Mynydd Llysiau > Pen Twyn Glas > Pen Allt-Mawr (Check point 10) > Pen Cerrig-calch > Table Mountain then down to Crickhowell. The morning had been a hard ascent from Pengenfford up Y Grib, after that relatively level going between the peaks. Surface varied between bogs, fine grassed fairways, rocky surface and man made paths gravelled to combat the erosion of the surface.
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  • Rain forcing a pause

    27. september 2017, Wales ⋅ ☀️ 14 °C

    Wednesday: Rain forecast for today just at the time I would need to pitch. I would have plummed for a B&B but next stop will be in the wilderness West of Llangattock where camping is only option. So have decided to bus home for today and recommence next week.

    Spent couple of hours walking around Crickhowell. A delightful town with a Castle, many listed buildings, a splendid old stone Bridge and a large number of shops for such a small place, many if them upmarket, and seven pubs I counted (there may be more) many with food.

    The pictures are from around Crickhowell.
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  • Mynydd Llangattock end of day 13

    6. oktober 2017, Wales ⋅ 🌙 9 °C

    Friday: Restarted my walk today from Crickhowell. Got T4 bus from Cardiff to Brecon, then X43 from Brecon to Crickhowell travelling in glorious sunshine. 3.5 miles / 1000 feet of ascent from Crickhowell to Mynydd Llangattock completed at end of 13th day of walking. Weather sunny. Wild camped on shoulder of Mynydd Llangattock.

    Began with walk over ancient bridge out of Crickhowell, through pleasant meadow in Llangattock, gentle few hundred yards up to Brecon and Monmouthshire Canal. Walked along towpath passed many moored boats and barges and a couple of barges under way. After passing an old Lime Kiln turned right up road built on old tram track then onto the bed of the old tram track itself. Gentle ascent at first then very steep up hlllside to old Lime quarries. The Tram track had been used to bring Limestone down from the quarry to the Kilns. Once fired the Lime was then transported away on the Canal. Pleasent chat to a landowner who was clearing a tree blown down in winds last week. Further up the tram way talked to a Farmer on Quad bike who was gathering Charlaois and Limisol Cows and a Bull. Once up to Llangattock quarries wide, level, grass footpath around the horseshoe quarry passing a number of small caves. Met a couple from Ebbw Vale who directed me to a huge cave a short walk above the main path. This is the one in the attached photograph - Cambrian Way Check Point 11. A little further on I missed a fork where the main path descended right so ended up following a narrow level path through woodland just below the limestone cliffs. It was very slow going so I eventually beat a route down to the main path losing around an hour in the process. As I rounded the shoulder of the cliffs a number of level grass spots apppeared so camped for the night.
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  • Crickhowell

    7. oktober 2017, Wales ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    Saturday: Toasty warm but extremely windy during the night. Felt like my Wild Country Zephyros 1 tent was going to collapse but it held splendidly. No let up in wind strength in the morning and looked decidedly grey. I had been planning to split the 20 miles between Crickhowell over Mynydd Llangattock and the Brecon Beacons to Storey Arms over Friday and Saturday then bus back to Cardiff late Saturday to be in time for an event on Sunday. As I had only walked 3.5 of my 10 mile target, together with the strong winds, decided to return down nearby road to Crickhowell for breakfast and get Bus home to pick up walk again in a few days.

    Had huge breakfast at reasonable price in cusioned comfort of The Britannia Inn on High Street. Open fire and friendly staff made it very pleasant. Surprisingly I was only customer. Shortly after leaving I walked past a Cafe packed with customers. Left me wondering why people choose hard floors and hard upright chairs over a carpet, soft furnishings and an open fire.

    As can be seen on the photograph weather had cleared to blue sky by the time I was ready to leave Crickhowell so I left town wondering if I had made the right decision.
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  • Danywenallt YHA end of day 14

    9. oktober 2017, Wales ⋅ 🌙 11 °C

    Monday: 8 miles / 700 feet of ascent from Crickhowell to Danywynallt YHA beside Talybont Reservoir completed at end of 14th day of walking. Weather pleasant sunshine, clouding over towards end of the day. Camped in Danywenallt YHA camping field.

    Took Bus from Cardiff to Crickhowell to resume walk having broken off last week to see comedian Henning Wehn in Leamington Spa. Very amusing view of the British from a German prospective. As he put it 'observational comedy from the viewpoint of a foreigner'.

    Arrived Crickhowell late in the afternoon so had to walk briskly to be at hostel in time for supper. Easy navigation in the daylight but quite tricky once it fell dark. Last 1.5 miles took 1:30. Lady at hostel kindly telephoned me at 20:37 as she was concerned I had not arrived. I arrived 5 minutes later. No pictures today as I was in such a hurry I did not take any.
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  • Storey Arms end of day 15

    10. oktober 2017, Wales ⋅ 🌙 12 °C

    Tuesday: 10 miles / 2700 feet of ascent from Danywenallt YHA to Storey Arms completed at end of 15th day of walking. Weather mostly cloudy with sunny intervals throughout the day and occasional short light showers late morning. Camping at Danywenallt was in an Orchard under a tree which kept the tent mostly dry during a short morning rain shower while I was having breakfast. Evening meal, breakfast and packed lunch as well as the welcome at Danywenallt were excellent.

    After leisurely breakfast, striking camp and chatting to fellow hostellers started walking at 10:00. Danywenallt is a Brecon Beacons National Park study centre as well as YHA. It is extensive with all usual hostel facilities located just below Dam of Talybont Reservoir. Walk out took me past the reservoir water treatment works. There were vans outside and door was open so I walked in, and got permission to look around. Discovered it was built 1935-37 to provide water to Newport and towns en route. I was told there is an extensive Victorian Water main which links all the water treatment works to towns. One of the photographs is of a graphic illustrating this.

    After walking across the valley I had a long 3 hour, 3 mile hike ascending 2000ft up Twyn Du to the start of traverse across the Beacons. Passed my first hikers on this section, a couple with 2 small dogs. They had been drenched on the mountain tops to the south, I was lucky to miss the same soaking. At the top of Twyn Du was a splendidly constructed cairn called Carn Pica shown in photograph 3.

    Once on the top going was relatively level and easy with simple navigation but south westerly wind increased considerably once I creasted the top. It was strong enough at times to halt my forward progress. Waun Rydd began with lots of walking around sections to avoid deep mud / bog followed by a section of laid gravel. I passed a platoon of Marines here on exercise in full kit all carrying their guns with the yellow safety fittings on the muzzules.

    Turning SW then West onto Bwlch y Ddwyallt the path surface had worn down into a trench to the base rock. The resulting broken rock surface slowed my pace. This same surface continued onto SSW Craig Cwarell which curved NW onto Craig Cwmoergwm. The vertical drop up to this point gave way mid way along to a nirth facing lower section where I was able to descend 20 feet to shelter from the southerly wind for lunch.

    At Bwlch ar yr Fan a Roman Road from a car park to the south, joins the East - West traverse I was on. On the section from here past Cribyn, Pen y Fan (Cambrian Way check point 12) and Corn Du I met 8 more hikers reflecting the ease of access from the car park. On my ascent up Pen y Fan I entered cloud for the first time today. I had seen cloud in the distance over peaks often today but it had always cleared by the time I had ascended the peak. Once passed Corn Du cloud cleared and crossing over the Bwlch Duwynt onto the final WSW smooth 10ft wide gravelled path down to Storey Arms the wind increased to be even stronger. It was at this point I realised a wild camp was out of the question as a doubted my tent would stay up. The strong wind coupled with forecast of heavy rain all Wednesday resolved me get the bus home from Storey Arms. I walked down to Storey Arms at a gentle pace knowing I had plenty of time until last bus which would take me within a few hundred yards of home. A successful couple of days as I have finally walked the eastern section of the Beacons all joined up. Like many of us, I have walked some of these mountains in the past but this is the first time I got to walk them all and appreciate how they all fit together.
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  • Tuesday: Restarting my Cambrian Way walk today. Just had time to wave Angharad and Isaac off on their holiday then a few minutes walk to board T4 TransCymru bus for the 30 miles to Storey Arms where I finished walking October last year.

    Weather glorious sunshine with a breeze making temperature cool enough to wear long sleeves.

    My plan is to walk 8-10 miles west from Storey Arms up onto Rhos Dringarth, across top of two valleys then turn south to walk down Glyntawe valley to pitch on Dan Yr Ogof caves campsite.

    11:30 Bus dropped me at Storey Arms - the highest point on the Merthyr Tydfil to Brecon road. Walked west up onto Rhos Dringarth moor. If doing this ascent again I would steer a little further north west to avoid having to loose height after climbing a little too high. Photo is looking back to Storey Arms.
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  • Ystradfellte valley

    12. juni 2018, Wales

    Tuesday: Continuing further west next feature was the Ystradfellte valley. Stopped for lunch in glorious sunshine by a stream that feeds the Ystradfellte reservoir. Sitting on a warm rock with boots and socks off was a delight.Læs mere

  • Maen Lila rock

    12. juni 2018, Wales

    Tuesday: After Ystradfellte valley I had an easy climb onto the next ridge west 'Fan Dringarth'. Guide book directed me to steer south west from here but I walked south along the ridge line for a while hoping to see a path west into the next valley. A path never appeared so I eventually turned west and walked across the open slope. Walking was easy and because it was June and weather had been dry for weeks all the bogs were dried up. Such a contrast to when I was walking last Autumn when there were bogs everywhere. Towards the bottom of the valley walked over 'Sarn Helen' Roman road. 200 yards further passed the huge rock in the photographs called Maen Lila. It appeared to a classic glacial erratic but the legend explains that it was put up by early man.Læs mere

  • Fan Nedd traverse

    12. juni 2018, Wales

    Tuesday: After Maen Lila I followed the guide book's suggestion and walked half a mile north on a minor road to a viewpoint giving magnificent views over Powys. Then turned west again to traverse this path beneath Fan Nedd. The photograph does not quite capture the drama but as I approached the very steep cliff dropping down from Fan Nedd I was feeling some trepidation at traversing the slope. It turned out to be quite safe and not the dramatic traverse it appeared from afar. In the distance you can see Fan Gyhirych which was to be my final summit of the day at 2379' / 725m and Cambrian Way check point 13A.Læs mere

  • Fan Gyhirych

    12. juni 2018, Wales

    Tuesday: Check point 13A Fan Gyhirych attained - hurrah! This final ascent ended a quite easy day of gentle ascents as I had followed a rough road/track that had been built within 1/2 mile of the summit. The guide book showed the road ending a mile from the summit at some sheep pens. I suspect the road has been extended since the guide book was written. From the road I turned north over open grass land to attain the summit trig point. Other photographs are from Fan Gyhirych looking north towards the Cray reservoir and south to Glyntawe which was to be my camp for the night.

    Took a long 2 hours to walk further 3 miles to Dan Yr Ogof campsite via a circuitous route following the road/track. I would have preferred to take the 1 mile bee line to the campsite but there were no paths marked on the map and I suspected fences might block my route. Extremely smart campsite with nicely mown grass, large smooth boulders placed around the site to sit on, and smooth tarmac drives sufficiently free of stones I was able to walk bearfoot to the shower block. Smart shower block included warm showers for no additional fee.

    After pitching and showering I walked a mile north to the Tafan-y-Garreg Inn for a drink. Disappointingly they were closed, despite their web site reporting they opened Tuesday until 23:00.

    Total 10 miles in glorious weather.
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  • Dan-Yr-Ogof campsite day 17

    13. juni 2018, Wales ⋅ ☀️ 14 °C

    Wednesday: Great night's sleep on Dan-Yr-Ogof campsite for £8. Site is about 300 yards from A4067 so little traffic noise except for the occasional particularly heavy lorry. Full British breakfast in the Cafe was excellent as were the generously filled Coronation Chicken brown bread rolls made especially for my lunch. I was particularly impressed that, rather than a polystyrene, they were in a cardboard take away box. They also supplied more than enough mayo and salad cream sachets rather then the common single sachet (which is never enough!).Læs mere

  • Llyn y Fan Fawr

    13. juni 2018, Wales ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

    Wednesday: First part of today's walk was due north to Llyn y Fan Fawr shown in the photograph. There are two routes to the lake / llyn. An upper route along Fan Hir ridge and a lower route along the Beacons way. I had walked the upper route a few weeks ago with Cardiff Ramblers so took the lower route for variety. This was a 1150' / 350m ascent over 4 miles which took me 3:30 including lunch stop. Route was over a reasonable surface, mostly worn down to soil or stones, but often grassed.

    From Llyn y Fan Fawr there are well laid large stone steps up onto Bwlch Gledd saddle. On the saddle south west wind increased dramatically because I was out of the lee of the ridge. Then a laid path of variously large flagstones or gravel up onto today's objective, check point 14 Fan Brycheiniog.
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