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Number of results: 2880
, currently showing 1301 to 1320.
The busy market town of Mold is located 10 miles west of the border with England. It is home to Clwyd Theatre Cymru, Wales' major drama house, originally built as a Regional Arts Centre.
Newtown
The Brimmon Wood & Kerry walk starts and ends in the centre of Newtown. It is mainly off-road walking with a few short sections on quiet lanes.
LLANFAIRPWLL
Set alongside the beautiful Menai Straits with stunning views of Caernarfon Castle and the Snowdonia mountain range beyond, you won’t find horse riding in more involving surroundings.
Isle of Anglesey
Foel Farm Park offers a great family visit to experience the sights, sounds and smells of a real working farm. We invite all visitors to meet, touch and feed the animals.
Devil's Bridge
Coed Maen Arthur is a woodland in the Ystwyth valley near the village of Pont-rhyd-y-groes, 14 miles from Aberstwyth. The waymarked walk goes through the woodland to Castell Grogwynion, one of the largest hill forts in Wales, and passes near an…
Crickhowell
Restored courtyard house with origins in the fourteenth century. Rebuilt by Sir Roger Vaughan in the fifteenth century. Recreated fifteenth-century garden. Beautiful tranquil setting.
Cardiff
Cardiff, is Europe’s youngest capital city and has been the capital city of Wales for around 50 years.
Gwynedd
Cwm Idwal was the first officially recognised National Nature Reserve in Wales; it was given this status by the Nature Conservancy Council in 1954. Along with Cadair Idris, Cwm Idwal was a favourite haunt of Charles Darwin.
Newport City
The Celtic Manor Resort is a world-class five-star destination just 90 minutes from London Heathrow. Set in 1400 acres of parkland in the beautiful Usk Valley in South Wales, it is the most complete resort in the UK and Europe
Swansea
Pwlldu Bay is a small, dramatic, remote pebble bound beach on the south Gower Peninsula. It is not easily accessible but, worth the visit if you can make it.
Brecon
The ancient market Town of Talgarth nestles beneath the Black Mountains which run along the border between Wales and England. Close to Brecon, Crickhowell and Hay-on-Wye, it provides an ideal base for visitors wishing to explore the area.
Fairbourne
A two mile stretch of sand backed by steep pebble banks and surrounded by the Snowdonia National Park.
Brecon
Brecon is a historic market town where you'll enjoy losing yourself...not only in the narrow streets and passageways lined with Georgian and Jacobean shopfronts, but in the sense of timelessness about the place.
Hay-On-Wye
Ancient trees of this age are one of the rarest habitats in Europe and the UK has a large proportion. They support a range of rare and declining species of epiphytes.
Nr Bargoed
Parc Cwm Darran, a peaceful country park tucked away from it all in the Daran Valley, two miles north of Bargoed. The visitor centre, open during the summer months has a coffee shop, exhibition area and information point.
Conwy
Extensive sands just to the north of Conwy joining on to the Penmaenmawr beach to the south-west.
Amlwch
The """"Copper Kingdom"""" refers to the area of Amlwch on Anglesey, North Wales which once had the largest copper mine in the world.
New Inn
The new Visitor Centre at Llandegfedd Reservoir spans beautiful, rolling landscaped countryside. Its stylish restaurant has panoramic views of the reservoir and watersports activities and is open 7 days a week.
LLANIDLOES
In the heart of the Cambrian Mountain uplands of Mid Wales, the River Severn springs from the upper slopes of Pumlumon Cwmbiga. The walking trail to the source of the Severn starts in the Hafren Forest. Follow the white waymarkers. When reaching the…
Abertillery is located within the Ebbw Fach valley surrounded by beautiful scenery of wooded hills and wild open moorland with lakes.