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Number of results: 2851
, currently showing 661 to 680.
Brecon
The Storey Arms Centre offers outdoor learning opportunities for schools and youth centres, as well as groups from higher education, charitable organisations and industry.
Colwyn Bay
Porth Eirias is an impressive and iconic new build development right at the heart of the new promenade improvements in Colwyn Bay.
Machynlleth
Start: Village car park, Cwrt
Grid Reference:SH 688 000
Distance: 4.8 km – 3 miles (with extension 6.6 km - 4 miles)
Grade: Moderate (extension energetic)
Terrain: Tarmac road, firm tracks, fields and woodland
Maps: OS Explorer - OL 23
Southern Snowdonia
The walk along the estuary from Barmouth to Dolgellau is 9.6 miles (15km). This easy leisure walk is suitable for all the family and involves no climbing. A section of the trail has been adapted for people with disabilities.
Machynlleth
This walk starts at the car park at Y Plas, Machynlleth and is graded as moderate. The terrain includes road, woodland paths, firm tracks and fields and is a distance of 5 miles.
Barmouth
The Mawddach Trail is flat and totally traffic free, making for a superb 18 mile return trip.
The route follows the course of the old railway line from Dolgellau to Barmouth with picnic areas, viewpoints and little nature reserves.
Buckley
Buckley railway station is on the Borderlands Line between Wrexham and Bidston on the Wirral.
Machynlleth
Start: Lay-by Derwenlas
Grid Reference: SN721 991
Distance: 6.2 km - 3.8 miles
Grade: Moderate
Terrain: Firm tracks, open fields, some boggy areas
Maps: OS Explorer OL23
Southern Snowdonia
There are three recommended walking routes to conquer Cader Idris. Whichever route you take they are all designated ‘hard/strenuous’ routes, and you should allow between five to six hours to get there and back
Mold
Moel Famau Country Park, 2000 acres of important upland landscape, and forms part of the Clwydian Range Area of Outstanding natural Beauty (AONB).
Brynmawr (sometimes hyphenated to Bryn-mawr in Welsh — meaning "big hill") is a market town in Blaenau Gwent, South Wales.
Blaenau Ffestiniog
Journey through an Indiana Jones-esque adventure environment that has been inaccessible for nearly 200 years
Pembrokeshire
Amroth is a half mile long, flat, sandy beach with a huge expanse of sand at low tide for all sorts of beach games.
Ruthin
This large forest lies to the north of the B5105 on the Hiraethog Moors. It has some of the best and most well managed coniferous plantations in Wales. It has hundreds of hectares of forest over 50 years old.
Benllech is a small town on the Isle of Anglesey. The popularity of its beach makes Benllech - on the A5025, the main road around the north of Anglesey - one of the most visited places on the island.
Deeside is the name given to a predominantly industrial conurbation of towns and villages close to the border between Wales and England near to the River Dee.
Llanidloes
Llanidloes is a small historic market town in Mid Wales; it is the first town along the River Severn.
Talacre
Point of Ayr consists of sand dunes overlooking a large expanse of sand at the mouth of the Dee Estuary extending west past Talacre to Prestatyn's Barkby beach.
Isle of Anglesey
Trearddur Bay is a village south of Holyhead on the west coast of Holy Island off the north-west coast of Anglesey. The historical name for Trearddur Bay is Towyn Capel or Tywyn y Capel.
Port Eynon
Gower Activity Centres at Rhossili and Port Eynon provide fantastic accommodation for experiencing all that Gower has to offer.