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Number of results: 124
, currently showing 81 to 100.
Pembrokeshire
A long, dune backed, beach popular with families (very close to Tenby town). The beach and sea shore shelve very gently into clear water.
Pembrokeshire
This is a dune backed, sandy beach is plenty big enough for all your beach activities and popular for water sports.
Cardigan
Picturesque remains that include a pair of highly defensible round towers dating to the first half of the thirteenth century. Earlier Norman origins.
Ceredigion
Part of Llandysul Trails - Teifi Loop Walk
Start: SN418406 - Car Park, Llandysul
Suitable for: Moderately fit walkers
Grade: Moderate
Distance: 5.63km/3.5M
Time: 2.5 hours (excluding rest stops)
Cardigan - Aberporth
1st section of the Ceredigion Coastal Path
Total distance 18.7km (11.7 miles)
Cardigan to Gwbert 5.6km (3.5 miles), grade/easy
Gwbert to Mwnt 5.8km (3.6 miles), grade/easy
Mwnt to Aberporth 8km (5 miles), grade/moderate
The Ridgeway
Pembrokeshire Alpaca trekking offers the opportunity for you to meet the Alpacas, walk approximately one mile with them with a halter, feed them in their natural habitat and interact with them.
A small beach with access to the Pembrokeshire Coast Path which runs round Dinas Head peninsula to Pwllgwaelod, a cove on the western side.
Abereiddy
Popular for activities such as coasteering with an instructor and famous for the "Blue Lagoon", a small breached quarry north of the beach. Look out for strong currents.
The ancient ruins of Tenby Castle lie above this picturesque sandy cove situated between Castle Hill and the East Cliff with steep (and tidal) access.
Pembrokeshire
This imposing medieval palace stands in a grassy hollow next to purple-stoned St Davids Cathedral. Even in ruins, the palace is unequalled anywhere else in Wales
Haverfordwest
Sealyham Activity Centre can be found in the heart of Pembrokeshire. It is based in a Georgian mansion surrounded by ancient woodland and a river valley.
Cardigan
The site takes its name from Dogmael, a 6th-century Christian saint reputedly the cousin of St David, Wales's very own patron saint.
Haverfordwest
Well-preserved motte-and-bailey castle, probably begun by the Flemish settler, Wizo, sometime in the first half of the twelfth century. Remains of a later stone shell-keep also survive.
Pembroke Dock
Pembroke Dock has an internationally significant heritage. This is celebrated under one roof in Pembroke Dock Heritage Centre, housed in the former Royal Dockyard Chapel, now an all-weather family attraction in the heart of Pembrokeshire.
Haverfordwest
Pembrokeshire's County Museum is located in a traditional Victorian country house near Haverfordwest, surrounded by 60 acres of park and woodland and is completed by an award-winning eco-centre.
Pembrokeshire
Extensive remains of a lavish country retreat used by the bishops of St Davids, with buildings dating from the thirteenth to sixteenth centuries.
Pembrokeshire
Pentre Ifan is a Bronze-Age megalithic site dating from at least 4000 B.C. It is probably the finest Welsh hilltop megalith (mega-lith = large stones). It is said to have been originally constructed as a burial chamber.
Fishguard
Surrounded in the Natural Beauty of the North Pembrokeshire Coastline, with it's towering cliffs and secluded beaches, our qualified instructors will teach you the necessary skills to enable you to explore at your own pace.
The Celtic trail offers the ambitious cyclist a satisfying tour of south Wales
Tenby
Community museum relating to the culture and heritage of South Pembrokeshire, including geology, archeology, maritime and social history, natural history and two art galleries.