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You are here: Experience and Enjoy > Natural Attractions
We’re lucky enough to live and work in the most stunning part of Wales (we’re biased, we know).
Llyn Clywedog has a surface area of 615 acres (230 football pitches), is 216 ft deep at its maximum depth and stretches in all a distance of some six miles. You can walk around it. Sail. Go fishing. Try stand up paddle boarding.
We have 2 National Parks: Snowdonia and the Brecon Beacons.
We have 2 National Trails: Offa's Dyke Path takes you through Mid Wales as part of a 177-mile journey, and Glyndwr's Way, 135 miles long; linking Welshpool, Machynlleth and Knighton (the only town in Wales that’s on two National Trails).
The Wales Coast Path is one of the few footpaths in the world to follow a nation's coastline.
The Cambrian Mountains comprises 467 square miles of Mid Wales and has some of the darkest skies in Europe.
We have hills and mountains inland, and beaches on the West Coast of Ceredigion. Walk to the Source of the River Severn. The Montgomery Canal, or ‘The Monty’ as it’s fondly referred to, stretches from Newtown to Llanymynech in Wales and continues over the border into England to Frankton Locks where it joins the Llangollen Canal. While not all of it is navigable by boat, the towpath is an open natural environment ready to enjoy and explore.
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