Tag Archives: walking routes

Favourite Wales walks and walking routes

22 Feb Wales Walks - Walking Routes - Welsh Waterfalls

Favourite Wales walks and walking routes

Wales Walks - Walking Routes - Welsh Waterfalls

Wales Walks - Walking Routes - Welsh Waterfalls

1. Walks in Wales

2. Henryhd Waterfall, Brecon Beacons, South Wales

3. Welsh Waterfalls Walk, Brecon Beacons, South Wales

4. Table Mountain, Brecon Beacons, South Wales

5. The Mumbles, Gower Peninsula, South Wales

6. The Brecon Mountain Railway, Brecon Beacons, South Wales

7. The Llanberis Path, Snowdon

8. The Miners Track and The PYG TRack, Snowdon

9. Criccieth Castle and Cardigan Bay

10. Portmeirion Italian Hill Village Walk

Wales Walks Top 5 Tips To Prevent Blisters

1 Feb

5 Top Tips To Prevent Blisters

1. Wear two pairs of socks.

The technical theory behind this is that the inner liner sock moves with your foot and the outer hiking socks move with the boot. The friction is then created between the two layers. The other benefit to this method is that the inner liner sock wicks away moisture from your foot keeping it dryer and thus stopping your skin getting soft and wrinkly and prone to blisters.

2. Wear your hiking boots in.

Give them a good walking around so they get used to how your foot works and where it need to bend with your foot. It will also soften up the leather and fabric a little. Don’t go out on a long hike to break them in, but wear them about for short walks, around the house, that sort of thing. This one really can make a difference.

3. Get your hiking boots properly fitted.

Go to a shop that knows about the bio mechanics of the foot and leg and how it all works. Make sure that they measure your foot for both width and length. You’ll be amazed by how often people don’t really know the size of their feet. Your expert walking boot fitter will then be able to best match your foot to a type of boot that is suitable for you. Give the walking boots a good walk in the shop. Have they got a slope for you to try them on to see if your foot slips? They should have. Always make sure you have room to wiggle toes and that they are not up against the end of the boot nor are they too far away fro the end of the boot. There should be no heel slippage.

4. Tape up your heels.

If you have a pair of boots that weren’t fitted for you and you get blisters then use two roles of wide zinc oxide tape and put a layer of this across your heel. This is also a blister prevention method that works very well if you cannot find proper blister prevention plasters.

5. Get some Blister Prevention Patches.

These go on the inside of your hiking boot heels and they them seem to prevent blisters which are like a slipper piece of extremely sticky back plastic and they do work.

Enjoy these tips and enjoy your walking routes, blister free!

Wales Walks Top 5 Tips To Prevent Blisters

1 Feb

5 Top Tips To Prevent Blisters

1. Wear two pairs of socks.

The technical theory behind this is that the inner liner sock moves with your foot and the outer hiking socks move with the boot. The friction is then created between the two layers. The other benefit to this method is that the inner liner sock wicks away moisture from your foot keeping it dryer and thus stopping your skin getting soft and wrinkly and prone to blisters.

2. Wear your hiking boots in.

Give them a good walking around so they get used to how your foot works and where it need to bend with your foot. It will also soften up the leather and fabric a little. Don’t go out on a long hike to break them in, but wear them about for short walks, around the house, that sort of thing. This one really can make a difference.

3. Get your hiking boots properly fitted.

Go to a shop that knows about the bio mechanics of the foot and leg and how it all works. Make sure that they measure your foot for both width and length. You’ll be amazed by how often people don’t really know the size of their feet. Your expert walking boot fitter will then be able to best match your foot to a type of boot that is suitable for you. Give the walking boots a good walk in the shop. Have they got a slope for you to try them on to see if your foot slips? They should have. Always make sure you have room to wiggle toes and that they are not up against the end of the boot nor are they too far away fro the end of the boot. There should be no heel slippage.

4. Tape up your heels.

If you have a pair of boots that weren’t fitted for you and you get blisters then use two roles of wide zinc oxide tape and put a layer of this across your heel. This is also a blister prevention method that works very well if you cannot find proper blister prevention plasters.

5. Get some Blister Prevention Patches.

These go on the inside of your hiking boot heels and they them seem to prevent blisters which are like a slipper piece of extremely sticky back plastic and they do work.

Enjoy these tips and enjoy your walking routes, blister free!

Wales Walks and Walking Routes

17 Dec Wales Walks - Portmeirion Lake - Hidden Treasures

Wales Walks and Walking Routes

North Wales

North Wales is a favourite among walkers, and it’s easy to see why.

This part of Wales is home to Snowdonia National Park which boasts almost 840 square miles of Wales walks, mountains, lakes and beautifully diverse walking terrain. There’s also Anglesey, Wales’ largest island featuring an area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, and let’s not forget about some of the best coastal walking routes in the country along the North Wales Coast.

There’s also an abundance of gentle strolls and more challenging, steeper climbs to be found in the North Wales borderlands.
Snowdonia Mountains and Coast

The Snowdonia National Park contains some of the most dazzling mountain scenery in the uk. With their reputation for rough rocky outcrops, vertiginously sheer cliffs and scooped glacial cwms, the mountains have shaped the livelihood of the people who’ve lived here.

When walking in this area we advise that you take a compass and be prepared for sudden changes in weather. And remember there will be limited mobile phone coverage!

Only a short distance away from this spectacular land of mountains you can discover breathtaking coastline. The Llyn Coastal Footpath provides you golden opportunity to experience the coastal landscape by following this winding route. There are small coves and wide expanses of sand, rugged cliffs and small harbours waiting to be discovered.

Wales Walks - Portmeirion Lake - Hidden Treasures

Wales Walks - Portmeirion Lake - Hidden Treasures

Llyn Peninsula

Morning on the Llyn Peninsula is spectacular. Almost anywhere you stay, the sea is there when you open the curtains.

The pointy mountains are an extinct range of volcanoes and you’re never far from them. Families with children come here because you can pretty much count on being able to go walking from your front door. You don’t have to travel far, and if you did want to travel, to Portmeirion, say, or to Caernarfon for the shops and castle, Llyn’s a small place and the journeys are short. You can feel cut off without actually being cut off.

Llyn’s popular beaches offer some of the best surfing in the whole of Wales. And there are also big, quiet stretches of sand like Porth Oer, known as Whistling Sands because the dry sand squeaks as you walk on it.
Mid Wales

Mid Wales is reserved especially for you. No crowds, no hassle, no pressure.

You have the choice between a scenic coastline with award winning beaches or entering the gentle heartland where the scenery is spectacular. Wherever you decide, the roads will be quiet and the vibrant towns will welcome you with open arms.
South Wales

Go West or Go East?

South West Wales is made up of the beautiful moors, rolling hills, beaches and cliff tops of Swansea Bay, Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire – home to the UK’s only coastal national park and Wales’ longest national trail.

Traveling East across South Wales you will find trails through deep valleys and hilltops, along canals and rivers and the first coastline in Wales to be awarded Heritage Coast protection.

UK Walking in the Brecon Beacons

9 Dec

UK Walking in the Brecon Beacons

Any Brecon Beacons walks in Southwest Wales offers walks together with UK walking routes as varied as you may could imagine. An class of true outstanding natural wonder its landscape is intertwined utilizing exploitation, conservation, preservation together with recreation.

The Brecon Beacons, defined by way of the Brecon Beacons National Area, has embraced the will need to protect this beautiful space with investment and environmentally friendly consciousness. The area showcases the tallest, roughest, toughest peaks in South Wales engulfed during the boundless terrain, swooping escarpments, significant vistas, impressive tarns (ponds formed by glacial formations) and also barren moorlands for the best Wales walks.

The sudden transition within the tranquillity and the breathtaking scenery within the Brecon Beacons to any coal bearing valleys legacy within the industrial revolution is more or less instant.

Merthyr Tydfil was in the past the largest town in Wales by using a legend dating back that will 480 when Saint Tydfil was initially slain by pagans. In her honour metropolis was renamed Merthyr Tydfil, with Merthyr for a modern Welsh translation for Martyr. With the growth within the iron industry, several wars and also rapid expansion of railways meant metropolis grew until its best in 1861. By the 1930’s adhering to World War I the neighborhood and industry was during decline. All that remained within the Dowlais ironworks finally made in 1987 marking the finale of 228 years for continuous production from in to the space, many sites.

Close by just is Port Talbot, home in 1952 of amongst Europe’s biggest steelworks and also then largest employer during Wales. A chemical plant during 1960 and deep-water harbour repair in 1970 meant the neighborhood was good for the community but a ruin while in the landscape.

Herein lays the importance of maintaining rural South Wales when using the Brecon Beacons being any saviour of tourism and also Gower Peninsula by Swansea delivering wonderful holiday spots to your beach lovers and coast walkers.

The Brecon Beacons National Park gives the consistent character of samsung s8500 upon wave of open hillside and extraordinary mountain air. The surface dips, rolls and rises fluidly as a giant green sea. Walking routes during the Brecon Beacons are uncomplicated with to everything spaces and vast skies above, easy to browse through but ruthlessly draining utilizing slow steady climbs the fact that seem endless.

The Black Mountains stands out as the first of the five main mountain ranges during the Brecon Beacons, a lofty range of hills along the Welsh/English border. The Brecon Beacons are definitely the heart of the Brecon Beacons National Park as well as the west are any moors and plateaux for Fforest Fawr. The loneliest of mountain ranges has reached the far west within the Brecon Beacons, Black Mntain; a daunting wilderness to your very brave explorer.

Matched against its northern counterpart, any Snowdonia National Park, the Brecon Beacons is more reliable ın comparison to the lucky-dip landscape of boulder strewn slants, jagged pinnacles, boggy moors together with woodland valleys.

Whilst Mount Snowdon and also Snowdonia National Park may seem like the preferred choice to your more adventurous the Brecon Beacons beholds rarer for treasures; the Welsh waterfalls. The Welsh waterfalls happen to be almost as endless when the mountain ranges and can be bought in the ancient woodlands and forest pathways in and around the Brecon Beacons.

The knowledge of walking into, approximately, up and below, inside and just outside of a Welsh waterfall may be a definite rival to many peaks and cwms for Mount Snowdon.

Wales Walks by Walks And Walking

13 Oct Wales Walks by Walks And Walking

Wales Walks by Walks And Walking

I found a great selection of Wales walks and walking routes that are all free to download and print off from a website called Walks And Walking.

Walks And Walking also offer special offers on walking boots, walking clothes, walking accessories and outdoor gear for hiking, camping, climbing, trekking and the latest big brand offers from Timberland, Blacks, Craghoppers, Millets and Bear Grylls.

Walks And Walking also have a facebook page where you can upload your own walks and experiences to share with the world!

Click here to visit the website for Walks And Walking
Click here to visit the facebook page for Walks And Walking
Click here to follow Walks And Walking on Twitter!

Wales Walks by Walks And Walking

Wales Walks by Walks And Walking

Wales Walks – Mount Snowdon

28 Sep Wales Walks Mount Snowdon

Wales Walks – Mount Snowdon

Mount Snowdon is situated in the Snowdonia National Park of North Wales and is certainly a mountain that is accessible but can also be very demanding. It offers truly entertaining and enjoyable walks and walking routes for the family and the adventurer.

Wales Walks Mount Snowdon

Wales Walks Mount Snowdon

Perhaps the best approach to see Mount Snowdon is from the Telford old road from Shrewsbury to Holyhead where it turns at Capel Curig. On a clear day you can celebrate the serrated line of beautiful peaks coming in to view along the skyline with Mount Snowdon sat in the centre as the king of them all.

From Llanberis, one of the most traditional and steady walking routes to the top of mount Snowdon, its peak rises behind the mountain range, almost hidden by the Crib y Ddysgle. Llanberis is also where you can find the famous Mount Snowdon Railway.

There are five main rocky ridges that radiate from Mount Snowdon and between them five deep cwms, Welsh valleys, which add a formidable aspect to each approach to the summit. Once the lush green valley’s are left behind the ascent of Mount Snowdon can be unforgiving if you do not follow the traditional Wales walks and walking routes as you climb steadily upwards.

Although barren, the wildness and silence offers a breathtaking experience with the many lakes and small streams running through the heather and down through the mountains to the cwms below. From the summit the views are spectacular, as you would expect, and it does not let you down in terms of the time spent planning the trip, mapping the walking routes, purchasing the correct equipment, breaking in your walking boots and buying those extra thermal layers.

Mount Snowdon won’t let you down but can be your downfall so make sure you are prepared for any eventuality as there are many grim ridges and hollows for the inexperienced hiker to get caught out.

Yr Wyddfa, the Welsh name for Snowdon, translated means “the great mound” or “the great tomb” due to the legend of Rhita Fawr who was reputed to be buried somewhere on Mount Snowdon.

The legend began when there were only two kings in Britain; Nynniaw and Peibiaw who declared war on each other. When the king of Wales, one Rhita Fawr, heard of this war he decided to end it promptly by attacking them both. Such was the outrage from the rest of Britain that they declared war on Rhita Fawr but emerged victorious cutting off all of their beards to make a cloak reaching down from his shoulders to the floor. Rhita Fawr was eager to add King Arthur’s beard to his cloak but was defeated and subsequently buried under a cairn of stones on the summit of Mount Snowdon marking the end of his legend.

Mount Snowdon has seven main and well marked walking routes up to its summit. The Snowdon Mountain Railway offers the easier way to the top, the Llanberis Path offering the most gradual ascent and the Horseshoe Walk is perhaps the most famous. The Snowdon Ranger Path is an easy and pleasant walk being slightly shorter than the Llanberis Path. The Beddgelert-Rhyd-DDu Path has two starting points with very steep walks, sheer drops and corkscrewing pathways. The Watkins Path takes you through one of the great cwms before rising to a rough scramble to the top. The PIG Track, or PYG Track, offers a varied walking route with less climbing than the others.

There are other walking routes and traverses available for the more experienced walker, trekkers, ramblers, hikers and climbers which broadens the overall appeal and popularity of the Snowdonia National Park.