Brilliant beaches, wildflower-strewn cliffs, pilgrim routes and sea life are among the highlights of this spectacular hike in Wales’s far north-west

Porth Neigwl beach, between the craggy headlands of Mynydd Rhiw and Mynydd Cilan at the end of north Wales’s Llŷn peninsula, is known as Hell’s Mouth, because locals once used its rough waters as a “trapping bay”, luring ships into it then murdering their crews and stealing their cargo. I feel quite safe there today, though, as I climb over grassy dunes and across the soft clifftops of boulder clay, remnants of the last ice age.

I’m walking around the peninsula on one of the lesser-known sections of the Wales Coast Path – which celebrates its 10th anniversary this year – basing myself in the fishing village of Aberdaron.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

The Mozart of pragmatic intervention: Fernandinho keeps City ticking over | Jonathan Wilson

He’s not big, not quick and doesn’t score, but the Brazilian’s elegant…

Leftist to become Chile’s youngest ever president after beating far-right rival

Former student leader claims 55.8% of the votes counted to defeat far-right…

Ex-homelessness charity bosses get 15-year ban for misuse of funds

Charity Commission inquiry showed Ashley and Lee Dribben spent large sums meant…