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Number of results: 2915
, currently showing 961 to 980.
Perched on top of a hill, all roads into Ruthin seem to lead to St Peter’s Square in the centre. Visitors come here to admire the mix of architectural styles, the excellent specialist shops, and good eating places.
COLWYN BAY
Enter the world of the Welsh Mountain Zoo and you enter a world of natural wonder.
Llandysul
Llandysul Paddlers Canoe Centre is based near Carmarthen in West Wales.
Llanidloes
The ruins of the Bryn-tail Leadworks lie in the shadow of the dam at the southern end of Llyn Clywedog Reservoir near Llanidloes Buildings and structures associated with the nineteenth-century extraction and processing of lead ore.
Cardigan
The Cardigan River & Food Festival is one of West Wales’ premier food and river celebrations, now in its mid-26th year.
The bridge is one of three connecting the Anglesey mainland to the smaller Holy Island and was the sole route until the construction of the Stanley Embankment in 1823. It is 120 metres long and carries the road over the Cymyran Strait.
Tenby
Carew Castle rich history spans over 2,000 years and tells of knights of the realm, kingmakers and Civil War devastation.
The site also incorporates the only restored Tidal Mill in Wales, an 11th century Celtic cross and a Medieval bridge.
Hay-On-Wye
Ancient trees of this age are one of the rarest habitats in Europe and the UK has a large proportion. They support a range of rare and declining species of epiphytes.
Llanfairfechan
Llanfairfechan is a small seaside town on the north coast off the A55 road, between Penmaenmawr and Bangor.
Builth Wells
Builth Wells is home to the Royal Welsh Show, red kites and the final resting place of Wales' last prince, Llewelyn the Last.
Crickhowell
Restored courtyard house with origins in the fourteenth century. Rebuilt by Sir Roger Vaughan in the fifteenth century. Recreated fifteenth-century garden. Beautiful tranquil setting.
Pant
Straddling the border between England and Wales, the reserve lies at the southern end of the carboniferous limestone outcrop that stretches from Anglesey and the Great Orme at Llandudno.
Rhuddlan is a town with a population of 3700 situated south of the North Wales coast at Rhyl and overlooking the River Clwyd.
Llandeilo
There are few castles in Wales - or Europe for that matter - which can boast a more spectacular location than Carreg Cennen. Its ruins crown a precipitous crag in a remote corner of the Brecon Beacons National Park.
Bangor
Bangor railway station is on the North Wales Coast Line from Chester to Holyhead.
Treharris
Treharris bus station is off the B4254 Cardiff Road by Bargoed Terrace with services from/to Pontypridd and Merthyr Tydfil.
Waunlwyd
Premier Inn Ebbw Vale is a modern, budget-friendly hotel offering comfortable accommodation and convenient access to the surrounding South Wales countryside.
The cobbled streets, glowing in the pastel hues of the painted houses, are littered with boutiques, bars and hotels that reinforce the sense that the Mumbles exists almost purely for pleasure.
Machynlleth
The Gŵyl Machynlleth Festival returns with an exceptional programme promising the best in Welsh, classical, world, jazz and folk music, alongside poetry, lectures, exhibitions and more.
Brecon
DofE expeditions, navigation training, map reading, wild camping and guided walks.