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Number of results: 1037
, currently showing 681 to 700.
Powys
This walk starts and ends in the centre of Newtown. It is a mixture of road and off -road walking with some sections muddy after heavy rain. It includes lovely views over Newtown and the surrounding hills. This walk is rated as moderate…
Borth
Borth railway station is on the Cambrian Line from Shrewsbury to Aberystwyth.
Brecon
Brecon Farmers & Makers Market is held on the 2nd Saturday of each month 09:30 - 16:00 at the Market Hall, Brecon.
Newtown
The Montgomery Canal Triathlon is one of the biggest events to take place on or near the canal. This special marathon is 27 - 28 miles of cycling, paddling and walking or running and will end at School House Bridge, Crickheath
Oswestry is the third largest town in Shropshire with a population of 17,000; it is five miles from the border with Wales and has a mixed Welsh and English heritage.
Rhayader
Situated in the centre of Rhayader in the heart of Mid Wales is one of the oldest businesses in the town - Hafod Hardware. A traditional old fashioned Ironmongers with wooden flooring and walls and ceiling lined in pine.
Ceredigion
Part of Llandysul Trails - Llandysul / Pont-Tyweli North Walk
Start: SN418406 - Car Park, Llandysul
Suitable for: Moderately fit walkers
Grade: Easy
Distance: 6.5km/4M
Time: 2.5 - 3hrs (excluding rest stops)
Morfa Mawddach
Morfa Mawddach railway station is on the Cambrian Coast Line from Machynlleth to Pwllheli and is located south-east of Barmouth, south of the Mawddach estuary.
Merthyr Tydfil
Garwnant Visitor Centre and holiday cabins are managed by Forest Holidays. The centre lies on the southern end of the Brecon Beacons National Park
Aberaeron
5th section of the Ceredigion Coastal Path
Total distance 11.9km (7.4 miles)
Aberaeron to Aberarth 3.1km (1.9miles), grade/easy
Aberarth to Llanon 4.8km (3.0 miles), moderate-easy
Llanon to Llanrhystud 4.0km (2.5 miles), grade/easy
Shrewsbury - Welshpool
Mid Wales Rail Trails | Points of interest on the train journey between Shrewsbury to Welshpool
Tywyn
Tywyn is a coastal town in Southern Snowdonia on the Mid Wales coast. The name Tywyn comes from the Welsh word for beach or sand dunes.
Brecon
The ancient market Town of Talgarth nestles beneath the Black Mountains which run along the border between Wales and England. Close to Brecon, Crickhowell and Hay-on-Wye, it provides an ideal base for visitors wishing to explore the area.
Aberaeron
This September more than 200 of Wales’ historic sites, landmarks and hidden gems will offer visitors free entry...
Machynlleth
Photograph the jewels of RSPB Ynys-hir temperate Celtic rain forest, in our Pop-up Woodland Photography Hide.
The woodland stars include summer visitors such as the Pied Flycatcher, Redstarts, and warblers migrating from a winter in West Africa to…
Llangrannog is one of Ceredigion's favourite seaside resorts, seven miles south of New Quay. Its award winning sandy beaches nestle below the cliffs and are crossed by the Ceredigion section of the Wales Coast Path.
Carmarthen Bay is a coastline of great contrasts and takes in a range of habitats including fresh water marshes, salt marshes (including the largest continuous salt marsh in Wales)
Clarbeston Road
Llys y Frân Lake has reopened following a £4m refurbishment with a new Visitor Centre, cafe, cycle hire, fishing, walking, watersports, adventure playground and climbing wall
Welshpool
Powis Castle’s restaurant has long been acknowledged as an example of excellence. Enjoy a variety of traditional dishes made with local, seasonal ingredients such as organic Welsh black beef, sourced from a local farm.
Welshpool
The Welshpool 1940s Weekend is a lively annual event that brings the wartime era back to life in the town of Welshpool. Featuring vintage vehicles, military displays, reenactments, live 1940s music, and period costumes, it offers visitors a…