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Snowdonia Links

Pete's Eats - The well known walker's and climber's caff in Llanberis.

 

Weather Links

Click for Capel Curig, United Kingdom Forecast Click for Capel Curig, United Kingdom Forecast

MWIS. Weather forecast for Snowdonia.

Met Office. 5 day mountain forecast.

Snowdonia Snowline - Daily record of the Carneddau Snowline.

Metcheck weather - Longer range forecasts.

Advertise your Snowdonia Business here! Email for info.

Accuweather

Snowdon Weather Station Project. Weather data and Webcams of Elidir Fawr and Moel Eilio.

 

Public Transport

Snowdon Sherpa Bus Timetables

Welsh Highland Railway.

Travelline Wales.

theTrainline - Timetables and online booking

 

Other Links

The Welsh 3000s - website just about the 14 peaks.

The BMC - British Mountaineering Council.

The Mountain Bothy Association - yes, there are bothies in Eryri...

TAC - The Angry Corrie Scottish hillwalking fanzine, read it free.

Eryri - Snowdonia National Park.

Oggy Cam . Ogwen Mountain Rescue and a Ogwen Valley webcam.

BBC North West Wales.

Graham's Wales Photos. Loads of excellent pics on Eryri in here.

North Wales Photographs Beautiful photos of North Wales by Simon Kitchin.

Cambrian Mountains National Park A 'Should-Be' fourth welsh national park.

Snowdonia Society Charity which looks after the interests onf the National Park.

eryriway.org.uk Sister site to walkeryri, emphasising long distance trails.

 

Dolwyddelan Circuit - Moel Meirch and Ysgafell Wen.

dolwyddelanpath

llyn ednotents galore

Distance and Ascent

30km / 1050m OS Map Required

OS Explorer 17 Landranger 150

Time

12 hours plus Difficulties

Length of route and navigation.

Start Location

Dolwyddelan Railway Station, SH 737 521 (free parking available) just off A470

End Location as start (but could shorten walk by starting in Roman Bridge from the train or Blaenau Dolwyddelan)
Grading Strenuous Facilities Pubs, Spar and Post Office in vilage.
Public Transport Trains from Betws Y Coed or Blaenau Ffestinog. GPS Files
Download GPX fileTracklogsMemorymap
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You can treat this as a 2 day walk, or as a lengthy summer day walk. I decided to take it at a more leisurely pace and do it over a weekend, camping at the peaceful Llyn yr Adar again (how wrong would i be!).

pentref dolwyddealanThe walk starts from Dolwyddelan (which is on the A470 between Blaenau Ffestiniog and Betws y Coed), which has a railway station for access. The timetables are available here (look for the T4). Turn along the A470 towards Blaenau Ffestiniog initially, and walk a short distance along it. There is soon a track that leads right (there's a milestone on the road at this point) and this takes you past a small cottage that has hens in the yard.

dolwyddelanThis lane leads to the castle, which you can visit (but the visitor centre with the key, is lower down, so you need to detour if you want to climb the tower) externally for free. Carry on along the direction of the track you have followed, but don't turn right along the most obvious track, and you come to a stile. It is just a brief downhill walk to arrive at the minor road at grid reference SH 712 519.

coed mawrThis pleasant country lane leads you easily, with little need for navigation, to Blaenau Dolwyddelan. There is a chapel marked on the map, but this is a dwelling now, but nonetheless a landmark. Walk along the road for about half an hour until you arrive at a track leading right, marked Coed Mawr. Follow this, and you will see clearly as you leave the farmyard a sign marking the path as a route to Nant Gwynant.

carnedd y cribauYou are now on open hillside at last, and these views of Moel Siabod and Carnedd y Cribau are unfamiliar to most. This is rarely trod terrain, and we saw only a handful of people. The track contours the lower slopes of Foel Goch (which is just the end of the Arddu ridge) that dominates the view to the left, with the Afon Cwm Edno in the valley below. At grid reference SH 678 522 you will cross the river at a bridge, and then the good path vanishes as you go uphill.

pathAim towards the stand of conifers that is just visible on the 1:25k map, and keep to their right. Look out for a building (also marked on the map) which is where you now turn left. The rest of this path to Bwlch y Rhediad is very boggy. It was dry for us today after a prolonged dry spell, but would clearly be awkaward under normal conditions. Keep an eye out for small wayposts too, that mark the route of the path.

At Bwlch y Rhediad, there is a gate. While there is a clearer path on this side of the fence, it soon peters out, so take the one on the opposite side. It's important that you realise this boundary fence is wmeirchhat's going to take you safely over these hills. You can use it as a handrail all the way around to Moel Druman. This path leads up to Moel Meirch, which is hidden at this point. Between this point and Moel Meirch is extremely boggy. It would take a lot of detours and imagination to get across this when rainfall is at normal levels. Even dry, some parts were tricky. You pass near the tops of the false summits of Cerrig Cochion, and then you realise that the actual summit is further along. Not ideal in such heat as today.

meirchThe path is heathery and rocky as it contours around the eastern flanks of Moel Meirch, almost to the top. We decided to press on and skip the summit, which is barely a couple of hundred metres from the path, as there was no decent path and we didn't fancy boulder hopping with the packs on our backs. I also wanted to get to Llyn Edno for a breather.

Llyn Edno is a beautiful spot to stop. It is hidden until you are virtually at it's shore. On another day, i'd have camped here, but we wanted Llyn yr Adar and Cnicht. So we llyn ednofollowed the fence over, up some of the small summits of Ysgafell Wen, past a couple of the Llynnoedd Cwn until we crested and could see Llyn yr Adar. This is when i had a bit of a shock, and not from the electric fence. There was a group of six or seven tents at one end of the lake. As we made a beeline for the rocky knoll at SH 656 481, i realised that they were camped too close to where we intended to. Fortunately, I'd explored a bit last time i was here, and a decent pitch was found on the opposite side of the knoll.

By evening, we counted 21 tents around the lake (including our two tents). I found thistents galore to be incredible pressure on the lake, and I think I'd keep away from this lake at weekends in future. Worse still was that the stream was dry and the lakewater manky. Great test for the new water filter i'd bought (and worth every penny), producing crystal clear and tasty water. My dehydrated meal was disgusting, but countered by the luxury of Bushmills whiskey i'd brought. I think we were all in bed by nine as the wind was bitterly cold.

Cnicht could wait 'till morning. A group of 20 schoolkids (who were responsible for 12 tents) had just gone up there, so we thought we'd go up first thing in the morning. But that was a misttent without viewake. As the night went on, the wind strengthened, the tent flapped and we had little sleep. Oh, and the cloud settled in and so did the rain.

So Cnicht was bypassed (as was the route's end, Moel Penamnen), we took a rough aim towards the ridge above us that we had visited last evening and knew we'd hit the path. Well, we hit 'a' path, and this took us to the ubiquitous boundary fence and then on to the summit of Ysgafell Wen. The mist had been so bad, we didn't realise we made this summit until i checked the GPS. Llyn Terfyn was only visible when we had our boots at the water's edge, and i was so glad i was on familiar territory. It could have been more difficult.

The path now is quite distinct, so we followed it over Moel Druman and then to the north of the small lake next to Llyn Conglog (which we didn't see). You need to veer left just after the lake, and this is no more than a sheep track. This contours around Allt Fawr and eventually to a ridge above Llyn Iwerddon. Of course, it was hidden in cloud, but the descent point is at SH 684 478. The path is not at all clear from the tollyn iwerddonp, and barely more so when you are on it, but it takes you to the distinctive, double dammed Llyn Iwerddon.

Cross the dam, and the path then crosses the fledgeling river. Keep to the left bank, and aim for the ventilation tower for the railway that is soon visible ahead (even today!). The path disappears before you get there, and some boggy ground needs crossing. Be careful as it hides a lot of ankle twisting holes. Now you can take a breather, as it's literally all downhill from here, and on a decent track. Follow the track to the main road, and turn left along the road for a couple of hundred metres. You arrive at a gate and this track leads down to Blaenau Dolwyddelan.

casteIt's a lengthy track, but easy on the feet and brain (no nav). You are high above the valley and there are probably views to be had. I'm not sure of the latter part of the route, as it crosses a farmyard, and it could well be private land with no access. A footpath does cross the farm named Hendre and this might be be best followed. Following the track past the farm ,you arrive at the road you left at the start of the walk, and you can simply reverse the route to Dolwyddelan. We went via Roman Bidge, but found it was more of a faff (note, the route distance is for this longer route we did).

 

General Links

Snowdonia attractions Several great reviews about some of Snowdonia's better known attractions. 

English-welsh dictionary Links and resources to help you translate that welsh word into English.

Walking shoes - Another site that I found that sells walking shoes online.

Merrell Walking Shoes from fitnessfootwear.com, decent little site i found for Merrell walking shoes.

Whalley Warm and Dry - paramo stockists, great service and range.

V-G Walking and Backpacking. Inspirational website detailing one to three (and more) day walks around the UK.

Trekking Britain. Route descriptions & experience as opposed to guide book.

OutdoorsMagic - Forum based website, lots of information on here.

Phil George - Mountain Leader Training in Llanberis.

Peak and Fell Walking - A photographic guide to walking in Britain's National Parks.

Wild Tramp.co.uk - New site on walking in the UK. Looks promising.

 

Digital Mapping

Tracklogs IMHO the best mapping for PC.

MemoryMap Still good, but route handling clumsier.

Viewranger mapping for smartphones.

Fugawi and Anquet are also popular.

Quo The new kid on the block.

Open Street Map - Open source mapping as featured on this site.

Multimap - Free online mapping.

Get a Map - Free online mapping from the OS

Access Land in Wales - online mapping from CCW.

 

DISCLAIMER ANY ADVICE FOLLOWED ON THESE PAGES ARE AT THE READER'S OWN RISK. I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR OTHER PEOPLE'S STUPIDITY OR INEXPERIENCE. IF YOU WANT TO WALK THE HILLS GO ON A COURSE, ASK AN EXPERIENCED FRIEND OR JOIN A CLUB. DONT EXPECT TO READ UP ON THE INTERNET AND BECOME AN EXPERT. I HAVE BEEN UP IN THESE HILLS FOR MANY YEARS, THATS HOW YOU GAIN EXPERIENCE...Phew! Rant over.

All text, photographs, audio clips, videos, multimedia and articles are Copyright Walk Eryri 2004 - 2008 unless where explicitly stated otherwise. You may not reproduce any part of the site or the articles contained within, without express permission of the copyright holder (Walk Eryri).