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Pete's Eats - The well known walker's and climber's caff in Llanberis.
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. Snowdon Weather Station Project. Weather data and Webcams of Elidir Fawr and Moel Eilio.
theTrainline - Timetables and online booking
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. 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.
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Most hills seem to have a weak spot. That place from where they can be climbed the easiest. Yr Wyddfa has Pen y Pass at nearly 400m high, you’re almost half way up before you start! Normally I’ve climbed the North Carneddau from Aber. That’s sea level to 900m. Rachub I noticed, lets me start nearly 200m up, a definite bonus. The walk starts from the centre of Rachub, near the post office at the crossroads of the ‘main’ roads. Take the narrow street uphill, and follow it until it turns right towards a gate. Cross through the gate and you will see some small quarry workings. Follow the path and the wall to your left, and within minutes you’re on open hillside. The path skirts Moel Faban – you can scale it if you feel energetic – until you arrive at a junction. Turn right along Bwlch-ym-Mhwll-le, a quarry like gap in the hill. You can skirt along either side of this feature, or through the centre, makes no difference. I went across the Moel Faban side of the canyon.
From this col, you may well need to take a bearing in mist to find the path up Drosgl. It’s an obvious path in good weather, but could easily be lost in poor conditions. This takes a short, but sharp pull up to below Drosgl and levels off again. There’s a second path here, one that keeps lower, but is fainter. I took the wider path that takes the collision course direct towards Bera Bach. I’ve little doubt the route around is quicker than tackling this crag head on, but probably less fun.
The mist was thick here and it finally began to rain, and while I was sure I was going in the right direction, I wasn’t sure if it really was an upright stone marking direction or merely an upright stone minding its own business. Taking a bearing, I found I was on the right track, and quite soon the path became so wide as to be impossible to lose. This section is peaty and badly eroded, so flagstones have been put in to help cross the worst sections. Hopefully, people will use them and the surrounding areas recover. I wonder why they cannot ‘turf’ these places with the appropriate grass to protect the easily eroded peat beneath?
You are on the summit of Foel Fras with minimal effort. I was looking forward to a coffee in the snug shelter, but strangely this was where the only other people on the mountain were currently enjoying a coffee. I waved, said hello to their dog, but felt that long conversation would spoil the solitude I’d enjoyed today. Again using the fence as guide, I descended to Bwlch y Gwryd below Drum, steeply in places. This col is particularly boggy if you go off piste, but again there are flag stones to make passage reasonably easy. Today, there was still no view from this point as the clouds were remaining low. So onwards, the short climb to Drum feeling longer than the 40 or so metres it takes. Fortunately, the shelter here was empty, so i managed to sneak a quick break. It had to be quick as the wind chill was extremely cold considering it was meant to be the end of May.
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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.
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.
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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. |
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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). |
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