Postcard from North Wales 2018
Posted: Mon Aug 27, 2018 9:31 pm
We have had a very long break this year, from the end of June to tomorrow, the 28th August, when we return to Anarita. We went on the Thomson Spirit for the last time and had a week down in Pembrokeshire. Whilst at home in Penrhyn Bay, I have been walking the Anglesey Coast Path. It was exactly a year ago that I decided that I would walk it, when I did the last leg of the mainland coast path from Chester to Bangor, and when I reached the Menai Bridge, I decided to walk across and I walked on to Beaumaris.
In March Rach, our daughter, and I walked the short distance from Moelfre to the Pilot Inn at City Dulas. It was the beast from the East weekend and freezing cold. In fact so cold that my hands froze when I took my gloves off to take photos and I kept my woolly hat and hood up for the whole of the walk.
Just a month later, in April, I completed the sections from Menai Bridge to Moelfre. It was lovely spring weather and we had a heatwave and people were in the sea.
During this summer holiday I have walked the West Coast of Anglesey, from Menai Bridge up to Holy Island and from Holyhead round to Moelfre. It has been a brilliant experience and I have met lots of other walkers who were completing the path. On the sand dunes at Aberfraw I met an adder on the path. It was a warm day and it slithered into the marram grass.
The highlight of the walk for me was the scenery around the north coast, from Amlwych to Camaes, which was the hardest walk I have done for years.
This is the only St Patrick's Church in Wales. According to legend, he was shipwrecked on a small island off the coast and came here. He lived in a cave where there was a well and, in gratitude built this church.
On the section from Camaes to Amlwych there were lots of very steep sections.
There were lots of inlets like this on the north coast and also on the section from Trearddur to Holyhead.
In March Rach, our daughter, and I walked the short distance from Moelfre to the Pilot Inn at City Dulas. It was the beast from the East weekend and freezing cold. In fact so cold that my hands froze when I took my gloves off to take photos and I kept my woolly hat and hood up for the whole of the walk.
Just a month later, in April, I completed the sections from Menai Bridge to Moelfre. It was lovely spring weather and we had a heatwave and people were in the sea.
During this summer holiday I have walked the West Coast of Anglesey, from Menai Bridge up to Holy Island and from Holyhead round to Moelfre. It has been a brilliant experience and I have met lots of other walkers who were completing the path. On the sand dunes at Aberfraw I met an adder on the path. It was a warm day and it slithered into the marram grass.
The highlight of the walk for me was the scenery around the north coast, from Amlwych to Camaes, which was the hardest walk I have done for years.
This is the only St Patrick's Church in Wales. According to legend, he was shipwrecked on a small island off the coast and came here. He lived in a cave where there was a well and, in gratitude built this church.
On the section from Camaes to Amlwych there were lots of very steep sections.
There were lots of inlets like this on the north coast and also on the section from Trearddur to Holyhead.