On this cold, wet winter's day, some memories of warmer, drier times back last summer - here are some views around Penarth:
Looking back toward the pier from the cliff
Looking along the pier from the upper deck of the newly restored pavilion
Views along the coast from the pier - looking east toward Cardiff Bay and west toward the headland
And looking out toward the twin islands of Flatholm and Steepholm in the Bristol Channel
I enjoy getting out and about in the countryside, and I like taking photos on my hikes and walks - here I'll be posting some of those photos and anecdotes, from new outings as and when, as well as digging back through my archive
Thursday, 19 February 2015
Tuesday, 10 February 2015
A winter's walk - Fourteen Locks
I went for another winter's walk on Saturday, a four-mile cross country
hike in the Newport area this time, setting out from the Fourteen Locks
Visitor Centre at Rogerstone and taking in the Allt-yr-Ynn nature
reserve, Wern-ddu wood and Ynysyfro reservoir en route. It was a
beautiful day, bright and crisp and clear - cold enough that I ended up
with a headache, but still a lovely walk...if a little muddy in places. I
think I might have to invest in slightly sturdier walking boots!
This is the 'pound' at Fourteen Locks.
The 'Fourteen Locks' Centre gets its name from a series of locks known as the Cefn Flight, which is an absolutely ingenious piece of canal engineering, dropping 169 feet in just half a mile - it's one of the steepest series of locks in the UK, completed in 1799.
This waterway was a branch of the Monmouthshire Canal, built to transport supplies upstream to the mines and coal and iron back down-river to the port in Newport. The canal was made redundant as a means of trade when the railways came along, and fell out of use entirely in the 1930s, after which the stretch of water between Locks 8-21 (the 'Fourteen Locks') fell into disrepair - as we can see, industrial decay at its finest!
There is a Millennium project between Newport city Council and the Canals Trust to reclaim the waterway, however, and restoration work is ongoing, so maybe some day the locks will be fully functional again.
This is the old lock-keeper's cottage, built in 1792 (and restored about 40 years ago after a fire)
I was very taken with this sign along the bridleway - such dramatic imagery!
Next, we picked our way along a muddy little footpath through the
Allt-yr-Ynn nature reserve, which was once the grounds of Allt-yr-Yn
House, a large country home now reduced to a ruin hidden in the trees
that we didn't even find. We did, however, manage to find Allt-yr-Yn
Lido, once an outdoor swimming pool built in the 1930s on the spot where
the spring and ornamental pools of Allt-yr-Yn House once stood. The
pool closed in the 1960s and was subsequently demolished - this pretty
wildlife pond is now all that's left.
We took a very boggy footpath across farmland onto the grounds of Tredegar Park golf course, skirting around the edge of Wern-ddu Wood and heading on past Ynysyfro reservoir.
And then we made it back to Fourteen Locks just in time for a nice hot cuppa before the Visitor Centre closed!
This is the 'pound' at Fourteen Locks.
The 'Fourteen Locks' Centre gets its name from a series of locks known as the Cefn Flight, which is an absolutely ingenious piece of canal engineering, dropping 169 feet in just half a mile - it's one of the steepest series of locks in the UK, completed in 1799.
This waterway was a branch of the Monmouthshire Canal, built to transport supplies upstream to the mines and coal and iron back down-river to the port in Newport. The canal was made redundant as a means of trade when the railways came along, and fell out of use entirely in the 1930s, after which the stretch of water between Locks 8-21 (the 'Fourteen Locks') fell into disrepair - as we can see, industrial decay at its finest!
There is a Millennium project between Newport city Council and the Canals Trust to reclaim the waterway, however, and restoration work is ongoing, so maybe some day the locks will be fully functional again.
I was very taken with this sign along the bridleway - such dramatic imagery!
The walk along the towpath and bridleway is just lovely
Next, we joined up with the Sirhowy Valley Walk, taking us up into the hills.
Some lovely views north toward Mynydd Machen and Twmbarlwm.
We took a very boggy footpath across farmland onto the grounds of Tredegar Park golf course, skirting around the edge of Wern-ddu Wood and heading on past Ynysyfro reservoir.
And then we made it back to Fourteen Locks just in time for a nice hot cuppa before the Visitor Centre closed!
Labels:
Allt-yr-Yn,
canals,
countryside,
Cymru,
fields,
Fourteen Locks Centre,
Great Britain,
hiking,
landscape,
Newport,
photography,
scenery,
Sirhowy Valley,
Tredegar,
UK,
UK waterways,
Wales,
walking,
Wern-ddu,
Ynysyfro
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