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Walking the Brecon BeaconsWalking the Brecon Beacons
Walking through the forested valleys south of the BeaconsWalking through the forested valleys south of the Beacons
The Taff Trail a popular walking & cycling route through the Brecon BeaconsThe Taff Trail a popular walking & cycling route through the Brecon Beacons
Talybont Reservoir - walking, cycling & watersportsTalybont Reservoir - walking, cycling & watersports
Walking and cycling along the Montgomery & Brecon CanalWalking and cycling along the Montgomery & Brecon Canal
Mountain biking in Brecon BeaconsMountain biking in Brecon Beacons
Bike hire available in Brecon, Crickhowell, Abergavenny, Hay-on-Wye, MerthyrBike hire available in Brecon, Crickhowell, Abergavenny, Hay-on-Wye, Merthyr
Outdoor shops in the Brecon BeaconsOutdoor shops in the Brecon Beacons

Brecon Beacons National Park Outdoor Pursuits

If you’re looking for some good outdoor activities in the Brecon Beacons there’s plenty to choose from. Some of the most popular include walking, cycling, pony trekking, sailing, windsurfing, canoeing, fishing, rock climbing, and caving. You can either try these alone or as part of a guided group, although the more adventurous activities should be planned with local groups or clubs. You can also book yourself on a holiday with one of the activity centres based in the area. They also offer activity weekends for adventurous stag & hen party weekends.

The Brecon Beacons gives you the opportunity to try most outdoor activities. There are a multitude of walking and hiking trails from the easy paved trails taking you through some of the best known sights in the National Park, to the more rugged mountain scaling tracks. It is one of the most exciting caving areas in the country with a variety of caves and cave formations to explore. There are also plenty of routes for those with limited mobility, including families with pushchairs and wheelchair users.

Walking and Hiking in the Brecon Beacons

This is probably the most popular pastime in the UK and it s no different in the Brecon Beacons. With the rolling scenery and recognisable mountain summits within the Brecon Beacons National Park there is something in the human spirit that urges on to reach these peaks, and has done for centuries. If you re route planning a walk there s a lot of information out there on particular walks throughout the National Park as well as leaflets and booklets available from Tourist Information Centres specifically detailing walking trails.

The Offa s Dyke path skirts the eastern border of the Brecon Beacons National Park and the Taff Trail, a long distance walking and cycle route, passes through the Beacons on its way from Brecon to Cardiff. More adventurous walking can be had by way of Gorge Walking.

One of the most popular walks in all the Brecon Beacons is up to Pen y Fan and Corn Ddu. These are the impressive looking old red sandstone mountains instantly recognisable from their sharp ridges that stand out against the skyline. Although a popular walk, it is not without incident - due to rapidly changing weather conditions Pen Y Fan has earned the infamous title of being the most dangerous peak in Wales - so make sure you re prepared. The name for the SAS Fan Dance - a 40 mile training exercise which potential recruits are subjected to - comes from here as Pen y Fan is included in the route. You ll often see military vehicles all over the National Park. The most direct route is a five mile round trip from Pont ar Daf, half a mile south of Storey Arms on the A470. A longer, but quieter, route is from the south on the other side of the Beacons that leads up to the two peaks from the Gap route (thought to be a Roman main road) that winds its way north from the Neuadd reservoirs through the only natural break in the sandstone ridge of the central Beacons.

Check out the website links for more information. They include some excellent downloadable colour leaflets on themed walks like Wildlife Walks, Loops & Links and even a leaflet on walks to historic aircraft crash sites. Whatever walk you re doing make sure you ve a map to find your way and orientate yourself if you get lost. Wear appropriate clothing and boots and make sure you take enough layers to cater for any weather it might be nice and sunny at the bottom but once you re scaling the heights of the hills the weather is liable to be a lot cooler.

Brecon Pony Trekking and Horse riding

Pony trekking is popular throughout the Brecon Beacons. Ancient bridleways over the hills have traditionally been the focus of pony trekking and horse riding. Nowadays there is also a network of dedicated bridleways and trails on which horse riders can travel without being disturbed by traffic.

There are over fifteen centres within the Brecon Beacons National park that offer pony trekking holidays, lessons or horse hire! There is a dedicated website for all things horsey which gives the most comprehensive information on centres' contact details and where to ride.

With this traditionally being one of the areas where the semi-wild Welsh mountain ponies and cobs came from, it seems only fitting to see the countryside on horseback.

Mountain Biking and Cycling

There's been a lot of effort put into providing mountain biking and cycling trails in Wales. Many of the Forestry Commission's horrid conifer plantations are now providing a useful purpose with custom-made trails that have been designed to offer a variety of riding surfaces and seem to be hugely successful so far. However, the more open and arguably more natural surroundings of the Brecon Beacons have made this the "spiritual home of mountain biking in Britain" or so says a local mountain biker. Not to be outdone equal effort has been made in the Brecon Beacons in identifying routes and providing information packs to help visitors find their way around the National Park.

There are sixteen well researched mountain bike routes identified by colour coding according to difficulty level. These are based around 5 bike hubs: Brecon, Crickhowell, Talybont on Usk, Talgarth and Sennybridge. The routes are aimed at offering everything from short and easy summer evening rides to full-on all day epics over a variety of terrain from challenging moorland tracks to broad well surfaced forest roads. There are dedicated websites - one for cycling the other for mountain biking that list the main routes or you can buy the route pack from Tourist Information and Mountain Centres throughout the National Park.

Ten routes have been identified for cycling breaks, holidays and touring within the Brecon Beacons as well as themed rides just outside the border in the Tywi Valley. Again a pack can be purchased from Information Centres throughout the National Park.

The Taff Trail that crosses through the centre of Brecon Beacons National Park is part of the National Cycle Route.

Caving and Rock Climbing

South Wales is one of the finest caving areas in the UK. The Brecon Beacons is home to two very extensive cave systems: Ogof Ffynnon Ddu and Dan-yr-Ogof. There are many other caves in the limestone areas of the Brecon Beacons National Park such as those at Craig y Cilau National Nature Reserve.

South Wales Caving Club members have often been the ones discovering and exploring the cave systems in the area. They are based at Penwyllt where cottages that were once used by workers of the limestone quarry that was once here have been transformed into their headquarters and bunkhouse accommodation that can be booked by visiting cavers. Check their website for further information.

The Brecon Beacons National Park is also popular for outdoor climbing where there are estimated to be around 400 climbs using natural crags and disused quarries in the area. You will need to seek local advice for more information such as the definitive guide produced by the South Wales Mountaineering Club (contact them direct for more information).

There are also purpose-built indoor climbing and caving facilities at Llangorse Climbing and Riding Centre which has other fantastic adventure activities for kids and adults alike. Not far from the National Park is the Welsh International Climbing Centre at Taff Bargoed near Merthyr Tydfil. This has one of the biggest and, apparently the best, climbing walls in Europe. You can also practice bouldering in purpose-built rooms and they have Britain's first artificial cave complex with all sorts of cave formations for you to practice manoeuvring through with a running water throughout, a waterfall and even stalactites. Sounds like enormous fun!

Fishing

With all the lakes, rivers and reservoirs within the Brecon Beacons National Park, there is some excellent fishing to be had. Whether it s coarse or game fishing you should be able to find something suitable. The main areas are:

The River Usk has a reputation as a good trout and salmon river. It follows a pretty route through the Usk Valley from Brecon to Abergavenny. The season for trout is 3rd March to 30th September and for salmon 3rd March to 17th October. The Usk Reservoir is an excellent trout fishery is 320 metres (1050 feet) above sea level at the head of the Usk Valley. It is in a quiet and remote area of the Park and nestles under the scarp faces of the Carmarthen Fans. Permits are available from a machine located near the dam wall. Fishing from the dam is not allowed and an area to the West of the tower is also preserved for wildlife.

The River Wye skirts the Brecon Beacons National Park around Hay-on-Wye before flowing on and into the Severn Estuary at Chepstow. For coarse fishing there is barbel, chub, roach and dace and big predatory perch and pike. Fly fishing is only permitted until the 30th April after which spinning tackle, but no real or artificial baits/floats, can be used until the 31st August. From the 1st September until the close, fly fishing only is the rule again. Talybont Reservoir nestles in the conifer forested Caerfanell valley, a short distance from the pretty village of Talybont on Usk. It has a reputation as a productive brown trout fishery. Fishing permits can be obtained on site from a machine at the water treatment works. Contact Welsh Water/Dwr Cymru for further information.

Fishing Wales is a comprehensive website with information on the areas for fishing as well as information about the wildlife in the area and the restrictions on fishing. Welsh Water provide a downloadable guide to fishing as well as one on recreational activities available from the link opposite. The Environment Agency Fishing pages provide a lot of information about fishing generally as well as local fishing guides.

Watersports

As with fishing the same areas are sometimes used for watersports. You can go canoeing, kayaking, white water rafting and sailing on various rivers and lakes in the National Park.

Llangorse Lake is popular for sailing and waterskiing - although there are some wildlife conservation issues around the recreational pressures on the lake. There are car parking facilities, picnic sites, camping and toilets. The Usk Reservoir is only accessible to organised groups for watersports. Llyn Pontsticill is a large reservoir, just north of Merthyr Tydfil, where canoeing is allowed by arrangement with Welsh Water. There are also paths, trails, picnic areas, toilets and viewpoints. There is good canoeing on the River Wye around Hay-on-Wye. White water rafting is also popular on this river. The Canoe Wales website has some very comprehensive information on where you can canoe or kayak and are collating information on where people have had trouble accessing waterways.

The Monmouthshire and Brecon Canal is open to boat traffic for a more relaxed water based adventure through the Usk Valley scenery. Between Talybont on Usk and Pencelli there are a series of lift bridges all of which have been replaced or repaired from their original state. The one at Talybont-on-Usk is now electronically operated. It runs from Brecon to Pontypool; it is all navigable and part of it runs through Blaenavon World Heritage Site. You can have an entire holiday on a narrowboat or just hire a smaller boat on a daily rate.

Brecon Beacons Weather Forecast

The weather can change very quickly in the Brecon Beacons, even from one hour to the next. Given the mountainous nature of the area, hill fog can be both extensive and frequent and is a potential hazard to be borne in mind by walkers in the Brecon Beacons. Although it may be warm and clear when you start off in the valleys the higher you go the colder it can get with strong winds buffeting you on the highest peaks. Like Snowdonia, the Brecon Beacons rainfall is comparable to the English Lake District. The months from October to January are significantly wetter than those between February and September. Mean daily sunshine figures reach a maximum in May or June, and are at their lowest in December.

With the weather in Brecon Beacons being so changeable, the Met Office provide a dedicated webpage for weather in the Brecon Beacons. The Met Office also provide a 24 hour mountain weather forecast service by calling 0870 900 0100. The BBC website also provides weather forecasts for different regions in Wales including a dedicated page for the Brecon Beacons with some excellent links for further information on all things outdoor including walking, caving, climbing, and abseiling.

Obviously under these conditions personal safety is hugely important. There is no substitute for experience when tackling the mountains, so make sure you are with someone who knows the area and/or make sure you have the necessary maps and navigation skills.

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