Wednesday 14 November 2012

Down Llyn's Memory Lane

Tan yr Ardd, Rhiw.  As it looked when it was my home in the early 1980s.
Heaven lies tucked down a grassy lane on the eastern slopes Mynydd Rhiw on the Llŷn peninsula.

Well, that's what I think anyway.  But then I'm biased. 

This was my home in the early 1980s, when I was in the brave summer of my youth.  Then, the rising moon’s silvery path led over the bay to my doorstep and at other times, the roar of the surf on Hell’s Mouth beach after a storm would keep me awake at night. 

I’ll recount the tale of my arrival here some other time, but suffice to say that I was offered the tiny cottage of Tan yr Ardd as my first independent home, and that the four formative years I lived here – and the fond memories of my farming neighbours – have become a big part of what I now am.

So it was an absolute delight to have the honour the other day – as the last long-standing occupant of the cottage – to rekindle a fire in the grate to celebrate the completion of its restoration, and that of its nearby twin, Fron Deg.


This pair of crog-loft cottages – or tydynnod in the parlance of the Llŷn folk – has stood empty and apparently unloved for over a quarter of a century; their chimneys missing the “hances o fwg(handkerchief of smoke) that used to indicate the presence of a community. 

Well, all that’s about to change as the Trust and its partners get to grips with one of the most exciting parts of the HLF-funded Llŷn Landscape Partnership project.  

The ‘Mab y Bwthyn’ (Son of the Cottage) plan will see Fron Deg being developed as a destination for guided educational walks that will provide an insight into the crucial part the tyddynnwyr played in the making of Llŷn’s landscape.  My former home Tan yr Ardd will be reunited with its land – a dozen acres of heathy pasture – and let as a modern smallholding, giving a lucky new tenant an opportunity to combine working the land with caring for the neighbouring cottage.

“Would you be interested in coming back?”  More than one person asked me.

“No, never go back” came the melancholic answer.

I hope you enjoy some photos of the occasion....


Tan yr Ardd - newly restored, thanks to the Llyn Landscape Partnership

Fron Deg - the best-preserved tyddyn in Llyn?


NT General Manager, Trystan Edwards, invites the project partners to take a preview of Tan yr Ardd
(a public open day is being organised for the spring).

 
Trystan and Operations Manager Andy Godber are interviewed for a film about the project - soon to be available online.
Colleagues and partners come to admire the builders' handiwork at Fron Deg

Monday 5 November 2012

Surfs up at Stackpole

The beach clean team.
Photo: Mike May


The Surf Ambassador Scheme launches at Stackpole in Pembrokeshire.
The National Trust at Stackpole is one of the partners that look after one of the most stunning parts of the Pembrokeshire coastline; Freshwater West. This beautiful wind swept beach attracts a huge number of visitors all year round, but it is also known as one of the most consistent surf destinations in Wales, providing ideal conditions for the sport. The Welsh Surfing Championships have been held here, the latest in 2012, and the Pembrokeshire Surf Ryders held their recent Surf Ryder cup at the beach earlier this month.

So, Freshwater West was the natural focus for the Stackpole team and National Trust Surf Ambassador, Raife Gaskell a local to the area, to launch their first event working together.

A pre-release screening of the British surf movie 'The Endless Winter' was shown at the Stackpole Centre followed by a beach clean at Freshwater West the following day.

Tickets to watch the film were sold out whilst over 80 people turned up the following day to help collect as much litter as possible off the beach totalling a fantastic 117 bags.

The Surf Ambassador scheme was originally formed to support and promote the conservation work carried out in the surfers' playgrounds along the Devon and Cornwall coast and now the scheme will be involved in the Trust's work along the Pembrokeshire coast.

Rebecca Stock, operations manager at Stackpole said "the Surf Ambassador Scheme will help us at Stackpole to build relations both locally and regionally and give us the opportunity to engage with a much wider audience. We were absolutely delighted with the turn out to both events this weekend which was purely down to Raife and his influence within the surfing community. I'm really looking forward to working with Raife, who is passionate about the work we do, to organise more events and further raise the profile of the work we do in preserving the beautiful coastline here in Pembrokeshire"

Tuesday 16 October 2012

Following our Founders' Footsteps in Barmouth

On Saturday, I came across one of the strangest sights I've seen on my travels around the Welsh Coast.  

On a rugged and gorse-covered hillside hundreds of feet above the roofs and chimneys of Barmouth were a group of Victorian ladies and gentlemen enjoying an afternoon tea.

L-R: Fanny Talbot, Robert Hunter, Octavia Hill and Hardwicke Rawnsley

In an imaginative play on the concept of 'open-air sitting rooms', my colleagues in Snowdonia had staged the event at Dinas Oleu as part of this month's celebrations of the life of a remarkable woman who was a driving force behind the founding of the National Trust. 

Octavia Hill, social reformer and champion of open spaces for the benefit of the public, had visited Barmouth on at least one occasion.  She had travelled there to meet her friend and fellow-philanthropist, Fanny Talbot, who had kick-started the fledgling National Trust by donating the hillside above the town as its first acquisition.

In a letter that was written in 1911, only a year before she died, Octavia Hill wrote:
 I visited in the spring the cliff at Barmouth, which was the first possession of the National Trust.  It was given by Mrs Talbot, a great friend of Mr Ruskin’s.  It is steep and wild, the path along its face is cut in the rock high above town and sea; at one place the path is widened, a semi-circular seat is hewn in the face of the cliff, and above the seat is an inscription telling of its dedication to the people for ever.  As we stood there the rain clouds suddenly parted and cleared off; the sun broke out and lighted up the whole magnificent view of sea, and bay, and headland; and one felt what an abiding possession such a view was for the townspeople, and the many visitors from all parts of England.
This Saturday turned out to be a similar day.  It had rained in the morning, but after enjoying some of the celebrations in the town - including a re-enactment of a meeting between Mrs Talbot and the Trust's three founders and talks about Octavia Hill and the town's history - a group of us walked up in sunshine to admire the 'magnificent view of sea, and bay and headland'.  

L to R: Rhodri Wigley (Area Ranger), Dame Fiona Reynolds (Director General) Vanessa Griffiths (Wales Countryside Assistant Director of Operations) with her children Quinn & Róisín, Jane Richardson (Wales Head of Membership & Supporter Services) and Trystan Edwards (General Manager, Snowdonia & Llyn). At the cairn built in 1995 to commemorate the centenary of the Trust's founding. 
I was reminded of the day we unveiled the centenary viewpoint cairn 17 years ago when I took a photo of Fiona's predecessor, Martin Drury, together with the Trust's Chairman, Wales Chairman and Wales Director, sheltering from the wind on the same spot.

Perhaps it should be made obligatory for every Director General to pay a pilgrimage to Dinas Oleu.  I'll suggest that our new Director General, Dame Helen Ghosh visits in her familiarisation tour.  

But I can't guarantee that there will be a sofa and tea to greet her when she arrives. 

Monday 17 September 2012

Autumn Walks in South Wales

Autumn is undoubtedly the best season for country walks.  Perhaps it's the quality of the light, the absence of crowds or the promise of nature's hedgerow harvest.  And it's not only the colours that are mellower: people seem friendlier and the pubs and cafes seem cosier.  

But most of all, the dying days of summer lend a wistful retrospection that I find so conducive to appreciating landscape.  Like tunes, I find that the best walks are in the minor key.

So it was my good luck that last week's visit to South Wales gave me an opportunity to further my quest to walk every section of the National Trust's 200 miles of Welsh coast.  And appropriately enough, both of them are featured in our Great Welsh Walk, which runs until the end of October.

The view of the secluded cove of Pwll Du, on Gower's south coast
The first walk, which takes you past this wonderful viewpoint to the hidden cove of Pwll Du on Gower's south coast, rewarded me with a glimpse of a kingfisher - darting up the stream in Pwll Du Wood - and gave amazing views of the south Wales coast as far as Porthcawl to the east and north Somerset and Lundy to the south.


Video clip of my description of the Pennard to Pwll Du walk:


The second walk was in Pembrokeshire's wonderful Cleddau woods, near the picturesque village of Lawrenny.  This walk had the benefit of starting and finishing at one of the cosiest of cosy autumn cafes, the Quayside Tearoom at Lawrenny Quay.  I had been told that it was one of the best in the county, and I was not disappointed.

The perfect combination: Lawrenny woodland walk and afternoon tea at the Quayside
To follow in my footsteps and sample the hidden delights of these two walks click the links:



If you've enjoyed these walks as much as I did, why not use this blog's 'comment' facility?



Saturday 8 September 2012

A Taste of the Sea at Porthdinllaen


As I approach the village by sea, I can see the crowds in front of the Ty Coch
The picture postcard village of Porthdinllaen is amazing whichever way you approach it.  But by far the best way, is by sea.  And that is how I arrived at Porthdinllaen this afternoon, on my way to join the first Blas y Mor (Taste of the Sea) festival.

The event was organised the National Trust as part of the Llyn Coastal Festival and included seafood cookery demonstrations from local cooks Mary White, Selective Seafoods, Heather Jones, Gegin Grug, Nick Grimes and Russel Smith from the Woodlands Hall Hotel and Mel Thomas, Hafan Hire.

Other activities included beach games, free canoeing trips with Llyn Adventures, face painting and a fascinating exhibition about the area's rich seafaring history, provided by the Nefyn Maritime Museum.

I've visited Porthdinllaen hundreds of times over the years, but I don't think I've ever seen it so full of life.  After catching up with colleagues, family and friends - and sampling some of the cook's dishes - I paddled out to see the new Porthdinllaen Lifeboat, the John D. Spicer, on her mooring out in the bay, before heading for home.

Below are some photos of the event, and a video in Welsh of Coastal Ranger, Laura Jones.

Hundreds pack the beach in front of the the famous Ty Coch Inn

Russel Smith dishes out his tasty Cawl Cranc Llyn - Llyn Crab Soup.

Three happy members of the Llyn Visitor Services Team: Val, Steph and Joan, in front of the Ty Coch

A group of youngsters head off for their first taste of canoeing, with Llyn Adventures 
Ceidwad Arfordirol Llyn, Laura Jones yn siarad am gwyl Blas y Mor
(Video in Welsh only)



Tuesday 4 September 2012

The Menai Strait's Other Engineering Wonder

Small but perfectly formed.  Anglesey's hidden hide.
In my first Welsh Coast blog post, made five months ago after an inspirational visit to Glan Faenol with Warden John Whitley, I promised that I would return to share with you more of his handiwork.

Well, today I found that I had an hour to spare in between meetings, so I popped over to take a look at another of his hand-made buildings.  Rather than writing about it, I thought I would post a video of my visit instead.





To take a look at another of John's creations, click here to download a walk.

Thursday 30 August 2012

Ceredigion by Bike

You too can enjoy the tracks and byways of Dyffryn Aeron.  Photo Credit: Janet Baxter
By happy coincidence, one of Wales' most attractive coastal towns is connected by an easy cycleway to one of Wales' most fascinating country houses open to the public.

The town is Aberaeron, with its wonderful architecture and equally wonderful ice cream and chips, and the country house - you've guessed it - is that miraculous survival from our rural past, Llanerchaeron. 

And now you can enjoy both these attractions without having to resort to the usual necessary evil of the motor car.

Since January, a cycle hire firm has teamed up with the National Trust to establish its base at the car park at Llanechaeron.

I met Simon Firth, the enthusiastically friendly proprietor of this little business, the other day on my travels. With his dog Woody (my "trusty side-kick") sitting patiently at his heels, Simon explained how he'd been approached by Paul Boland, the Trust's Property Manager about a year ago.

"I was working at a bike shop at the time, and Paul put the idea into my head. Although it’s taken a while for people to realise I'm here, I've not looked back."

Simon, who took up cycling on his doctor's orders to combat chronic back pain, is a convincing advocate of the restorative powers of cycling.

I asked him about the route to Aberaeron - which opened as a foothapth and cycleway 14 years ago when the track-bed of the Aeron Valley Railway was awoken from 40 years of neglect.

"At three and a half miles, it's such an easily-achievable distance.  Naturally, its popular as a safe peddle for families, but I've noticed how retired visitors have told me that its the perfect cycle for anyone who’s not been on a bike for a while."

Of course, when you get to your destination, there's no shortage of things to do: there's the ice-cream and chips for a start.

I wonder how many calories you burn off in three and a half miles of cycling?


Simon has a wide range of British-made bikes, trailers for people of all ages.  To contact Simon, phone 07896 895366 or email him on silikesbikes@gmail.com.  To download a leaflet, click here


Anglesey Visit: From Conservation Grazing to Nuclear Powerstations

An 'informed welcome': Warden Bryn Jones in action
How to establish an NT presence on NT beaches managed by a third party?

What's involved with organising conservation grazing?

How should we respond to the building of a new nuclear power station on our doorstep?

All questions raised during a fascinating day with our Warden Bryn Jones visiting National Trust sites on the north coast of Anglesey. 

Read the captions to the pictures on facebook to find out more > Click here

Tuesday 31 July 2012

Getting Wet & Wild at Plas Newydd


“You can do kayaking, canoeing, raft building, high ropes course or sailing”

The words were spoken by Jane, our Business Support Coordinator at Plas Newydd when I asked if I could join one of their Wet & Wild days. 

I paused and glanced out of the window towards the Menai Strait

“Mmm.  Let me think…” I ruminated.

Kayaking and canoeing? I can do this any weekend. 

Raft building?  Sounds a bit like hard work. 

High ropes?  Too terrestrial for a Coastal Engagement Project Manager.

And, Sailing..? 

Yes, I thought.  I’ve always fancied doing that, but never had the opportunities – financial or otherwise – to have a go.

So here I am, a month later, unglamorously clothed in purple waterproofs and life jacket with three families of friendly strangers on the quay below the Marquess of Anglesey’s ancestral home on the banks of the mighty Menai.

Ready to cast off
 For some time now, the Trust has been keen to complement the more cerebral attractions of the James Wyatt –designed 18th century mansion with activities that could appeal to people of all ages and interests.  And we didn't have to look far for ideas.  The Conway Centre which provides all sorts of educational, art and adventure experiences sits right next door.

So it was two teachers from the Centre, Colin and Charlie who were to show us land-lubbers the ropes.   They split us into two groups: the younger children and a father with Colin and the older children (including me) with Charlie.  A few minutes later our group was stepping carefully from the little motor boat onto the graceful lines of Jouster, one of two 8m long J/80 fixed-keel sailing boats that the centre owns.

Jouster, waiting at her mooring
Sitting attentively with my fellow cadets, Charlotte, Emily, Alfred and Alex, I learnt the names for the sails, ropes (some curiously called sheets), cleats and other vital equipment.  Soon we were setting off into a stiff south-westerly and learning to ‘beat a tack’, ‘come about’, ‘jibe’ and how to avoid the ominous-sounding “danger zone”.

Charlotte takes the tiller as Charlie checks the trim of the sails

Alfred and Emily off Felinheli
Emily takes a turn as helm
A dozen or so tacks brought us to the far side of Felinheli and in high spirits we made for home, securing the yacht to the mooring minutes before a squall hit us.  The final task – requiring the combined teamwork of both crews – was to haul the motor boat in one continuous motion up the steep ramp to the safety of the quayside.

And so we made our way back to the kit store, pleased with ourselves for taking the trouble of broadening our horizons in such an enjoyable way. 

Now all I have to do is start saving up for that yacht.

Why not go Wet & Wild yourself?  Trips continue until the end of August.  Click here for details.

Friday 20 July 2012

ABERDARON BOAT SAILS 50 MILES INLAND


After the longest voyage she's ever taken, Orion is hoisted onto the National Trust's stand at Builth Wells.  
A little bit of maritime history was made yesterday when "Orion", one the few surviving Aberdaron lobster and herring fishing boats arrived at the National Trust's stand at the Royal Welsh Show ground.

Orion, which is named after the local cove Porth Orion, is one of two boats now in the care of the National Trust that were originally owned by Guto Christmas Evans of Cae Mur .  The other boat – Annie – is awaiting restoration, but it is hoped that Orion can join the other surviving Aberdaron boats in the annual regatta next summer.

Guto Christmas Evans promised his father that he would make sure that  his boats would be looked after.  Both are now in the care of the National Trust.
The last people to carry on the age-old boat building tradition at Aberdaron were Siôn Tomos and Wil Jones; both worked through the first half of the 20th century.  It is said that Siôn Tomos, who at one time was also the village postmaster, had to be cajoled to build the boats by his wife when they needed the money. 

These little boats - of which 30 have survived - were built to a unique design favoured for its manoeuvrability in the rough waters of the Bardsey Sound, where willow lobster-pots were laid in deep water close to the shore.  Some say that the design retains features that may have been handed down from the Vikings.


Wednesday 11 July 2012

Olympic Beach

Staff and Volunteers drew a huge Paralympic logo in the sand of Rhossili Beach under the watchful eye of a time-lapse photographer. Agitos on Rhossili Beach / Chris Russell-Jones

When the London 2012 committee approached the Trust to produce a time-lapse film showing the creation of the Paralympic logo, we knew we'd have to work fast. They'd seen the Oak Leaf Challenge film we did last September and were inspired.

We only had a short window of time before the tide would cover the beach so it was vital that nothing was left to chance in the planning stages.

On the day 27 adults and two classes from local Penclawdd Primary School helped us to dig the design.

"This is the second time-lapse film we've done on Rhossili Beach, so many of our digging team are getting quite professional at this." said organiser, Kathryn Thomas (NT Gower). 

"And our volunteer surveyors did an outstanding job marking out the grid for us. Then all we had to do was transfer the design from paper to beach!"

The film for this spectacular will be released to worldwide news agencies and be shown on London 2012 and YouTube websites, as well as the BBC Big Screens around the country.

To watch the video, click here



Tuesday 3 July 2012

Aberdaron Coastal Tourism Centre of Excellence

This blog post was published last July, so is totally out of date now.  However, it does provide a valuable insight into the architect's approach to the design of Porth y Swnt (as it's now called), which is due to open in March.

Aberdaron will be the location for a new heritage
centre.  But how do you design a building for such a beautiful place?
Photo: © Turtle Photography
 
"God is in the detail"  

So said the Aberystwyth-based architect Iwan Thomas at a meeting I recently attended.  We were considering sketches for a new building that will be built in the heart of the picture-postcard village of Aberdaron on the Llŷn peninsula.

The project will be one of the most exciting developments to take place on the Welsh coast over the next couple of years.  It will involve the creation of a new visitor building at the centre of the picturesque cluster of higgledy-piggledy white-washed houses that huddle around a beautiful medieval seaside-church 

The need for a building to interpret the area's rich natural and cultural heritage has been discussed by the community many times over the years.  But it was purchase of the village car park - together with Henfaes, a former guest house - by the National Trust that was the catalyst that enabled the project to be a possibility.  Then, a successful grant bid to Visit Wales for a Coastal Tourism Centre of Excellence ERDF grant, turned that possibility into a reality.


The Aberdaron area is exeptionally
rich in nature and culture.  Soon there will
be a facility that will help people learn
about it.
 When you consider that this will be the only new building to be built in the heart of one of our most beautiful villages for a generation or two, then you'll realise that the discussion with the architect could not have been more important.  

The discussion was an insight to the sort of questions that architects have to wrestle with when designing for a sensitive site: A contemporary building may disturb the visual harmony of the village; a vernacular building may come over as mawkish pastiche; a tailor-made building may be difficult to adapt if the purpose changes; a future-proofed building that's able to cope with any change may end up an undistinguished 'box'...

Luckily, Iwan Thomas was able to tap into the combined experience of a group of some of the most eminent architects in the UK, during a recent advisory visit of the Trust's architectural panel.  The result of that meeting was the realisation that the starting point for a new building should be based on a greater appreciation of what makes Aberdaron beautiful now.  

Looking at the village through the eyes of an architect is a revelation:  You notice that funnelled gaps in between buildings invite exploration; and how glimpses through gateways into small yards enclosed by whitewashed walls add to your curiosity; and how domestic and working buildings interact with each other to create pleasing diversity.  Above all, you begin to appreciate that the gaps between buildings – and the way that they relate to each other – are as important as the buildings themselves.

Fired up with these observations, Iwan summarised the situation nicely.

“We must work with the grain of the village…the building will only succeed through the quality of its detailing and the richness of its materials.”

With the benefit of this approach, Iwan has started to sketch out some tentative designs that will be shared with the community and the planners over the next few weeks.

Having been instrumental in this building’s conception, and possessing in equal measures a passion for its purpose and a wish that this special village retains its unique character, I was mightily relieved that we have found an architect who is prepared to work in such a sensitive way.

If you’re interested in coming along to see the sketches – and to have an opportunity to comment on them – there’s an open day at Henfaes, Aberdaron on the 13th of July.


Henfaes is located at the centre of the village.  The new visitor centre will be located near the car park behind this building


Friday 22 June 2012

Getting to Grips with Gower




Space below my feet.  One of the wonders of the Gower peninsula.
 
“Well done everybody.  You’ve made it.  We’re on the Worm!”

These were the words of National Trust Warden, Claire Hannington, and they were shouted triumphantly just as I arrived – along with a group 30 other walkers – on the tidal island of Worm’s Head, just off the tip of the Gower peninsula. 

And we had a good reason to be triumphant.  From our grassy vantage point we were able to look back to the mainland over the half mile of jagged barnacle-encrusted limestone, seaweed and rock pools that form a natural causeway over which the intrepid walker can scramble at low tide.

Time and tide waits for no man...this is not a place to linger.
I’d joined the walk – organised as part of the hugely popular Gower Walking Festival – as part of a long-standing promise I’d made to myself.  After a number of ridiculously brief visits over the years, at last I was going to spend two nights and two days exploring this most intriguingly beautiful part of the Welsh coast.

I was the guest of the small team of dedicated staff and volunteers that looks after the National Trust’s 26 miles of amazingly varied coastline on the peninsula.
 
The ideal guide: Warden, Claire Hannington in action
Claire, who says she’s more at home when she’s attending to practical tasks, could not have been a better guide for my first morning’s ‘walk to the worm’.  Her explanations were down-to-earth, witty and highly informative and they helped bring the landscape alive to us better than any information panel or leaflet ever would.

Having conquered the worm and marvelled at its amazing diversity of wildlife, I returned to the team’s base at South Pilton Green Farm and - after joining a planning meeting for the Cwm Ivy Wildlife Day on the 30th of June – I was free to explore the peninsula under my own steam.

I headed to the north coast, where I explored Whiteford Burrows National Nature Reserve, the first National Trust property to be purchased through the Neptune Coastline Campaign, back in 1965 and soon found the recently-restored Lodge bunkhouse which is now available for group bookings. 

A visit to the cosy Britannia Inn at Llanmadoc for my evening victuals was followed by an ascent of ‘The Bulwark’, an impressive prehistoric earthwork with a spectacular view of the mighty Loughor estuary to the north and, in the opposite direction, the intricately-embroidered patchwork quilt of farms, hedges and scrubby heaths that makes up the rural heart of the peninsula.

Lengthening shadows.  The view over Whitford Burrows from the Bulwark
An early start the following morning saw me weaving my way through ‘The Vile’, which as I'd learnt on the previous day’s walk, is a rare survival of the medieval open field, still with its strips of arable crops, sinuously curving away from the hamlet of Rhossili towards the coast. 

The next few hours were coastal walking at its very best. Seven miles of dramatic limestone cliffs and flower-filled grassland, enjoyed to the accompaniment of that evocation of happy solitude, the soaring melody of the skylark.  The only thing that detracted from my enjoyment was the fact that this is a walk that rewards the relaxed rambler with time to spare.  Purposefully striding towards my rendezvous at Port Eynon, I spurned opportunities to descend scrubby valleys that invited happy detours to hidden coves.  These included the remarkable fortified cave of Culver Hole and the famous Goats Hole, Paviland, the location for one of the most famous prehistoric burials in Britain.

At Port Eynon, I was met by the Gower team's admin assistant, Roni, who turned out to be a veritable mine of local information as she showed me around the Trust's properties on the south coast.  As Roni met with Megan, our car park attendant at Pennard, I was able to explore the wonderful Three Cliffs Bay.

Picture-postcard Three Cliffs Bay never fails to impress
Have you noticed how famous picture-postcard views sometimes disappoint when you actually visit them?  Well, Three Cliffs Bay is not one of those.  Stepping into the classic view and exploring its delights rewarded me with a succession of wonderful scenes, including sweeping beaches, flower-studded hillsides, dramatic cliffs and a gracefully meandering river.

Wiping the sweat off my brow as I rushed up to meet Roni at the entrance to Penmaen Burrows, I reflected on how lucky I am to have gained a store of memories of this wonderful part of the Welsh coast.

You too can enjoy the delights of Gower...

For an introduction to the National Trust on Gower and to find out about planned events, like the guided walk I joined, click here

To follow my footsteps, here are the links to download walks I did.  Rhossili to Worm's Head, Whiteford Burrows , Port Eynon to Rhossili (and beyond) and Three Cliffs Bay





Wednesday 20 June 2012

Pembrokeshire's World Cliff Diving Championships will be a UK First


Abereiddi's Blue Lagoon.  The perfect venue for the UK's first World Cliff Diving Championships
©National Trust Images/David Sellman
 EXTREME athletes from across the globe will test their nerve on the Welsh coast this year when the National Trust host the world cliff diving championships.

The dramatic Blue Lagoon at Abereiddi in Pembrokeshire is to be the first British site ever to stage one of the seven legs of the Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series at the end of the summer.

 The National Trust owned cliffs will be the venue for the incredible televised competition which sees only the best and bravest divers in the world leap from a specially made platform 27 metres above the waves.

 “It is hard to understand just how extreme a sport this actually is. The cliff they dive off is the same height as an eight storey building,” said National Trust Ranger Nicky Middleton-Jones.

 “The divers hit the water at almost 90 kilometres an hour, and the impact on their bodies is such that even the slightest mistakes could be almost unimaginable.”

Abereiddi’s Blue Lagoon is the sixth stop of the series that sees 11 of the world’s best take on incredible cliff dives in France, Norway, Portugal, USA, Ireland and Oman.

 Nicky said: “The divers not only have to deal with fear and the elements, but they also have to impress the judges with perfectly executed twists and somersaults.

 “And, of course, they have to get the entry into the water absolutely right. Unlike normal diving where competitors hit the water head first, cliff divers have to enter the water feet first as the pressure of hitting the sea from such a height, at such speed, is too much for the head and shoulders to take.”

 British reigning World Champion Gary Hunt and former British Olympic Diver Blake Aldridge will lead the event on the 6, 7 and 8 September.

Nicky said: “The many dangers of cliff diving are obvious, and we remind everyone that these divers are experienced professionals taking part in a carefully managed event, with measured risks and a host of safety experts. The consequences of members of the public attempting something like this could be fatal.”

 1500 tickets for the event’s spectator area will be made available nearer the event.