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This Week's Walks - Archive

Please see the Saturday Walker's Club This Week's Walks page.

This is an archive of walks done by the Saturday Walker's Club. You should only need to use this page if the SWC website is down.

Sunday, 7 May 2023

Sunday Walk - South Britain’s best ridge walk: The Black Mountain (Y Mynydd Du) from Glyntawe [Extra Walk] [Brecon Trip]

Length: 21.9 km (13.7 mi) [shorter walk options available, see below]
Ascent/Descent: 1062m
Net Walking Time: 6 ½ hours
Toughness: 8 out of 10 
 
Meet at 09.00 next to the Market Tavern, where it borders the Morrison’s car park. Car drivers bring their cars into the car park. We’ll then allocate walkers to cars. The start of the walk is in Glyntawe at the bus stop by the bridge over the River Tawe (called: Glyntawe, near Field Study Centre). This is on the A4067, south west of Brecon, Grid Reference SN 846 167. Both publicans in Glyntawe have expressed their strong preference that walkers who spend all day on the hill, do NOT park their cars in the pub car parks. Please use one of the few side roads off the A-road (and not the small lay-by by the church either). 
 
Spare walkers will have to take the 09.20 bus T6 (direction Ystradgynlais for Abertawe/Swansea) from Stand 5 to Glyntawe (near Field Study Centre), arrives 09.53
In any case, the walk will not start before the bus has passed through.
 
For the easiest short option of walking SWC 86 instead (see below), the next bus at 11.20 would suffice. 
Return buses: 16.11 and 18.11. 
 
The Black Mountain (Y Mynydd Du in Welsh), in the Western Brecon Beacons, is often referred to as the last wilderness in the Brecon Beacons National Park and a walk along it as South Britain’s best ridge walk. It traverses a series of high peaks along a sequence of steep dramatic escarpments and features some of the most spectacular upland scenery in Britain. The route involves remote and rugged terrain, with a couple of glacial lakes and superb mountain views and leads almost entirely through open country.

From the Tawe Valley you rise steeply up a grassy hillside onto the first ridge, Fan Hir, and soon follow its edge with some far views to the two famous peaks in the Central Beacons: Pen y Fan and Corn Du. After dropping into a saddle, you re-ascend to Fan Brycheiniog and then onto the northerly top Fan Foel. The views of the moorland and open country to the north are spectacular, and reveal the isolation of the range. Turn west through a deep saddle to conquer the even more spectacular ridge of Bannau Sir Gaer.

The return route along the bottom of the steep escarpments, past some glacial lakes and moraines, reveals a different and fascinating perspective of the high buttresses and some steeply carved valleys below.

Walk Options:
Fully written up, shorter circular or out-and-back options, as well as a start from a car park near the northerly end, are described on the webpage and in the pdf.  
For a very straight-forward short option with easy-to-follow minimal text, consider walking SWC 86. 
An alternative return route from the last top initially leads through open pathless, sometimes boggy, moorland, then through a veritable moonscape of shake holes, swallow holes, pot holes and limestone pavement before dropping back into the Tawe Valley (Cwm Tawe in Welsh).
 
Lunch: Picnic on the ridge. 
Tea: Tafarn Y Garreg (open to 18.00) or The Gwyn Arms (note: this latter pub last time had somewhat conflicting policies regarding walkers: no walking boots, but no socks only either).

For all walk options, a summary, route map, height profile, photos, walk directions or gpx/kml files click here. T=swc.279

2 comments:

Thomas G said...

For anyone wanting to stock up on food for the walk: Co-op and Morrison's will only open at 10, but Costa Coffee, Coffee #1 and Greggs will be open at 9 or earlier.

Thomas G said...

After a few departures, a couple of rest dayers, 1 new arrival and with the runner going back into hospital for a scan, n=12 walkers set off in 4 cars to Glyntawe. On the car journey, the ridge had still been engulfed in low clouds, but they were supposed to lift, which is what they did. So we had the rewarding views after the long stepped ascent, and some far views at that.
2 peeled off on the 2nd shortcut off Fan Foel (16.11 bus), the other 10 lunched in the saddle between there and Picws Du. From the Waun Lefrith, 1 then took the alt. ending via the shakeholes route. All 10 were reunited at the Tafarn y Garreg.
W=overcast-with-sunny-periods