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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.

Friday, 24 September 2021

Friday Walk - Wild and dramatic Clydach Gorge: waterfalls, cascades, fast-flowing waters, ancient beechwoods, an ironworks' ruins and an elevated railway [Abergavenny Trip]

Length:  17.9 km (11.1 mi), with options to shorten
Ascent/Descent:  368/644m 
Net Walking Time:  4 ½ hour
Toughness:  4 out of 10 
 
Take the 14.31 (Line 3 from Stand 2 at Abergavenny Bus Station, also calls Pavilion, Brecon Road Surgery & Nevill Hall Hospital) to Brynmawr Bus Station, arrives 15.21.
 
 The Clydach, a short and fast river on the boundary of the Brecon Beacons National Park, flows off the southern slopes of the Mynydd Llangatwg through a wooded valley to the Usk River. For about 3 km the valley forms the Clydach Gorge/Cwm Clydach, containing waterfalls, cascades, fast-flowing waters and a few caves as well as some ancient beechwoods. The gorge is not only little-visited, but – despite the presence of the A465 Heads of the Valleys dual-carriageway, which also travels along the valley – also wild, dramatic and unspoilt.

The valley was a centre of early industry and remnants of limestone quarries, mines, an ironworks and several tramroad inclines are either passed or walked along, while a dismantled railway line provides an airy high-level walk route in the upper valley.
The steepness of the terrain and the narrow rock walls prevent a continuous path along the gorge, but three out-and-backs along good paths into the gorge, to waterfalls or caves, are described.
In the Lower Clydach Valley, you follow the rushing river closely through woods, then leave the Clydach to follow the Monmouthshire & Brecon Canal for a while, before heading to Abergavenny through lush pastures with views across the Usk Valley to the Black Mountains.
 

Walk Options

 

A finish at Abergavenny Bus Station cuts 750m distance, and 30m ascent.

The three out-and-back routes into the Clydach Gorge can be omitted, they are (from west to east):
· Upper Clydach Falls and Ogof Clogwyn, 580m distance, 40m ascent;
· Devil’s Bridge and Pwll-y-Cwn, 540m distance, 70m ascent;
· Lower Clydach Falls, from 600m to 960m distance, negligible ascent.

Bus Lines 3 (Abergavenny – Brynmawr, Mon-Sat, 4 buses a day) and X4 (Merthyr Tydfil – Abergavenny, Mon-Sat, hourly) travel along the Clydach Valley, calling on the A465 outside Clydach, in Clydach (not the X4), Gilwern and Govilon, enabling shorter versions of the route.

 
Tea: 5 pubs en route (some of those may be closed due to Covid though), and plenty of places in Abergavenny’s Town Centre. See the walk directions pdf for details. 
 
For walk directions, maps, height profiles and gpx/kml files click here. T=swc.371

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Am on this walk but starting from Abergavenny so will do much shorter there and back version.
Tahnyet

Thomas G said...

3 off the posted bus did the full route, including the three dips into the gorge for waterfalls and cave. Plenty of photos were taken. After starting slightly late due to road diversions, we crossed the Usk into Abergavenny just before 8 pm, in the last light. Had a drink at the Kings Arms' outdoor seating in the almost Mediterranean evening temperatures and then dispursed.
2 others had walked the route off an earlier bus (w/o the dips into the gorge) and 1 walked a short out-and-back from Abergavenny due a late start. N=6 w=late-summer-feel