Sugar Loaf
Tuesday 25th April 2000
The first walk that I did on this holiday was up a distinctive hill that overlooks the town of Abergavenny which is situated at the southern end of the Black Mountains. This was my first time through Abergavenny and it was my most trouble-some visit. For whatever reason there were lengthy traffic jams through the town that delayed me for ages. I have never had any problems getting through Abergavenny since but I have been wary of driving through the town ever since. I parked in a lay-by near the farm and caravan site of Pysgodlyn on the A40 a few miles out of Abergavenny and immediately started climbing through woodland. I have little memory of the walk up the hill until I reached the open hillside, but the directions that I was following appeared to have taken me through three farms as I slowly climbed the hill. Once away from enclosed farmland I headed straight up the bracken-covered hill towards the summit of Sugar Loaf. This 596m hill must have extensive views across south Wales and north into the Black Mountains, but I’ve never been back to Sugar Loaf mainly because it has no ridges linking it to any other hill, it sits all on its own, which is a pity as it is a striking hill that is instantly recognizable from a distance. From the summit I slowly walked back down the hill by a route that I have forgotten and whose directions don’t sound familiar.
Grwyne Fawr
Thursday 27th April 2000
Bal Bach and the Offa’s Dyke Path
Friday 28th April 2000
My final walk on this holiday started from Llanthony Priory, which was the same place I’d started the last walk on my first visit to the Black Mountains. As mentioned last week I climbed up the southern bank of Cwm Bwchel as I was directed that way, but it made my route a lot more difficult and less interesting than the proper path to the saddle of Bal Bach. Unlike in 2005, on this occasion that was as high as I went as I took a path through the heather that crosses the hillside east of Bal Mawr and slowly descends back down into the Vale of Ewyas. Following the edge of the farmland I walked up the valley until eventually I dropped back down onto the road through Y Fferm to Capel-y-Ffin. Now once again I began the climb that had so enthralled me the previous year even making the same mistakes, going the wrong way as I had done before. It would take my first descent of the path the following September for me to find the correct route up the hill. At the top of the broad ridge I joined the Offa’s Dyke Path and headed south all the way to a right branching path that took me steeply down to the picturesque ruins of Llanthony Priory. In retrospect this was not a great walking holiday, but it was just the start of many more to come and continued to lay the ground works for my love of hill walking and the Black Mountains.
No comments:
Post a Comment