North Wales
Wales is a country of extraordinary - and extraordinarily varied - beauty. We all know of the mountains, of course, and of the lakes; and of the remarkable man-made features - the castles, the ancient monuments of long barrows and standing stones - left to the landscape by the country's long and turbulent history. What may surprise the first-time visitor, however, is Wales's exceptional scenic diversity. A moderately short journey will take you past deep, pine tree and rock-sided ravines; expansive moorlands supporting lonely farm buildings and isolated wind-sculptured trees (not to mention innumerable sheep); lush green valleys; and magnificently austere mountains rising directly from the coastal edge.
And then there is the weather! During the first week of our first visit, the weather was uncharacteristically fine: long, hot sunny days ending with some of the most dramatic sunsets we have ever seen. On our second week the books were well and truly balanced: hard rain and temperatures fell. At one point on Midsummer's Day, the temperature dropped to 10C; and that evening, while we photographed the coast a short distance from Harlech, we searched through our pockets for pairs of gloves.
Our first visit to Wales was not to be our last.
And then there is the weather! During the first week of our first visit, the weather was uncharacteristically fine: long, hot sunny days ending with some of the most dramatic sunsets we have ever seen. On our second week the books were well and truly balanced: hard rain and temperatures fell. At one point on Midsummer's Day, the temperature dropped to 10C; and that evening, while we photographed the coast a short distance from Harlech, we searched through our pockets for pairs of gloves.
Our first visit to Wales was not to be our last.