Ad
related to: symonds yat rock walking trails
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The route passes through Chepstow, the Wye Valley AONB, Tintern, Monmouth, Ross-on-Wye, Symonds Yat, Hereford, Hay-on-Wye, Builth Wells, Rhayader, and Llangurig to Plynlimon. The route of the Wye Valley Walk can be broken into 17 stages, [3] though the entire walk is often walked in seven day-length sections from Chepstow to Plynlimon, or vice ...
Symonds Yat Rock was used as a location for some episodes of Series 5 of the BBC television drama Merlin. Symonds Yat was used as a location for some of the shots filmed in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1; The Saracens Head Inn in the hamlet of Symonds Yat East was featured in Escape to the Country on BBC One in 2014.
Around Symonds Yat, limestones and red sandstones meet. This leads to a landscape of hills and plains, as well as substantial meanders which have formed impressive river cliffs. The Lower Wye landscape was formed by the river acting on a series of layers of rock that dip towards the Forest of Dean.
Symonds Yat East; Ross-on-Wye; King's Caple; Brockhampton; Fownhope; Mordiford This page was last edited on 8 October 2024, at 23:30 (UTC). Text is available under ...
The Malvern Hills, an SSSI on the boundary of Worcestershire and Herefordshire. This is a list of the Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) in Herefordshire, England.
Symonds Yat: Hand ferry at the Saracens Head Inn - Symonds Yat: Biblins Bridge - Site of Biblins Youth Campsite Wye Bridge (Monmouth) II: Built in 1617 Duke of Beaufort Bridge: II: Monmouth Troy: Built in 1874. It is listed (as a historic structure) simply as the Railway Bridge, Monmouth. Monmouth Viaduct
Upper Wye Gorge is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), noted for its biological and geological characteristics, around Symonds Yat in the Wye Valley on the Wales–England border. [1] [2] The site is listed in the "Forest of Dean Local Plan Review" as a Key Wildlife Site (KWS). [3]
Impressive cliffs have been cut by the river in lower dolomitic sections of the Carboniferous Limestone, most notably at the popular ‘Symonds Yat’ viewpoint, which affords one of the most famous views in England. Other ‘karst’ features such as caves, rock pillars and sink holes abound in this area.