Pembrokeshire Coast National Park - Pembrokeshire Wales - Scenic Flight
A scenic flight over Pembrokeshire Coast National Park in Pembrokeshire Wales. We get a great view of what this beautiful part of Wales is all about. Pembrokeshire Wales is a beautiful spot but from the sky it gives you a whole new perspective. You see the Pembrokeshire coast, Pembrokeshire beaches an so much more. Highly recommended and we left from the Haverford West Flight Centre. Pretty sure we see the Pembrokeshire Coast Path as well, what a flight.
After we head to St Davids Wales where we catch a sunset over Whitesands beach before indulging in some Welsh food aka Welsh cuisine trying some lamb and pan seared scallops fresh from the sea and countryside. The lamb in Wales is unreal arguably the best in the world and the seafood is top shelf too.
Daily travel vlog filmed on a GoPro Hero 4 Silver or Sony a5100
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Donny's Summer Holiday | Pembrokeshire Coast, Wales.
A GREAT summer holiday. I thank my parents for inviting me along to enjoy the wonderful coastal scenery and wildlife.
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Correction: Not PEREGINE, but a SPARROWHAWK.
Thanks BadgerBotherer1, for pointing that out.
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Music By
Marama Hirawani - Summer Holiday Ukulele
Purple Planet Music - Quiescence
Chris Zabriskie - Rewound
Chris Zabriskie - I can't imagine where I'd be without it
Akira Taniguchi - Ambient1
Adam Butler - Shining Sea
Salaisuuxia - Classical Guitar
The Tinkerbell Effect - Distance
Slide Effect - freesfx.co.uk/users/flowfx
Thoribass - Nature
Scott Holmes - Reflections Across The Sky
Noxive - Resilience
Thanks to Argofox
(Creative Commons Licenses)
Pembrokeshire Coast - Wales, United Kingdom
Kayaking and coasteering at Preseli Venture in the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park in Wales, United Kingdom.
Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, Wales, UK
Pembrokeshire Coast National Park is a national park along the Pembrokeshire coast in west Wales.
Content licensed under Creative Commons Attribution. Source: Wikipedia.org
South Wales Beaches | Pembrokeshire Coast Day Out | England Road Trip Travel Vlog 22
South Wales Beaches | Pembrokeshire Coast Day Out | England Road Trip Travel Vlog 22
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Our final day in Wales and we went looking for the best beaches in South Wales. We visited a few of the best natural spots in Pembrokeshire like the Green bridge of Wales and Stack Rocks. After we headed to St Govans Chapel, a cool find in a secret cove. Finally we went to Broadhaven beach, a stunning secluded beach on the South of Wales. Wales is a great way to get off the beaten path, even during a peak season it is still relatively untouched. This is a great stop on your UK travels and looking for something a bit unique.
⭐YHA Broad Haven
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Pembrokeshire Coast
Pembrokeshire cost
Ceredigion & Pembrokeshire Coast - UK, By Jim G H
via Pixelpipe
Pembrokeshire Coast
Music: The Black Crowes - She Talks to Angels
NATURE IN THE PEMBROKESHIRE NATIONAL PARK (WALES-UK) hd 1 30 .m2t
The coast of the Pembrokeshire National Park is full of life.
Pembrokeshire Beaches
Taking a look at the beaches on the Pembrokeshire coastline.
A year in the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, Wales
Pembrokeshire: a year in pictures
Uk Pembrokeshire Coast
Pembrokeshire is a county in the southwest of Wales.
It is bordered by Carmarthenshire to the east, Ceredigion to the northeast, and the sea everywhere else.
The county is home to Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, the only national park in the United Kingdom established primarily because of the coastline; the Park occupies more than a third of the area of the county and includes the Preseli Hills in the north as well as the 190-mile Pembrokeshire Coast Path.
Industry is nowadays focused on agriculture , oil and gas, and tourism; Pembrokeshire's beaches have won many awards.
Historically, mining and fishing were important activities.
The county has a diverse geography with a wide range of geological features, habitats and wildlife.
Its prehistory and modern history have been extensively studied, from tribal occupation, through Roman times, to Welsh, Irish, Norman, English, Scandinavian and Flemish influences.
Pembrokeshire County Council's headquarters are in the county town of Haverfordwest.
The council has a majority of Independent members, but the county's representatives in both the Welsh and Westminster Parliaments are Conservative.
Pembrokeshire's population was 122,439 at the 2011 census, an increase of 7.2 per cent from the 2001 figure of 114,131.
Ethnically, the county is 99 per cent white and, for historical reasons, Welsh is more widely spoken in the north of the county than in the south.
The county town is Haverfordwest.
Other towns include Pembroke, Pembroke Dock, Milford Haven, Fishguard, Tenby, Narberth, Neyland and Newport.
In the west of the county, St Davids is the United Kingdom's smallest city in terms of both size and population .
Saundersfoot is the most populous village in Pembrokeshire.
Less than 4 per cent of the county, according to CORINE, is built-on or green urban.
See List of places in Pembrokeshire for a comprehensive list of settlements in Pembrokeshire.
There are three weather stations in Pembrokeshire: at Tenby, Milford Haven and Penycwm, all on the coast.
Milford Haven enjoys a mild climate and Tenby shows a similar range of temperatures throughout the year, while at Penycwm, on the west coast and 100m above sea level, temperatures are slightly lower
Pembrokeshire, though, featured twice in the 2016 wettest places in Wales at Whitechurch in the north of the county and Scolton Country Park , near Haverfordwest.
Orielton was the tenth driest place in Wales in 2016
The county has on average the highest coastal winter temperatures in Wales due to its proximity to the relatively warm Atlantic Ocean.
Inland, average temperatures tend to fall 0.5 °C for each 100 metres increase in height
The air pollution rating of Pembrokeshire is Good, the lowest rating.
The rocks in the county were formed between 600 and 290 million years ago.
More recent rock formations were eroded when sea levels rose 80 million years ago, at the end of the Cretaceous Period.
Around 60 million years ago, the Pembrokeshire landmass emerged through a combination of uplift and falling sea levels; the youngest rocks, from the Carboniferous Period, contain the Pembrokeshire Coalfield.
The landscape was subject to considerable change as a result of ice ages; about 20,000 years ago the area was scraped clean of soil and vegetation by the ice sheet; subsequently, meltwater deepened the existing river valleys.
While Pembrokeshire is not usually a seismically active area, in August 1892 there was a series of pronounced activities over a six-day period.
The Pembrokeshire coastline includes numerous bays and sandy beaches.
The Pembrokeshire Coast National Park, the only park in the UK established primarily because of its coastline, occupies more than a third of the county.
The park contains the Pembrokeshire Coast Path, a near-continuous 186-mile long-distance trail from Amroth, by the Carmarthenshire border in the southeast, to St Dogmaels just down the River Teifi estuary from Cardigan, Ceredigion, in the north.
The National Trust owns 60 miles of Pembrokeshire's coast.
Nowhere in the county is more than 10 miles from tidal water.
The large estuary and natural harbour of Milford Haven cuts deep into the coast; this inlet is formed by the confluence of the Western Cleddau , the Eastern Cleddau, and rivers Cresswell and Carew.
Journeys: Pembrokeshire, Wales -- Castles and Coast
Pembrokeshire in Wales is a hidden national treasure with beautiful gardens, the only National Coast Park in Britain, and the Landsker, a line of castles and strongholds built in the 11th century by Normans to act as a barrier between England and Wales. We visit Pembroke Castle, where Henry Tudor was born, and which was the centre for Norman rule in West Wales, and Carew Castle built on the site of an Iron Age fort. Picton and Upton Castles, Saundersfoot and Colby have magnificent gardens and for scenery we were blown away by the sweeping crescent of jagged cliffs, sandy beaches, and incredible sea views along the 186 mile Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Path. For more information visit ontopoftheworld.net and check out episode #6 in Journeys through the British Isles.
Things To Do in Pembrokeshire, Wales: Barafundle Bay to Tenby
This travel guide to Pembrokeshire, Wales will show you the most stunning parts of this beautiful county. From Barafundle Bay to Tenby, these are the best things to do here...
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Sabina Trojanova aka girlvsglobe is a full-time UK-based lifestyle blogger, travel blogger, fashion blogger and YouTuber. I'm all about responsible travel, sustainable fashion, natural beauty and veggie food. If that's your kind of thing go ahead and subscribe for more! :)
destination guide | travel vlog | fashion lookbook | vegan food and lots more
Managing Coastal Slopes in the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park
Coastal landscapes are among the most treasured landscapes in the UK. The Pembrokeshire Coast National Park's coastal belt covers approximately 4,400 hectares of land area.
It consists of two main habitat types: maritime grassland and coastal heath. It's a long, narrow piece of land, stretching for nearly 260km.
The coastal belt varies in width from just a few metres to extensive plateaux and headlands. It contrasts strongly with the county's intensively farmed interior. It's the National Park's major visitor attraction as is the land surrounding the Pembrokeshire Coast Path, a National Trail.
The old way of farming these kinds of areas was to use them for grazing land, with the farmers removing gorse and scrub either using fire or by cutting, to keep the area open.
Assistance has been given to farmers to help them to return to more traditional methods of farming. In some areas, assistance has meant the re-introduction of coastal management techniques funded by agri-environmental schemes. The problem of confidence in the old techniques has been tackled by giving farmers help to re-learn lost skills.
Adventures in the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park - Antur ym Mharc Cenedlaethol Arfordir Penfro
Produced by Greentraveller Limited for the Welsh Government.
#FindYourEpic #WalesAdventure
Cynhyrchwyd gan Greentraveller Limited ar ran Llywodraeth Cymru.
#GwladGwlad #AnturCymru
Pembrokeshire Coast by Drone
Cinematic drone shot compilation of the Welsh coast
Shot on DJI Spark
St Brides Bay, Pembrokeshire, Wales GBR
Music: U137 - Watching the Storm
Discover the Pembrokeshire Coast Path - Darganfyddwch Lwybr Arfordir Sir Benfro
The Pembrokeshire Coast Path is a spectacular 186 mile (299 km) long National Trail covering some of the most varied coastal scenery in Britain, stretching from St Dogmaels in the north to Amroth in the south.
Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Authority maintain the Coast Path with funding from Natural Resources Wales and the Welsh Government.
For more information on the Pembrokeshire Coast Path National Trail, visit the National Trail website at
Mae Llwybr Arfordir Sir Benfro yn ymlwybro ar hyd 186 milltir (299km) o'r golygfeydd arfordirol mwyaf trawiadol ym Mhrydain. Mae'n ymdroelli o Landudoch yn y gogledd i Lanrhath yn y de.
Rydyn ni'n cynnal a chadw'r Llwybr gyda nawdd gan Cyfoeth Naturiol Cymru a Llywodraeth Cynulliad Cymru.
Am fwy o wybodaeth ar Lwybr Cenedlaethol Llwybr Arfordir Sir Befnro - rhowch glic ar wefan y Llwybr Cenedlaethol -
Epic Walks Wales Saint Davids Head Pembrokeshire Coast
Epic Walks Wales Whitesands to St Davids Head Pembrokeshire Coast
Visit Pembrokeshire - summer from the coastal path
The Pembrokeshire Coast Path runs 186 miles around the coast of the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park. Each stretch brings stunning coastal scenery, walkers, artists, surfers, wildlife, adventure and food!
You never know what you might discover around the next headland. To explore more of Pembrokeshire visit: