Amazing Wales [4K]
A non-commercial travel video I filmed from WALES in UK (2018).
Tenby | Aberystwyth | Cardiff | New Quay | Swansea | Snowdonia | St Govan's Chapel | Llandeilo | St.Davids Cathedral | Laugharne Castle | Beddgelert | Hay Castle |
Filmed and Edited by : Harinarayan Rajeev
Music : Wanderlust by AK
Bangor Tourist Attractions: 7 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Bangor? Check out our Bangor Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Bangor.
Top Places to visit in Bangor:
Cwm Idwal National Nature Reserve, Penrhyn Castle, Bangor Garth, Bangor University, Cadeirlan Bangor Cathedral, Gwynedd Museum & Art Gallery, Britannia Bridge
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Porthcawl Tourist Attractions: 7 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Porthcawl? Check out our Porthcawl Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Porthcawl.
Top Places to visit in Porthcawl:
Rest Bay Beach, The Grand Pavilion, Newton Bay Beach, Wales Coast Path Boardwalk, Coney Beach Amusement Park, St. John The Baptist Church, Porthcawl Lifeboat Station
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Visit Wales: Find Your Epic
In this pristine country, bordered by England on the east, the Irish Sea on the north and west, and the Bristol Channel to the south, find all things that the traveller in you looks out for.
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Places to see in ( Bethesda - UK )
Places to see in ( Bethesda - UK )
Bethesda is a town on the River Ogwen and the A5 road on the edge of Snowdonia, in Gwynedd, north-west Wales, colloquially called Pesda by the locals. It all started in 1823 when the Bethesda Chapel was built and the town grew around it. The chapel was rebuilt in 1840 and has now been converted into flats and is known as Arafa Don.
The town grew around the slate and stone quarrying industries; the largest of the local quarries is the Penrhyn Quarry. At its peak, the town was exporting its purple slate all over the world, and in doing so gained a reputation for being the world's best. The town was the site of a three-year strike led by the North Wales Quarrymen's Union from 1900. This led to the creation of the nearby village of Tregarth, built by the quarry owners, which housed the families of those workers who had not struck.
Most of the town is to the east and north east of the A5 road, with housing packed onto the hillside in irregular rows. This was due to the A5 marking the border between Lord Penrhyn's land, and the freehold land. This can still be seen in the layout of the current high street, where all the public houses are found on one side of the road.
In 1884 a branch of the London and North Western Railway's network from Bangor was opened. The line closed to passengers in 1951 and to freight in 1963. These days the trackbed of the Penrhyn Quarry Railway towards Porth Penrhyn is taken over by the Lôn Las Ogwen cycle path.
In its heyday, the population of Bethesda peaked at 10,000; it is currently around 4,327 people (2001 census), there are also the villages of Rachub and Tregarth nearby. Current opportunities for employment in the town are limited: there are a few manufacturing businesses; most businesses are in the low-paid service sector and hospitality industry. For employment with higher earning potential, residents tend to commute to towns along the North Wales coast. Bangor is the most popular destination, but some will commute daily as far as Cheshire. Because of the lack of degree-based employment opportunities, many young people move out of the area to places such as Cardiff and Manchester as soon as they are qualified. Ysgol Dyffryn Ogwen (Ogwen Valley School) is a bilingual comprehensive school, with 374 pupils, established in 1951. Zip World Velocity in Penryn Quarry is the longest zipline in Europe, at just over 1600 metres long, and brings the town hundreds of visitors.
The architecture and layout of the town is largely utilitarian. Most of the buildings are constructed of stone with slate roofs. Some are constructed wholly of slate blocks, although such buildings tend to suffer from damp and structural slippage because the very flat and smooth surfaces of slate do not bind well to mortar. The town has 40 Grade II listed buildings, including three pubs, in addition to the substantial and imposing Grade I listed Nonconformist Jerusalem Chapel.
The upper parts of Carneddi, Cilfodan and Tan y Foel owe more to stone quarrying on the nearby hills rather than slate quarrying that supported the lower end of the town. At the eastern limits, the town is bounded by the rising land of the Carneddau mountains which form some of the more remote landscapes of Snowdonia. Much of Bethesda once consisted of discrete villages such as Gerlan, Rachub and Braichmelyn; their names are retained as districts of the town.
( Bethesda - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Bethesda . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Bethesda - UK
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Top 10 Must Do Coastal Trails In The World
Top 10 Must Do Coastal Trails In The World:
10. Fjord Coastal Walks, Norway
9. California Coastal Trails, U.S.A
8. Sydney Coastal Trail, Australia
7. The Kalalau Trail, Hawaii
6. Kosi Bay Hiking Trail, South Africa
5. Anglesey Coastal Path, United Kingdom
4. Gokarna Beach Trek, India
3. Lycian Way, Turkey
2. Cinque Terre Coastal Walk, Italy
1. GR34 Coastal Footpath, Brittany, France
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Things to do in UK: The Outsiders' Guide to Wales
There’s so much to discover in Wales, any hour of the day. Tuck into tasty street food, board a steam train to Mount Snowdon and take a dip in an infinity pool.
Places to see in ( Porthmadog - UK )
Places to see in ( Porthmadog - UK )
Porthmadog, known locally as Port, and since 1974, rendered into Welsh from its former Anglicised form, Portmadoc, is a small coastal town and community in the Eifionydd area of Gwynedd, in Wales. The town of Porthmadog lies 5 miles (8 km) east of Criccieth, 11 miles (18 km) south west of Blaenau Ffestiniog, 25 miles (40 km) north of Dolgellau and 20 miles (32 km) south of Caernarfon.
The town of Porthmadog developed in the 19th century as a port exporting slate to England and around the world. Since the decline of the slate industry it has become an important shopping centre for the surrounding area and a popular tourist destination. It has easy access to the Snowdonia National Park and is the terminus of the Ffestiniog Railway. In 1987 the National Eisteddfod was held in Porthmadog.
Porthmadog is located in Eifionydd on the estuary of the Afon Glaslyn where it runs into Tremadog Bay. The estuary, filled with sediment which was deposited by rivers emptying from the melting glaciers at the end of the last ice age, is a haven for migrating birds. Oystercatchers, redshanks and curlews are common and, in summer, there are flocks of sandwich terns. Borth-y-Gest, 1 mile (1.6 km) south of Porthmadog, is a village built in a shallow bowl which sweeps down to a sheltered bay, with hidden sandy coves and cliffs. Ships were built here before Porthmadog was established and houses, still known as pilot houses, were built at the mouth of the harbour so that pilots could keep a watch for ships needing them.
Morfa Bychan is 2.1 miles (3.4 km) south west of Porthmadog. It has a popular wide sandy beach, Black Rock Sands (Welsh: Traeth Morfa Bychan), with Graig Ddu, a rocky headland, at its western end. At low tide, rock pools and caverns are exposed. Sand dunes lie behind the beach, forming part of Morfa Bychan and Greenacres Nature Reserve. Tremadog, an exceptional example of a planned settlement, is 0.9 miles (1.4 km) north of Porthmadog. The village was built on land reclaimed from Traeth Mawr by William Madocks.
The Welsh Highland Heritage Railway, not to be confused with Welsh Highland Railway, is a three-quarter-mile (1.2 km) heritage railway. It includes an award-winning miniature railway, a heritage centre, a shop and a cafe. Porthmadog lies on the A487, the Fishguard to Bangor trunk road. The A498 runs north from Porthmadog to Beddgelert, giving access to Snowdonia. The A497 runs west through the southern Llyn Peninsula to Criccieth and Pwllheli. In 2008 the Welsh Assembly Government published plans for the A487 Porthmadog, Minffordd and Tremadog Bypass, which would reduce the amount of through traffic in the town of Porthmadog.
The town Porthmadog is served by three railway stations. Porthmadog Railway Station is on the Cambrian Coast Line between Pwllheli and Machynlleth. Trains, operated by Arriva Trains Wales, run through to Shrewsbury, Wolverhampton and Birmingham. Porthmadog Harbour Railway Station at the southern end of the Stryd Fawr has been the terminus of the Ffestiniog Railway from Blaenau Ffestiniog since passenger services started in 1865.
( Porthmadog - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Porthmadog . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Porthmadog - UK
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Top 10 Most beautiful places in wales | Beautiful Destinations |Tourist Attraction | TheeUniverse
Wales is a basically shocking spot to visit.There are amazing shorelines, eminent structures and
little shelters of such excellence they could come appropriate out of the pages of a dream novel.
Start to finish, east to west, there are such a large number of children's story sees you need to
make a decent attempt to recall that they're not inventions of somebody's creative ability.
Some of them don't look genuine. However, there uplifting news is every last one is and ALL of them are ideal here.
The Video presents here most beautiful places in Wales.
Here the list goes to ;
1. Mount Snowdon
2. Cardiff Castle
3. Bodnant Garden
4. Southerndown
5. Brecon Beacons
6. Portmeirion
7.Rhossili beach
8. Conwy Castle
9. Pembrokeshire Coast
10. Anglesey
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Track Diviners - Falling (feat. Harley Bird) [NCS Release]
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Wales and England Travel Vlog: A Day of Extremes
Today we are doing an extreme form of everything in Snowdonia, Wales and Appleby, England. First, I ride the fastest zipline in the world at Zipworld then visit the tragically-named, yet beautiful town of Beddgelert before heading to sleep a castle hotel!
Hi there! My name is Jen and I am the founder and writer of World On A Whim, the Perfectionist's Guide to Spontaneous Travel. While my blog focuses on international travel, I am starting school in Los Angeles and will therefore not be able to travel abroad quite as much. Therefore, I decided to curate a Day in LA each week so that we can all enjoy our free time and have adventures in this glorious city. And of course I will share my travels outside of LA with you as well :)
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Thank you to Visit Britain for a wonderful visit to your beautiful country!