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18 June 2014
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Rambling | Brecon Beacons

Wilderness and wildlife

Winter in Brecon Beacons

The Brecon Beacons National Park is one of Wales's most spectacular wilderness landscapes covering an area of over 500 square miles.

The National Park takes in a wide variety of scenery from lakes and woodlands to moorland and mountains.

Brecon Beacons National Park

Boasting the biggest mountains in southern Britain, the Brecon Beacon's wild and unspoilt landscape is great for walking and nature spotting.

The Brecon Beacons are great for ramblers of all ages and abilities with walks for the casual stroller and the hardened hiker.

Spectacular scenery

FloraThe Brecon Beacons has been strikingly sculpted by glacial action from the last Ice Age, resulting in impressive features like corries, which are huge hollows in the hillside.

On higher ground visitors walkers can find Arctic Alpine plants, usually associated with inhospitable mountain ranges like the Alps.

The area's rocky cliffs are fantastic places for plants with 500 species including Arctic Alphines and the delicate, purple Saxifrage.

Steep escarpments, rocky summits, limestone pavement, heather moorland and vast underground cave systems can all be found in the Park's upland areas.

The park's lowlands are characterised by grasslands, hay meadows, woodlands, and some important wetlands such as Llangorse Lake.

Brecon BeaconsBird watchers' paradise

Ramblers should look out for the wonderful upland birds that make their home here from Peregrines and Buzzards to the agile Merlin and scarce species such as the Wheatear and Whinchat.

Spring is a good time to visit when there are dozens of different types of birds to be seen.

The Red Grouse is only found on upland moorlands like the Brecon Beacons, hiding in the low and dense cover to avoid predators.

In the Spring crowing males defy each other with loud crowing challenges from prominent perches in a display of one-upmanship.

Another bird which has made its home here is the Ring Ouzel, an upland blackbird which loves steep, boulder-strewn slopes and bare mountain sides.

The Ring Ouzel with its black body and white chest is mostly easily spotted from its monotone 'too-too-too' singing. There are 20 pairs in the Brecon Beacons.

Also look out for Ravens, Kestrels, Sparrow Hawks, and Red Kites.

A good place to go bird watching is the Craig Cerrig Glesiad National Nature Reserve, located in an area called the Crags of the Blue Stones, noted for its harsh Winter climate.

Horse power

Mountain ponyWelsh Mountain Ponies are one of the local residents in Brecon Beacons. This semi-wild breed goes back 3,000 years to before Roman times.

Today there are about 500 ponies in total, which are used for riding, breeding, farming and pulling carts.

A good place to see these ponies is the Black Mountain or Mynydd du, a real 'wild west' area of the national park, a wilderness rich in myths and legends.

The ponies are one of the reasons that there are so many rare flowers, because they eat the other vegetation, allowing beautiful flowers such as the Meadow Saffron to survive.

Sadly the number of ponies is less than it once was due to the decline of traditional hill farming.

Photos courtesy of Brecon Beacons National Park.

 

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