To The Welsh Lake Llyn Anafon

This route was born from the desire to camp up at the Welsh lake up high, I saw it in a picture and thought looks like a good place to camp, it was and it wasnโ€™t. Starting in Abergavenny and traversing your way right up into north Wales, only 150 miles but with about, 18000ft of elevation gain this wasnโ€™t going to be an easy one, ohh and I took this on in late October just for some added welsh weather.

The terrain, the weather, can be tough going on this one, and I decided to do it on the gravel bike, there are a few road slogs, but Iโ€™m not sure if I would choose to do this route on a gravel bike again. Certainly not in the winter, maybe in the summer but if you take this route on with a gravel bike have big tyres and very easy gearing. The weather didnโ€™t only beat me up on the trails, having to change course mid-way a couple of times because the wind I had to contend with was ruthless. When I finally reached the lake it was actually this beautiful evening with the sun staring to get low in the sky, however as a set-up camp for the night in a place that I was hoping would be perfect. It kind of was for most of the night, stars twinkling in the sky. A thick rain cloud would come over head, and non-stop rain would pursue. The ground I was on was an old building of sorts, so a thin layer of grass and dirt then rocks, so as the rain continued coming down the ground would start to flood, and I was sleeping in a puddle, still dry in my tent, but I had to keep pushing the water away. So I called it a quits at 4am packed up and starting heading home, more problems would arise, but I will let you watch the video for that.

I am sure on a beautiful summer welsh evening and a clear night heading up here for a little sneaky camp would be epic, it is beautiful up there.

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Quantock & Exmoor Long Weekender

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The Great North Trail