10 miles, sandstorm and rain. We love it.
APEx Walking Series finishes for the Summer..
Well that’s the Autumn, winter and spring APEx walking series over – This now ended series did indeed end as planned, and advertised, with our toughest walk saved till last!
We will now start planning the next APEx-walks series to start in September with the theme of “Inspiration” – scouting-out wild and inspiring places to fill the backend of this year and the first quarter of next with some inspiring memories and positive new experiences to counter the “batten down the hatches - call of the couch, comfort eating and TV” approach to seeing the winter through…
We now have a number of qualified mountain walking and other walk leaders and are training several more leaders up over the summer – And offering our own “Navigation Training” speak to Matt if you are interested?
We are unfortunately losing Angela’s support as she is off, in the next month, to Scarborough to live – she has been great at helping keep the walks on track!
During the summer months the intent is to have a couple of saunters maybe with a coastal theme – to make the most of summer weather spent by the sea – maybe the APEx Steering Group can choose where to go (and Michelle/Matt may be able to finally find a minibus?).
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Such A Natural Therapy….
In my opinion little compares – (even marathons, longer distance fell runs, mountaineering, triathlons, long sea swims - long bike rides. Etc) compares to a relaxed walk in big scenery - but (a big but) - if this natural and non-vested interest "therapy" - is to work its magic-a-proper- it needs to be on a (bracketed-off) day when there’s as little as possible mind pre-occupying...:
· work or stressing week-day appointments the next day
· stuff to rush back for on the day
· folk you can’t get on with stimulating company
· mediocre weather
The secret is to have sufficient time and available head-space – no rush, lots of natural and sensational stimuli and loads of clean air!
And this is why I feel that Saturday’s are the day of choice for a good APEx walk (now the shops are open on Sundays...).
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Anglesey!
It’s been on my mind since these walks began, a couple of years ago, to take an APEx walk over New Borough Warren and then nip through the thin curtain of sand dunes and then promenade along the Beach to LLandwyn Island..
The only dilemma (if you read the emails) was as to whether:
To do the Walk in late spring early summer and get those incredible “South Pacific” evoking views of strong sunlight dancing in a myriads of shimmering horizontal squiggles atop turquoise seas with the backdrop of blue- hazy mountains marching off along down the LLYN coast like a line of South-Seas volcanic peaks…
Or conversely –
go during the late autumn early winter and catch the opposite effect of the cold Atlantic’s dark grey and dark big seas - top-blown with angry white foamed waves and wind driven spray – natures savagery - wind-howling and malevolent waves – grandly viewed and awe-inspiring from within the hood of your anorak when you’re anchored securely atop some rocky promontory on Llandwyn Island (such a fabulous and inspiring place!!!) watching the colossal spectacle of huge waves and accelerating squalls - winds picking up pace over the seas and then recklessly hurtling in to and over the narrow ribbon of coastal plains and picking up more momentum to batter against Snowdonia’s mountains (a mere ten miles or so to the east of your viewpoint).
Hyperbole aside - In the end we got the paradoxical Twist of - gale blown Autumn/winter Conditions unseasonably at a (nearly) summery time of year and after months of dry and benign calm weather!
Inventor
Grey skies of scudding clouds, squalls of driven rai
A maximum of 13 degrees Celsius (compared to 22 in London!!). Mountains obscured by shrouds of low cloud (And considering how fine a spring we have had till this last week or so ) an uncharacteristic gloaming forlornness.. gave this walk real atmosphere... 21 folk 3 rollicking dogs
We set off from Newborough village back down the road to a path that straight lined us on to the comparatively sheltered bowl of Newborough Warren and coastal marsh flats tucked inside the Southern end of the Menai Straits. Here we had wide and gloomy forlorn granite grey views of Caernarfon castle across the flat marshes to where the castle was camouflaged amongst the town which itself was hardly distinguishable from the grey granite hillside it climbs away from the coast.
Grey skies of scudding clouds, squalls of driven rai
A maximum of 13 degrees Celsius (compared to 22 in London!!). Mountains obscured by shrouds of low cloud (And considering how fine a spring we have had till this last week or so ) an uncharacteristic gloaming forlornness.. gave this walk real atmosphere... 21 folk 3 rollicking dogs
We set off from Newborough village back down the road to a path that straight lined us on to the comparatively sheltered bowl of Newborough Warren and coastal marsh flats tucked inside the Southern end of the Menai Straits. Here we had wide and gloomy forlorn granite grey views of Caernarfon castle across the flat marshes to where the castle was camouflaged amongst the town which itself was hardly distinguishable from the grey granite hillside it climbs away from the coast.
Next, Wind-driven-sand blasted us via channels concentrating the shot’s of sand through notches in the thin ridge of sand dunes that we had to clamber over - like a windy desert scene - sheltering in the lee of the wind and then staggering up and over emerging from the dunes into the widest of views of seas and coast.. and the big expanse of grey green waters of Caernarfon Bay and cloud-lost mountains marching up the Lleyn from Bardsey and Aberdaron funnelling into a acutely shaped meeting place where the Anglesey coast virtually joins the mainland at the in the couple of hundred metre wide treacherous waters between the spurs of Abermenai and Belan.
This semi-circling panorama of a mountain jagged brimmed sloping down - half a broken saucer shaped landmass - has since early childhood fishing and holiday beach excursions been possibly my favourite in the whole of Wales - I love the wide and bright free-feeling South West facing aspect of Caernarfon bay - so much less chilly feeling than the cold-austerity of feel that the North Anglesey coast has at Amwlch, Point Lynas and Bull Bay..
Caernarfon bay – on those rare hot summer days, rivals any Mediterranean coastal view and well rewards the effort of getting there!
Kite Surfers – Acrobatic antics with outstanding – brilliant bright strident nylon colours jumping out of the gloom in 21st century flares of humanity against the muted tones of big washed expanses of sea and grey sky – tide-line sand and cliffs and forest...
Llandwynd island is simply stunning! Even on rough days – such as last Saturday’s – Octoberish- grey lighted and windy, rainy desolation. – In (rare hereabouts) hot weather, the many little perfect sandy swimming coves and rocks and the White windmill looking lighthouses (and crosses) and crystal clear waters look Aegean in aspect..
I think, again personally, that this little tree-less peninsula of a grass topped finger of cliffs and perfect sandy swimming coves is the epicentre of local loveliness – Remains of Celtic monastic stuff, medieval settlements and later periods of hunched architecture of lighthouses – even in the cold, windy and rain-sweptness of our visit and soaked attempts to shelter for lunch - still felt uplifting and stunningly beautiful –We were going to walk along the fabulous swimming beach of Maltraeth and up its wide mouthed estuary – but wind, rain and heavy legs from slogging over miles of soft sand and ankle twisting strands of wave polished pebbles, made us change tack and find shelter amongst the calmer environs submerged within the big pine forest that holds this coast together buffering against gale and tide and stops wind-blown sand from dust-bowling itself onto local low-lying pasture lands.The walk back to the minibus and cars was directly through Newborough forest on old Forestry Commission Tracks.
When we got back to Wirral it was readily noticeable how much more calm and benign the conditions were back here on sheltered Wirral
A tough walk but well worth the effort and a great way to finish the 9 month series of APEx walks – I hope?
Chris Shaw, CEO, Advocacy in Wirral
Truly inspiring account of the walk! I can vouch for the therapeutic benefits. It feels good to be part of this as my family live at a distance; and though I have close friends it is also good to be in a group where I can talk and laugh with others or walk alone if I want to. Fabulous pics! - three favourites: the large group in the dunes, the pine trees, and the white foam on the island beach.
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