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Aber Falls

Gwynedd, Wales  >  United Kingdom

An area of temperate rainforest woodland around a spectacular waterfall, noted for its woodland and mountain birds.

Added* by Nutcracker
Most recent update 12 Μαρτίου 2023

Description

Aber Falls is located in one of the northernmost of Wales' classic hill valley woodlands. Easily accessible from the university city of Bangor and the North Wales coastal road. The semi-natural to natural woods of Oak, Ash, Alder, and Hawthorn are excellent breeding habitat for the four classical upland broadleaf woodland birds, Μαυρομυγοχάφτης, (Κοινός) Φοινίκουρος, Δεντροκελάδα and Δασοφυλλοσκόπος, as well as resident species like Πράσινος Δρυοκολάπτης and Γερακότσιχλα. The river below the Falls, the Afon Goch, has (Ευρωπαϊκός) Νεροκότσυφας, Σταχτοσουσουράδα and Ακτίτης. Around the cliffs beside the Falls, scan for Χιονοκότσυφας in spring and summer, and on the screes, Καστανολαίμης, Μαυρολαίμης and Σταχτοπετρόκλης. The area is bleak in winter, but flocks of Κοκκινότσιχλα and Κεδρότσιχλα can be seen in the open ground, and (Κοινό) Λούγαρο and Lesser Redpoll feeding on seeds in the Alders and Birches.

A longer, strenuous option is to continue to the southeast of the falls; climb up the side of the former plantation to the northeast of the Falls, then cut straight up the open moor to Llwytmor (849 m) and on to Foel-fras (944 m) and Foel Grach (974 m), or even to Carnedd Llewelyn (1,064 m). Birds up here are few, but (Κοινός) Κόρακας is reliable, Πετρίτης regular, Κοκκινοκαλιακούδα occasional, and in mid to late May, spring passage Βουνοσφυριχτής are frequently seen on the barren high tops. Be careful when descending to follow a safe path, don't try climbing down the cliffs beside Aber Falls!

Details

Access

Take the bus from Bangor to Llanfairfechan (and beyond), alight at Abergwyngregyn and walk from there; alternatively, cycling from either Bangor (10 km) or Llanfairfechan (4 km) rail stations. For cars, see the P sign on the map for directions.

Terrain and Habitat

Forest , Mountain , Canyon/cliff , Scattered trees and bushes , Grassland , Plateau , Valley , River

Conditions

Mountainous , Wet , Hilly , Rocky , Open landscape , Slippery

Circular trail

Yes

Is a telescope useful?

No

Good birding season

Spring , Summer

Best time to visit

Spring , Summer

Route

Wide path , Unpaved road , Narrow trail

Difficulty walking trail

Average walk

Accessible by

Foot , Bicycle , Car

Birdwatching hide / platform

No

Extra info

Note that the mountain option should only be attempted during good weather (dry, with cloud base reliably above 1,500 m). With low cloud and rain - frequent at any time of the year - the moors become very dangerous, as it is easy to get lost and fall down any of the many crags. Make sure you are equipped for heavy rain at any time - this is a temperate rainforest area! In winter, deep snow can be expected above 300-400 m; do not attempt the mountains in this without good mountaineering experience!

Photo of Aber Falls by Clive Giddis, cc-by-sa license, from geograph.org.uk (photo 4006020).

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