Green Walks in Wales South / De Cymru

This region comprises Wales to the south of the railway line between Machynlleth and Middletown (which is situated between Welshpool and Shrewsbury stations).

Neighbouring regions are

Note also some of the most convenient hubs for multi-day walking on different routes.

Routes

Some places lend themselves to being hubs, where you may pitch up for a few days’ car-free walking, fanning out on a different route (or part of a route) each day. The hub becomes a walking-place for recreation at walking pace. Hubs in this area include

  • Aberystwyth
    Aberystwyth has good transport links along the coast and inland to the south, and through mid-Wales.
  • Brecon
    Brecon is a handy hub for the Beacons, and there are links to the hills to the north, and towards Hereford.
  • Cardiff
    Cardiff is a prime hub, with transport links radiating east and west, and through the valleys to the north. Some walks in the Forest of Dean and in the Bristol area are also accessible.
  • Carmarthen
    Carmarthen has good links with the coast around it and with the inland corridors.
  • Hay-on-Wye
    Hay is a good local hub, serving days out on Offa’s Dyke Path and the Wye Valley Walk, as well as local forays into the north-eastern corner of the Brecon Beacons National Park and the hinterland to the north.
  • Llandrindod
    Llandrindod is the fulcrum of the Heart of Wales Line, and has other links into mid-Wales.
  • Llanelli
    Llanelli, at the southern end of the Heart of Wales Line, also serves coast and country between Carmarthen and Port Talbot.
  • Machynlleth
    A town on the hinge of North and South Wales, Machynlleth is a hub for the coast in both directions, and into the south of Snowdonia.
  • Newport
    Newport is the natural hub for the eastern Valleys and the lower Wye Valley. The Forest of Dean and the Bristol area are also accessible.
  • Swansea
    The Gower Peninsula is very local, and the railway offers the coast in the same way that is does from the Llanelli hub. The western Valleys are also accessible.

Disclaimer and advisory notices

Note that lwalks.london can accept no responsibility for content on an external site or in an external publication, nor for any action by an external site which renders our content or link outdated or unworkable. Furthermore, lwalks.london retains the liberty to unlink external content at any time if the content loses relevance to the linking page(s).

Images used on the lwalks.london site are either owned by lwalks.london, or are subject to a licence-to-use held by lwalks.london. These images must not be further used by any third party without the explicit permission of lwalks.london, or of the original image licensor. A small number of images are in the public domain.

Routes are to be followed entirely at the walker’s own risk: lwalks.london can take no responsibility for any inconvenience, damage, loss or injury caused by attempting to follow a route, which is no more than a mere suggestion of a possible enterprise.

We should be happy to learn of any changes to the line of a walk and/or its attendant facilities, or to consider an image which you own for inclusion on the site, lwalks.london thus being granted a free and non-exclusive licence to use the image anywhere on its site. Please contact us.