Bird Watchers' and Walkers Paradise
Visit Bardsey if you can. There are daily trips in the summer, weather permitting. In any event, make your way westwards from the village to the end of the peninsula, where you’ll see the island, and, on a very clear day, the hills of County Wicklow in Ireland (OS 145255). A footpath down a short valley leads to the rocks and a clamber (take care) to see Ffynnon Fair, Mary’s Well, a freshwater spring which is covered twice a day by the sea.
It’s a bird-watchers’ paradise anywhere at ‘finisterre’, Wales’s ‘land’s end’. Look out for the chough, emblem of the Llŷn Peninsula, as well as the kittiwakes, kestrels, puffins, stone chats, guillemots, and manx shearwaters. To hear the shearwaters at night in the early summer is an experience you’ll never forget. In spring and autumn you can see flocks of migrating birds.
These days the local economy is very much dependent on tourists and pilgrims, and you will find a warm welcome in the hostelries and B&Bs, the self-catering houses and the caravan and camping sites. Once you’ve tasted Aberdaron you’ll want to come back again and again. Many people are hooked for life!
The area around Aberdaron is a walker’s paradise. You can leave your vehicle in the car park in the centre of the village, or use it to get to some of the outlying places. Try the coastal path to Porth Meudwy (OS 164253), which is where the Bardsey boat goes from. Or go further to the end of the peninsula at Pen-y-Cil (OS 158240), and walk back along the lanes. Then there are delightful beaches to explore: Porth Ysgo, past disused manganese mine workings (OS 204263), Porthoer (OS 167300), often referred to as ‘Whistling Sands’, where there is a café in the summer, and Porth Iago (OS 167317) further along the north coast. Two miles north-east of Aberdaron you can find one of Europe’s earliest Iron Age settlements, Castell Odo (OS 187285). Pottery found there has been dated to 425BC. The hill fort is at 480 feet above sea level, and you can still find traces of ten circular huts. A more recent attraction is the house Plas yn Rhiw, ‘the large house on the hill’, (OS 237286), owned by the National Trust. There is a garden and a shop and, in clear weather, views across to Snowdonia.