Images

Image of Foel y Geifr (Cairn(s)) by GLADMAN

Lovely bit of lichen, too.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Foel y Geifr (Cairn(s)) by GLADMAN

Looking across the Hirnant Pass, the wind getting somewhat powerful again....... note the quartzite.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Foel y Geifr (Cairn(s)) by GLADMAN

A ‘rustic’ OS triangulation pillar surmounts the funerary cairn, looking towards Foel Goch.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone

Articles

Foel y Geifr

I awake to one of those typical North Walian mornings, cloud obscuring Moel Siabod as I poke my head outside – or rather stumble from – the battered old tent. What’s the weather gonna do? Dunno. But something I can’t explain is pulling me towards Cadair Idris.... only to find the mountain also deep under cloud upon approaching Dolgellau. So, improvised Plan B it is, then.... an obscure chambered cairn said to sit above the Afon y Dolau Gwynion near Llyn Efyrnwy (Lake Vyrnwy).... Except as I proceed up Cwm Hirnant, beyond Rhos-y-gwaliau, the sheer beauty of the landscape gets the better of me and I’ve gotta walk. Here. Right now. Plan C, then, in the form of an ascent of Foel y Geifr, an unassuming 2,053ft moorland peak – if ‘peak’ is actually the right word – rising to the immediate west of the summit of Hirnant Pass. Hooray. A decision at last.

To be honest it’s not much of a plan since the ascent is short... and not so much sweet as an annoying slog through deep heather and bog. Nevertheless the summit, crowned by an attractive OS trig pillar adorned with equally attractive lichen, is quickly attained. However it’s what lies beneath the trig pillar which is of greater interest, a relatively significant stoney mound – albeit grassed over – with several small blocks of quartzite apparently placed upon it with purpose. And it seems our friends at Coflein have already thought of what I was thinking, so to speak. Here we have another Bronze Age funerary cairn, no less.

I go for an excellent walk northwards to overlook Cwm Hirnant itself from Foel Goch. Sadly no more prehistoric cairns to report near to hand, although take your pick from the horizon for many other distant locations (Garnedd Wen, Arenigs, Foel-Cwm-Sian-Lwyd, Arans, Berwyns etc). Needless to say, a violent front moves down the valley giving me a bit of a pasting, but the atmosphere, upon returning to Foel y Geifr, is all one could wish for. Yeah, this high moorland sandwiched between Y Berwyn and The Arans won’t be to everyone’s taste, I guess. Paths are at an absolute premium, the going underfoot difficult, to say the least. ‘Intimate’ may well be an appropriate adjective... nevertheless the vibe is sufficient to delay my return to the car until the onset of dark. The Afon y Dolau Gwynion cairn will have to wait for another day now. I’m sure it can cope with the disappointment....

Miscellaneous

Foel y Geifr
Cairn(s)

Wasn’t aware of the ancestry of this funerary cairn at the time – although the use of quartzite suggested this was very much a ‘probable’ – so very pleased to be able to add this summit cairn to the ever growing TMA catalogue of Welsh upland monuments. According to Coflein:

‘Remains of a cairn, probably dating to the Bronze Age, situated within open moorland in a prominent position on the summit of Foel y Geifr. The stone built cairn is circular on plan and measures about 12m in diameter and up to 1.2m in height. An Ordnance Survey triangulation pillar has been erected on the cairn.
Source: Cadw scheduling description. FF 13/07/2004‘

Sites within 20km of Foel y Geifr