
Image Credit: Natural Resources Wales
Image Credit: Natural Resources Wales
From the south east, en route back to the car. Tired.
From the south en route to Drosgl
Looking through the modern and ancient entrance, over Bethesda and down the Ogwen valley.
High above Bethesda is this small, less than impressive hillfort, but its position overlooking the entrance to the Ogwen valley is inspired, with the low low clouds and snow in Snowdonia there aren’t many better sited hillforts.
Parking available on Cilfoden Terrace and Tan y Foel (they may be one and the same) to the south east of the settlement, I’d streetviewed the place already so knew what to look for and when I got there I knew I was there.
The hillock on which the fort sits is high above the valley floor to the west but on the east side it keeps on rising all the way up to the pyramidal Moel Faban, with its quad of cairns. All the way round the fort is a modern wall that makes it difficult to see the earthwork, a gate echoes the old fort entrance, but the only traffic these days is of the sheep variety, indeed the whole fort is being reused as a big sheep pen.
The only way to appreciate it is from slightly above, looking over it down the Ogwen valley, on your way up the hill note the hut circle, but don’t tarry long it’s only medieval. (only he says)