
The northern barrow, with Y Garn beyond.
The northern barrow, with Y Garn beyond.
The southern cairn, with Llyn-yr-Oerfa below. Pendinas hillfort near Aberystwyth can just be seen faintly on the skyline, right.
Looking from the top of the northern barrow towards Disgwalfa Fawr, Drosgol and Y Garn (Pumlumon), all topped with cairns.
The excellent northern barrow from the north.
The beautiful Cwm Rheidol. Pendinas hillfort near Aberystwyth is distant top right. The Vale of Rheidol steam railway runs along the hillside on the opposite of the valley.
Looking out over the western rampart.
Western rampart. Gelli round barrow is on the hill to the left.
The hillfort seen from the northwest, on the approach from Gelli (Melindwr) round barrow.
The view northeast-ish towards Pumlumon.
Looking east across the Gwy/Wye valley, with Bryn Titli rising behind.
The barrow seen from over the hedge. It’s pretty substantial, even in ruin.
Coflein description:
A mutilated and threatened round barrow, 23m in diameter and 1.4m high. Courses of crude paving and an upright, but buried, monolith are reported to have been observed. A stone-walled, slab-roofed chamber built into the S side of the monument was used as a potato store before 1938.
(source Os495card; SN97SW5)
J.wiles 22.04.02
Looking across the valley towards the steep slopes of Gamallt.
Approaching the cairn on its little knoll, centre, from the east.
Looking down on the Marteg Valley from the slopes of Gamallt to the southeast. The cairn is just above and to the right of the bend in the minor road, left of centre. The hills are Moelfryn (across the hidden Gwy valley) and Yr Wylorn.
Y Gamriw fills the skyline. Seen from the ridge of high ground crossed by the Wye Valley Way to the north, above the confluence of Elan and Gwy rivers.
Landscape context from across the Gwy/Wye valley to the WSW. The ancient cairn is on top of the right-hand of the twim summits, the modern cairn on the left-hand summit.
Landscape context for the cairn on its ridge, centre skyline. Further cairns grace Trembyd to the left. The slopes of Graig Ddu (yet more cairns) rise on the right. From the Wye Valley Way near Cefn to the north.
St Gwrthwl and his stone, from the church’s information board
The enclosure top right, in a fair weather reprise of the challenging conditions from my previous struggle up here in November 2022.
Looking southeast on the cliffs of Craig y Llam across Cwm Rhwyddfor, with Pumlumon (I think) on the skyline.
Looking towards Arenig Fawr and Aran Fawddwy.
Looking towards Gau Graig from the slopes of Mynydd Moel. Aran Fawddwy rises on the skyline beyond.
Llyn Arran seen from Mynydd Moel, near the Bronze Age cairn. According to the GGAT record, the standing stone is close to the edge of the lake. Gau Graig is at the end of the mountain ridge to the right of the lake. Aran Fawddwy and the Aran mountains are on the distant skyline.
The forbidding cliffs of Mynydd Moel, seen from the ridge to the east.
The clifftop perch of the cairn. Yr Wyddfa distant skyline.
There is a serious volume of stone here. Looking towards the Tarrenau.
The wrecked cairn, shelter on the left and marker cairn on the right, both formed from the stones of the original monument.
The southwestern arc of the footprint, looking towards Pen y Gadair, the summit of Cader Idris.