|
|
Y Bwthyn, Bryncrug

Y Bwthyn, Bryncrug

Y Bwthyn, Y Bwthyn, Bryncrug, Tywyn, Gwynedd, LL36 9RG, United Kingdom

Secure your booking for just £10

Property details

Sykes Gem Awards 2024 Bronze winner for Best Longstanding Property. Three bedrooms: 1 x family room with 1 x twin (zip/link, can be king-size on request) and 1 x single, 1 x double, 1 x ground floor double with en-suite wet room shower, basin and WC. Bathroom with bath, basin and WC. Open-plan sitting, kitchen and dining area with electric fire.

Key features & notes

Bath
Bed linen
Broadband/wifi
Cot available
Dishwasher
Fridge/freezer
Garden/patio
Ground floor accommodation
Ground floor bedroom
Heating
Highchair available
Hob
Microwave
Off road parking
Oven
Shower
Towels
Tumble dryer
TV
Washing machine

About where you'll be staying

Bryncrug is a small village with a shop and pub, located in the Dysynni Valley, at the southern end of the Snowdonia National Park. Aberdovey is 6 miles away with its harbour, sandy beaches and golf course along with small shops, inns and superb restaurants, including ones serving locally caught seafood. Visit the Cader Idris mountain range and the Dovey and Dysynni valleys nearby, great for walking, climbing and seeing wildlife.
See More Holiday Cottages In Snowdonia

Bird watching in Snowdonia

Snowdonia National Park, now officially known as Eryri, has a rich diversity of habitats including mountains and hills, rocky crags, upland bog, ancient forests, coastal dunes, and river valleys making it a paradise for bird watchers.

Managed by the RSPB, Coed Garth Gell in the Mawddach Valley is small nature reserve that is home to a good variety of woodland birds. In spring look out for lesser-spotted woodpeckers and hawfinches, while nightjars can be heard ‘churriing’ on still summer evenings.

Nearby Arthog Bog, also managed by the RSPB, is a wetland reserve that’s crammed full of wildlife. Bird species that can be found at the reserve include cuckoos, siskins, and reed buntings.

Another extensive woodland area is Coedydd Maentwrog National Nature Reserve, the remains of a vast Celtic rainforest that once extended down the west of Britain and Ireland. With plenty of walking trails, it’s a beautiful space to spend the day searching for redstarts, pied flycatchers, and wood warblers hiding amongst the oaks.

To the north of the park is Cors Bodgynydd reserve, home to numerous birds of prey including red kites, peregrine falcons, and buzzards. There are plenty of mammals to look out for too; badgers, otters, and foxes all call the reserve home.

Head to Morfa Harlech by the coast to visit one of the few sand dune systems in Wales, which supports a range of rare wildflowers, and where ringed plovers come to nest in the late spring. Skylarks and stonechats also breed on the reserve, while wading birds such as redshanks, oystercatchers, and dunlins come to feed at the shoreline.

If you want to hone your bird watching skills, Rhyd Y Creuau Field Centre set in the heart of the Snowdonia National Park offers a variety of one day and residential natural history courses.

Nature on your doorstep

RSPB Mawddach Valley – Coed Garth Gell
8.8 miles

Similar properties

The Herons

South Keiss

More details

Eloen

CRANTOCK

More details

Lean Low Holiday Cottage

Hartington

More details

West Lawn

Rhosneigr

More details

Harry

BLISLAND

More details

Gorse Bank

BROUGHTON-IN-FURNESS

More details