A luxurious holiday home offering an enviable seaside location.
1 step to entrance.
Ground Floor:
Open plan living space.
Living area: Smart TV, Electric Woodburner
Dining area.
Kitchen area: Electric Oven, Electric Hob, Microwave, Fridge/Freezer, Dishwasher
Utility Room: Washing Machine
Bedroom 1: Super Kingsize (6ft) Bed, Smart TV
Shower Room: Walk-In Shower, Heated Towel Rail, Toilet
First Floor:
Bedroom 2: Super Kingsize (6ft) Bed, Smart TV Ensuite: Roll Top Bath With Shower Attachment, Heated Towel Rail, Toilet
Gas central heating, electricity, bed linen, towels and Wi-Fi included.
Back garden with sitting-out area and garden furniture. Private parking for 2 cars. No smoking. Please note: This property is unsuitable for children under the age of 13.
Once inside you’ll be greeted by an immaculate open plan living space with all your home comforts and more. Wander through the patio doors and step outside onto the spacious decking with uninterrupted countryside views. Both bedrooms are very spacious with top quality mattresses and super kingsize beds, along with Smart TVs perfect for those relaxing mornings. The first floor bedroom has sea views and an en-suite bathroom with roll top bath. There’s also an impressive walk-in shower room downstairs which has real boutique feel with top quality shower. This accommodation is immaculate there’s a feeling of luxury as soon as you walk through the door, you’ll most certainly not be disappointed.
Within walking distance of the beach, eateries and convenience stores you could simply park up and relax. There’s miles of coastline to explore with picture perfect beaches and dunes you’ll be spoilt for choice. Just down the road there’s Harlech here you’ll find the imposing UESCO World Heritage Site, Harlech Castle. Bustling Barmouth is just down the road take a walk along the promenade and indulge in some fish and chips, an iconic feature of the town is Barmouth Bridge, the over 150-year-old railway viaduct across the Mawddach Estuary. It is half a mile in length with a wooden promenade suitable for pedestrians or cyclists which now forms part of the Wales Coast Path and the Lon Las Cymru Cycle Network. You’re in a fantastic location to explore this area of the Snowdonia National Park.
Gwynedd is a mountainous county with much of the east covered by Snowdonia National Park. To the west is the Llyn Peninsula which is flatter and has some of North Wales’s most beautiful coastlines.
The lagoons, wetlands, grasslands and reedbeds of Spinnies Aberogwen nature reserve near Bangor attract a wonderful variety of birds all year round but in particular during spring and autumn migrations. In the summer look out for kingfishers, little egrets, and grey herons in the reeds as they hunt for small fish, while in winter, water rails, great-crested grebes, and snipe, are joined by dunlins, lapwings, and redshanks looking for shelter. The reserve has a hide as well as bird feeders giving you the opportunity to see the wildlife up close.
Just south of Porthmadog is Traeth Glaslyn nature reserve made up of salt marsh, willow woodland, and grassland and a haven for wildlife and birds including teals, wigeons, curlews, black-tailed godwits. There is a hide here too, but please note at high tide the reserve can become submerged so check tide times before you go.
Another wetland reserve is the RSPB’s Arthog Bog in the Mawddach Valley. It may be small but it’s crammed with wildlife. Visit in spring for the opportunity to see summer migrants such as sedge warblers, whitethroats, and cuckoos. In autumn, flocks of redwings and fieldfares arrive for the winter. There’s a good chance to see goldfinches, linnets, and siskins feeding on seeds all year round.
For woodland birds head to Nantporth nature reserve, overlooking the Menai Strait and home to blackcaps, treecreepers, nuthatches, and jays. It’s also a good place to spot carrion crows, ravens, and jackdaws which often flock to the foreshore.
Also in the Menai Straits, is Traeth Lafan or Lavan Sands, an intertidal sandbank that is important for waterfowl in particular oystercatchers, as well as ringed plovers, knots, greenshanks, and turnstones.
Although ospreys can be spotted all over Gwynedd, for fans of these magnificent birds of prey a trip to Bywyd Gwyllt Glaslyn Wildlife is a must. A pair of ospreys has been breeding at the site since 2004 and in spring, visitors can watch on camera as the parents deliver fish to feed their chicks at the nest. There are also viewing platforms, hides, and scopes, and volunteers on hand to answer any questions you might have.