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Sea Breeze, Dinas Dinlle

Sea Breeze, Dinas Dinlle

Sea Breeze, Morawel, Dinas Dinlle, Caernarfon, Gwynedd, LL54 5TW, United Kingdom

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Property details

All ground floor. Two bedrooms: 1 x double, 1 x twin. Shower room with basin and WC. Kitchen. Sitting room.

Key features & notes

Bed linen
Broadband/wifi
Dishwasher
Fridge/freezer
Garden/patio
Ground floor accommodation
Ground floor bedroom
Heating
Hob
Microwave
Off road parking
Oven
Pub
Shower
Towels
TV
Washing machine

About where you'll be staying

Dinas Dinlle is a coastal resort renowned for family fun and watersports. It has an Iron Age hill fort and Roman ruins on a National Trust area by the beach. Caernarfon Aerodrome is at the far end of the beach and is great for pleasure flights or visit the Airworld Aviation Museum. Dinas Dinlle is near Llandwrog and Glynllifon Country Park. Glynllifon Park was once Lord Newborough’s private garden and is home to Grade I listed gardens and is a designated S.S.S.I. boasting Victorian follies, streams, fountains, tree trails, craft shops and The Glynllifon Mansion. Nearby is Caernarfon, a tourist spot with a castle and town walls. There is the Welsh Highland Railway, which passes through scenery. Caernarfon offers shops, places to eat and a golf course, and is close to the beaches of Anglesey and the Llyn Peninsula as well as the mountains and rivers of the Snowdonia National Park.
See More Holiday Cottages In Anglesey

Bird watching in Anglesey

Anglesey has a diverse range of habitats including cliffs, heaths, wetlands, dunes, and sand marshes supporting a rich variety of wildlife, and most of its coastline has been designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.

The RSPB manages several reserves on Anglesey including Valley Wetlands near Holyhead which holds one of the most important reedbeds in Wales as well as marshes and grasslands. Bitterns breed here and if you’re not lucky enough to spot one hidden in the vegetation then listen out for their booming calls in spring. The lakes are home to hundreds of wildfowl including shovelers, tufted ducks, and goldeneyes.

RSPB Cors Ddyga in the village of Gaerwen is another important wetland site that supports a large colony of lapwings and is one of the few places in Wales where it’s possible to see marsh harriers.

For seabirds, head to Cemlyn nature reserve on the wild north coast of the island, famous for its tern colony with hundreds of pairs of sandwich terns, and smaller numbers of Arctic and common terns. Puffins can also be found on the island; the best place to find them is at South Stacks Cliffs, also managed by the RSPB. Look out for choughs and peregrine falcons too.

As the name suggests puffins can also be found on Puffin Island off the eastern tip of Anglesey and which is also home to a large colony of cormorants. Seals, porpoises, and bottlenose dolphins can often be seen in the surrounding waters.

Llyn Alaw to the north of the island is a man-made reservoir which is 4.3 km long and has several walking trails by the water. It is an important destination for overwintering birds including whooper swans, wigeons, teals, tufted ducks, and pink-footed geese.

Nature on your doorstep

RSPB South Stack Cliffs
20.6 miles

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