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Celtic
Trails Walking Holidays
We wish you all happy and peaceful 2009

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Celtic
Trails want to give you the best walking holiday in Britain you
can have.
Your
walking holiday will take you along the very best of National
Trails and Long-Distance Paths through Wales, Scotland, England
and Ireland.

Walking
ancient Celtic trails and old drovers routes you can choose from
spectacular Coastal paths, Coast- to-Coast walks, Island circuits,
and easy hill and mountain routes, where you will meet few other
people.
We make no apologies if you won't find every
walking route in Britain here. We know our walking routes intimately,
and have avoided walks with unacceptably high levels of road walking,
viewless conifer-lined trails, or featureless routes with little
to stimulate the senses.
You
are offered a selection of walking holidays which will give you
the most rewarding walking experience.
Walk
at your own pace, guided by our detailed route notes and maps,
and enjoy the sense of freedom travelling on foot through peaceful
landscapes, your senses re-awakened by the scenery and sounds
of the countryside around you
We
only use the very best accommodation, of it’s type, available
in each of the areas you will walk through. Nothing is left to
chance, we plan in intricate detail - so you don’t need to.
Celtic Trails . . . . . . . .
. . . . . That little bit more
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Walking
Holiday Breaks
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Three Castles Walk
Walking from Castle to Castle is
the perfect walking break and antidote for modern day pressures.
Here you will escape into the tranquility of this quiet
and little known corner of Monmouthshire, where rural life
has changed little over the centuries. |
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Dee Valley Walk This
excellent walking holiday break follows the course
of the River Dee, a beautiful salmon river snaking
through pastoral riverside and hillside landscape,
in Wales’s quiet rural Borderlands.
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The
Coleridge Way
A
walking holiday break on the Coleridge Way takes you
through the stunning Somerset countryside of the Quantock
Hills, the Brendon Hills of Exmoor, a landscape that
inspired the poet Coleridge to produce some of his
best known work.
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Wales
is part of the United Kingdom but separate from England. It is an ancient Celtic country, a people, a culture, a language, a little known part of a Britain that has remained different and unspoilt.
Known in its own language as Cymru, ‘the Land of Comrades’, towards a million of its people speak Cymraeg, Welsh, the language of the Celts and one of the world’s
oldest living languages. |
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Cornwall This
spectacular guided walking holiday leads you around Cornwall,
and the southernmost edge of the British Isles. The beautiful
land was one of the first areas settled in by the Celts and
shares its unique ancient culture and language 'kernew' with
that of Celtic Wales and Brittany.
For
romantics, Cornwall historically has a long tradition of smugglers,
shipwrecks, and pirates.
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Anglesey,
Ynys Môn Coastal Path
falls within a designated Area of Outstanding
Natural Beauty (AONB) which covers 95% of the
coast. It passes through landscape that includes
a mixture of farmland, coastal heath, dunes,
salt-marsh, foreshore, cliffs and a few small
pockets of woodland. This includes a National
Nature Reserve(NNR).
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Cambrian
Way Walking Holidays The Cambrian
way is the classic High Route across Wales, a challenging
274 mile (440 km) Coast-to-Coast walk from Cardiff
on the south coast to Conwy on the north. The route
crosses areas of mainly remote mountains, hills and
valleys, mile upon mile of unspoilt nature from the
Black Mountains, Brecon Beacons, through the Cambrian
Mountains to the spectacular mountain ranges of the
Snowdonia National Park.
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Carreg
Trust Christian Retreats
on Bardsey Island. Carreg Trust formed by a
group of Christians who believe that God is
calling us to preserve and develop it as a place
of contemplation and prayer. A place for both
guided and individual retreats and above all
a place set apart for peace and development
of the inner life.
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Dylan
Thomas Trail For many, Dylan Marlais
Thomas was the epitome of the wild Welshman. That
man amongst men fought with words to express his deepest
feelings for the earth and people that were his Wales.
Bardsey
Island - Ynys Enlli "Gateway to Heaven"
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Glyndwrs
Way Walking Holidays is an outstanding
132 mile (212km) walking route that runs through some
of the finest unspoilt scenery in Mid-Wales. The trail
is named after Owain Glyndwr, the legendary Welsh
leader who led a successful revolt against English
domination in 1400.

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Mawddach
Trail Walking Holidays The two RSPB
reserves in the Mawddach Valley offer superb scenery
and beautiful walks through oak wood and scrubland.
In the spring pied flycatchers, wood warblers and
redstarts can be heard in Coed Garth Gell. Ravens
and buzzards are present throughout the year. The
trail at Arthog Bog is accessible to wheelchair users.
North
Wales Path winds for 60 miles along
the coast from Bangor to Prestatyn, mostly along public
footpaths. It takes you to traditional seaside resorts
which you can reach from the path, and also gives
you stunning mountain and coastal views. Near Prestatyn
the route follows the Prestatyn Dyserth Way, a 2 2/3
mile former railway. Between the Prestatyn Dyserth
and the Offas Dyke Path National Trail, Bishopswood
is an SSSi, and the limestone hill Graig Fawr is owned
by the National Trust. Some of the most stunning views
on the path come from Little Ormes Head, where you
can look over Snowdonia, and the top of the cliffs
of Great Ormes Head – 680 feet high and popular
with climbers.
Offas
Dyke Path Walking Holidays One of the
earliest of the National Trails this renowned long
distance footpath must rate as the best walk in Britain.
The 177 mile (285km) route extends from the top to
the bottom coast of Wales and follows an 8C earthwork
built by King Offa sometime between 756 and 796 to
contain marauding Welsh tribes.
Pembrokeshire
Coast Path Walking Holidays The Path
twists and turns its way around this dramatic coast
following the entire Pembrokeshire coastline for 143
miles/ 299 km. It is an unforgettable experience walking
along cliff tops, enjoying the wild and spectacular
coastal scenery ~ spring flowers carpeting the cliffs,
beaches, fishing villages and offshore islands with
their wealth of marine and bird life.
Pilgrim
Trail ~ Lleyn Coastal Path ~ Castle to Castle Walk
Walking Holidays This walk has the
precedent of being an ancient route, tracing the spiritual
journey taken in early centuries by pilgrims from
Bangor to Aberdaron and crossing to Bardsey island,
the mystical Isle of a 1000 Saints, reputedly the
burial place of many early Christian saints.
Snowdonia
Trail ~ Cambrian Way Northern Section Walking Holidays
The Snowdonia Trail is an outstanding
walking holiday of approximately 140mls (220km), for
the connoisseur of unspoilt mountain scenery. Taking
in some of the most scenic and spectacular sections
of the mountain routes of Wales, including Snowdon
and the major summits, we believe it is unrivalled
for fine mountain walking and atmosphere.
The
Three Castles Walk walking from Castle
to Castle is the perfect walking break and antidote
for modern day pressures. Here you will escape into
the tranquility of this quiet and little known corner
of Monmouthshire, where rural life has changed little
over the centuries.
Wye
Valley Walk Walking Holidays is an
easy grade continuous walking trail that follows the
river valley from Chepstow to Rhayader and continuing
to its source near Pumlumon in the hills above Aberystwyth.
The 136 mile (218km) route criss-crosses the lower
border between Wales and England through a wonderful
variety of scenery.
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Isle
of Arran Coastal Way, is a walking
holiday around the Isle of Arran, the most southerly of
the collection of Scotland’s beautiful Western Isles.
Only 12 miles from the mainland across the Firth of the
Clyde, within easy reach of Glasgow, a Walking Holiday on
the Arran Coastal Way on the beautiful Isle of Arran is
a world away from the busy Scottish mainland.
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Great
Glen Way The Great Glen Way leads from
the popular hiking centre of Fort William, near the foot
of Britain's highest mountain, Ben Nevis, diagonally northwards
to the self-proclaimed 'capital of the Highlands', Inverness,
linking the Atlantic Ocean on the north coast of Scotland
and the North Sea on the east coast.
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Highland
Drovers' Trail As its name suggests,
the Highland Drovers' Trail follows part of a route taken
by the Highlanders of the Isle of Skye between the 15th
an 19th Centuries as they 'drove' their cattle every Autumn
across the Western Highlands to the markets in the Scottish
Lowlands.
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Rob
Roy Way Scotland’s most infamous
outlaw, Rob Roy MacGregor, roamed the Southern Highlands
of Scotland during the latter part of the 17th and early
part of the 18th Centuries. Now you can trace the legend
of this famed Scot and his clansmen on the Rob Roy Way,
a walk of some 80 or 90 miles from Drymen to Pitlochry,
depending on your personal route of choice.
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St
Cuthberts Way Walking Holidays St Cuthbert’s
Way provides an immensley enjoyable walking holiday through
the beautiful Scottish border countryside. Walking St Cuthberts
Way traces the footsteps of the 7th century saint who spread
the Gospel through Scotland and northern England, performing
many healing miracles along his way.
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Speyside
Way is one of four official Long Distance
Routes in Scotland (the others are the West Highland Way,
the Southern Upland Way and the Great Glen Way). It was
first opened in 1981, to run from Spey Bay to Ballindalloch,
with a spur to Tomintoul being added in 1990. A northern
extension from Spey Bay to Buckie followed in 1999, with
the route finally being completed between Ballindalloch
and Aviemore in April 2000.
Southern
Upland Way Opened in 1984, the Southern
Upland Way is Scotland's longest walk and Britain's first
official coast to coast long distance footpath , beating
a trail of some 212 miles (340 kms) from Portpatrick on
the south west coast of Scotland, to Cockburnspath's North
Sea coastline in the east.
West
Highland Way Scotland’s most popular
trail, the West Highland Way is a challenging 95 mile (152
km) walk from Milngavie, near Glasgow, Scotland's largest
city, leading northwards to Fort William, beneath Ben Nevis,
Britain’s highest mountain.
The
Cotswold Way
Often called the model for a long distance footpath for
its unique rich landscape and wealth of cultural and historical
attraction to be encountered along the way, the Cotswold
Way, has now been deservedly designated as a National Trail.
Cumbria
Way
Coleridge
Way
Dales
Way The Dales Way leads across some of the
most splendid countryside in the Yorkshire Dales National
Park and ends on the shores of Britain's largest lake, Windermere,
at Bowness in the romantic Lake District.
Hadrians
Wall Path Completed in AD122 it took the
soldiers of the 2nd and 6th legions just over a decade to
build Hadrian’s Wall and their astonishing achievement
remains the largest ancient monument in northern Europe
and a Roman World Heritage Site
Hardy's
Dorset.
Isle
of Man Coastal Path - Raad ny Foillan -
A walking holiday on the Isle of Man Isle of Man will rediscover
the pleasures of walking in the tranquillity of an island
with countryside unchanged for hundreds of years, Only a
short hop across the Irish sea from the UK mainland , the
Isle of Man is a world away from the stresses and demands
of modern day living.
Isle
of Wight Coast Path A 60 mile route tracing
the spectacular coastline of the largest island off mainland
Britain, the Isle of Wight Coastal Path takes in variety
of stunning scenery, including the island's landmark white
chalk and sandstone cliffs, the famed chalk stacks of ‘The
Needles’, beautiful beaches, sheltered estuaries, marshlands
and various 'chines', a name unique to Isle of Wight and
Dorset given to wooded or dry ravines.
Walking
the Herefordshire Trail - Independent walking holidays
this new 154-mile circular long distance route takes you
deep into the rich, colourful agricultural countryside of
Herefordshire.
Peddars
Way and Norfolk Coast Path Although two separate
paths, the Peddars Way and Norfolk Coast Path form one National
Trail, combining centuries of history with some of the finest
and varied scenery in the East Anglia region of England.
South
West Coast Path Britain's longest and, arguably
most spectacular National Trail, the South West Coast Path
is a 630-mile (1,008km) trail rounding the south-western
tip of England from Minehead in Somerset through Devon and
Cornwall to Poole in Dorset.
Saints
Way
Two
Moors Way The oldest regional footpath in
Devon, the Two Moors Way stretches over 100 miles (63 km),
linking the two National Parks of Dartmoor and Exmoor.
The
Tarka Trail The Tarka Trail is a looping
figure of eight footpath of over 180 miles/280 km in length
through the beautiful North and Mid Devon countryside, tracing
the travels of Henry Williamson's much loved `Tarka the
Otter' depicted in his best-selling 1927 novel.
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Dingle
Way Walking Holidays The Dingle Way
– Slí Chorca Dhuibhne – is a diverse
and beautiful Celtic walking trail, A walking holiday over
the Dingle Way is full of surprises for those who wander
its paths - you'll encounter panoramic vistas of sea, mountain
and islands, a profusion of unique birds, plants and unspoiled
landscape, and an astonishing array of ancient sites spanning
6000 years.
Kerry Way
Wicklow Way
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Jersey
‘Around Island Walk’ The Landscape is very
diverse, heather covered cliff paths with fantastic views
of the other Channel Islands in the north to sloping sandy
bays in the south, the wilder west coast which is a surfer’s
paradise to green country lanes and the rockier marine environment
on the island’s east coast.
Guernsey
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Information lines open 9.00am
to 5.00pm
To Book telephone: Overseas - 0044 1291 689774 : UK - 0800
9707585
E-mail: info@celtic-trails.com or complete the
enquiry form.
Celtic Trails, P.O.Box 11, Chepstow, NP16 6ZD, Wales, UK
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