Wednesday 14 August 2013

Anglesey and Gogarth

Anglesey, and Gogarth in particular have an attraction to lovers of the sea and climbing .The Gogarth cliffs offer climbing expeditions of the highest quality.........but this time I came to paddle round them
 Here`s my new kayak on its first sea trip on the tiny beach of Porth Darfach near Holyhead .This solo trip is full of interest for me , having researched it for months . There are many dangers between here and Holyhead , not least tide races, rough sea , wash from ferries and no safe landing places for five miles ,and I`m alone !!

Here we are paddling solo round to the south stack lighthouse . Fortunatly the sea was calm and I could push on at speed to North Stack . The lighthouse is open to the public for a fee and is worth a visit . The birds nesting on the cliffs are quite a sight  (and smell)


People come here to watch the birds from the clifftop , but for me paddling is the main attraction.
I paddle beneath the Gogarth main cliff . Its five hundred feet high and inspiring . Just looking up at it makes you dizzy but Ive climbed it many years ago and found it special .

If you click on the picture to enlarge it there are two climbers near the top ! this pic shows them on Cordon Bleu HVS 5b
I paddled on to North Stack passing a famous climbing area , where can be found `A Dream of White Horses` on of the most famous climbs anywhere , but not too hard ,see below
Dream of White horses goes across the rock in the centre of the above picture .Technically its not difficult. The sea caves here are deep where the sea has eroded the soft rock . I paddled into the caves as it was calm 

Some of these caves are a hundred feet deep . Its important not to scrape the kayak on the rocks as the cave gets very narrow near the back. A jellyfish swims alongside me ...

At the North Stack lighthouse I see the owner has a for sale sign on the wall facing the sea , presumably in the hope of attracting sailing types to buy it . The lighthouse is not used now and is owned by an artist.

Arriving at Holyhead the breakwater blocked my progress . As its nearly two miles long , that trip round it could wait for another day .I looked for a place to land at Soldiers Point but the beach was stony and I decided not to scrape the boat
The breakwater at Holyhead seen above must be one of the greatest achievements of the Victorian era , being one and a half miles long .Fifteen hundred men were employed building it for nearly thirty years.Its possible to drive a car along it .Seven million tons of rock were quarried and more than thirty men died making it

Paddling back this scene caught my eye  near the South stack . The strange rock formations have been folded by upheavals millennia ago deep in the earth before the age of empires 

Here`s a picture of Holyhead and the breakwater from the hill .










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