1
Penpedwast, Meline
View from the edge of Coed Pant-teg. This farm, abandoned for nearly a century, is now being renovated.
Image: © Dylan Moore
Taken: 7 Aug 2009
0.02 miles
2
Penpedwast
Old gentry farm once held by the Lloyd family: seems to be undergoing a refurbishment.
Seen from the footpath that now runs between Pengelli Forest and Castell Henllys.
Image: © Natasha Ceridwen de Chroustchoff
Taken: 2 Sep 2009
0.03 miles
3
View from the Pengelli Forest Nature Reserve
Horses grazing in the meadow below enhance this view, looking roughly South from the forest path near the entrance to this small reserve.
Image: © Derek Voller
Taken: 18 May 2010
0.05 miles
4
Trees near Penpedwast
Along the route of the footpath between Castell Henllys and Coed Pengelli. The one on the right is a beech, on the left, an oak.
Image: © Natasha Ceridwen de Chroustchoff
Taken: 2 Mar 2011
0.05 miles
5
Badger at night in Pengelli Forest
Taken in infra-red at 23:53 with a wildlife camera, attached to a tree by the track.
See https://www.geograph.org.uk/editimage.php?id=7587266 for a daytime view.
Image: © Rich Tea
Taken: 4 Sep 2023
0.10 miles
6
Woodland pathway
A 'new' walking route has been opened between Castell Henllys and Pengelli Forest, using what seem to be. in the main, old trackways. An excellent initiative.
Image: © Natasha Ceridwen de Chroustchoff
Taken: 2 Sep 2009
0.10 miles
7
Footbridge over Nant Gafren
The path between Pengelli and Castell Henllys crosses the stream here via a rustic wooden treetrunk bridge.
Image: © Natasha Ceridwen de Chroustchoff
Taken: 2 Sep 2009
0.13 miles
8
Trees in Cwm-yr-Allt-Lwyd, Meline: sunset
Image: © Dylan Moore
Taken: 2 Nov 2012
0.13 miles
9
Common earthball (Scleroderma citrinum)
Also known as the pigskin puffball this usually-spherical, warty-skinned fungus is commonly found growing out of the ground in woods in the autumn. It is not edible and is easily distinguished from edible puffballs by the blackish colour of its flesh.
Image: © Natasha Ceridwen de Chroustchoff
Taken: 2 Sep 2009
0.22 miles
10
Predated oak marble galls
A mix of broad-leaved tree species have been planted in fields beside the older woodland. Some of the young oaks have marble galls of which many have been predated by birds who have pecked into the hard galls in search of the grub of the gall wasp, Andricus kollari, inside.
Image: © Natasha Ceridwen de Chroustchoff
Taken: 2 Mar 2011
0.22 miles