The principal areas of Wales are Anglesey, Blaenau Gwent, Bridgend,
Caerphilly, Cardiff, Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion, Conwy, Denbighshire,
Flintshire, Gwynedd, Merthyr Tydfil, Monmouthshire, Neath Port Talbot,
Newport, Pembrokeshire, Powys, Rhondda Cynon Taff, Swansea,
Torfaen, Vale of Glamorgan, and Wrexham.
More than 4,000 seabirds breed on the cliffs at South Stack each year. You can watch live TV pictures of the breeding seabirds at the Ellins Tower and Lighthouse visitor centres. During the breeding season you are likely ...
The reed-fringed lakes of Valley Wetlands are one of the best places in Wales to see wildfowl all year round. Tufted ducks, pochards, shovelers, gadwalls and grebes all breed and numbers swell in winter with the arrival ...
Set on the south side of the Dyfi estuary, this reserve mixes the delights of a Welsh oak woodland with the wet grassland and saltmarshes of the estuary. Spring is a wonderful time to visit the woodland when it is full o ...
"Even before I set foot on it, I was losing my heart to this rock in
the ocean." RM Lockley - "The Island". Puffins, Manx Shearwaters, Storm
Petrels, Choughs, Peregrines, glowing cliffs of Old Red Sandstone,
carpet ...
Snowdonia is one of the eleven National Parks of England and Wales,
and is the second largest after the Lake District. Designated in 1951,
the Snowdonia National Park Authority celebrated 50 years as a
protected la ...
The Dee Estuary, on the North Wales / North-West England border, is one
of the United Kingdom's premier birding locations for wetland and
shorebirds. This Web site describes the best Dee Estuary birdwatching
areas wit ...
Gwent covers the lower Wye and Usk river valleys and the Severn Estuary in South East Wales. The Gwent Wildlife Trust was set up in 1963 to purchase its first nature reserve, Magor Marsh and now has over 30 wildlife site ...
The Trust manages over 30 nature reserves across North Wales, covering a very wide range of habitats and species, and ranging in size from many hectares to less than one, and in status from a National Nature Reserve to v ...
Situated slightly further out to sea than its neighbour Skomer Island, Skokholm offers you the absolute 'get away from it all' experience on Britain's first established Bird Observatory which is now intern ...
Situated 15 minutes boat ride from the picturesque Pembrokeshire coast, this beautiful 750-acre island offers the visitor a wide choice of unique wildlife experiences.