This post is about what’s described as “Wales’ largest rewilding site“. I suspect it’s about more than ‘rewilding’. Because there’s usually big money involved with ‘environmental’ schemes nowadays.
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TIR NATUR: WHO’S WHO?
I’ve written about this outfit a few times in recent years. But to get you started, here’s the Tir Natur website, and here’s the Charity Commission entry.
When I first encountered Tir Natur it seemed to be a very amateurish outfit, but now it appears more professional. (That’s not always a compliment.) And there also seems to have been an almost complete change of personnel.
The name I recall from the beginning was Stephen Jenkins. And he gets a mention on the website, telling us he’d left:
The capture above confirms that Tir Natur was formed in 2021. But not actually registered with the Charity Commission until June of 2022.
The only founding member still with Tir Natur might be Gwenan Jenkins-Jones. She’s had training in how to spot money laundering. Which might come in useful at a ‘rewilding’ charity.
These changes are also reflected in the address given.
For the address now shown with the Charity Commission is Moat Farm, Trimsaran, to the west of Llanelli. Though the old address, Y Beudy, Lanlwyd, Pennant, Ceredigion SY23 5JH, also appears on the website.
The Pontyberem address is perhaps where we’ll find the chair of the trustees, Tatatia ‘Tash(a)’ Reilly; for one of the farm owners is a Lindsey Reilly.
Tatatia was the director of a company called Dashtan Ltd. In the business of ‘Residents property management’, which was formed and folded in less than a year. A phenomenon which, as you know, always gets my antennae twitching.
Her co-director was Bogdan Edward Staniaszek. The company address was given as this property not far from Swansea city centre.
Did this in any way link with Tir Natur’s activities?
I suspect those living at Moat Farm are relative newcomers to Wales. ‘Nice little place in the country’ and all that. Same applies to a number of other Tir Natur trustees. I see two smallholders among them.
Definitely getting a whiff of good-lifers here. Though these are the ‘farmers’ Tir Cymru claims to be working with. None are real farmers.
Then there’s a couple of eco loonies who also come from outside of Wales. James Hitchcock, formerly of Montgomeryshire Wildlife Trust, and now Rewilding Britain. And Tim Birch, still looking over his shoulder for the Derbyshire gamekeepers he smeared, and now involved in just about every enviroscam.
Next, Bronwyn Jamie Bunt-Brown, who may be American. And was living in Surrey when she ran this short-lived company. And there was another company that never filed accounts, or seemed to do anything, before being struck off.
Bronwyn became a trustee 25 March, 2025. Someone who joined on the same day was Pamela Louise Noakes. While Bronwyn seems to have moved to Wales Pamela sill lives in London, where she works for M&C Saatchi Group.
This company has worked with Rewilding Britain. Fancy! And is keen to offset its carbon emissions. Noakes’ role is Global Director of Sustainability. Curiously, this day job is not mentioned in her Tir Natur bio. Why would that be, I wonder?
Turning to the ‘Executive Team’, those who run Tir Natur day to day, presents very much the same picture, with the obvious exception of Gwenan Jenkins-Jones. I hope she’s getting well paid, because her mere presence is invaluable to this scam.
To help her provide a Welsh gloss there’s Dr Elen Robert, whose full-time job is as a translator for Natural Resources Wales. Is NRW – that is, us – paying her to do translation work for Tir Natur?

Dan Ward’s day job is with North Star Transition, another interloper organisation.
I could go on, but I’ll just mention David Kilner who, as Development and Programme Lead, might be the top man. Dai is also involved with Climate Cymru, where ‘diversity’ seems to be more important than the climate or the environment.
I say that because you may recall it was the BAME department of Climate Cymru, back in 2024, that called for dogs to be banned from the countryside because they offended a certain group that really should start adapting and integrating.
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MONEY, MONEY, MONEY?
With money from somewhere, Tir Nature has bought (or “secured“) 1195 acres of Ceredigion. Here’s a report on the purchase from the County Times.
And here’s a video put out by Tir Natur.
According to an article last week in Nation.Cymru half of the £2.2m has been raised. Farmers Weekly talks of “a philanthropic bridging loan”
The Charity Commission website shows that over £900,000 appeared from somewhere before the end of June last year. But where?
Less than two years ago Tir Natur was skint. Though there is now at least one active Crowdfunder page. And there seems to have been an earlier Crowdfunding attempt that closed about a year ago after raising £60,000.
With a sizeable donation in match funding coming from Aviva which, as we know, works with BlackRock. Here’s more information on the Aviva Communities Fund, which has donated £28,264, that we know of.
One of the reasons I’m focussing on the money is because there are many examples of ‘rewilding’ projects and the like that have gone financially awry, perhaps taken on burdens that became too heavy.
One example of overreach would be Highlands Rewilding, which may be the model being followed by Tir Natur. This outfit struggled to pay off the bank loan.
If it’s not overreach then ‘rewilding’ is often a front for milking government schemes.
An example of this would be another case from the Highlands. With Aberdeen Investments being honest about the motives behind the company’s interest in ‘rewilding’.
The estate was acquired by abrdn three years ago for £7.5m as a way to offset carbon emissions from its property portfolio.
The Highlands now are over-run with investment funds and asset managers looking for ‘environmentalists’ to front for them so they can rake in the money from carbon capture and other wheezes.
And there are plenty willing to play the acceptable public face of corporate greed. New groups sprout quicker and better than any fungi they claim to grow.
Just yesterday a good contact drew my attention to Wild Cymru, which is rewilding 210 acres of Ceredigion, at Cefn Garthenor, near Tregaron. The farm is owned by Neil Alistair Hughes of Savoir Beds.
The Chair of Wild Cymru is Daniel Gruffydd Jenkins-Jones. Might he be related to Gwenan Jenkins-Jones of Tir Natur?
A few days earlier a different source told me about another outfit also operating in Ceredigion. This is Oxygen Conservation, which now owns the 300 acres of Esgair Arth.
The guy who seems to own the company, Roy Barry Bedlow, has a string of similar companies. And it’s all about investment, not the environment.
A number of his companies carry the ‘L C’ handle, which stands for ‘low carbon’. One of those companies is L C Energy, which supplies woodchip. But don’t worry, this isn’t shipped across the Atlantic, it’s all “sustainably sourced within the UK“.
Biomass is a scam within a scam. Get big grants to plant native hardwood trees, instead plant quick-growing foreign species, grab the grants and subsidies, chop ’em down, flog off the wood as ‘renewable energy’, sell the land, move on to the next scam.
It should go without saying that Roy Barry Bedlow is based in Jersey.
Finally, a worrying possibility raised by someone who knows about these things, is that this Tir Natur project might qualify for payments under the Sustainable Farming Scheme (SFS), which would not have been the case under the old Basic Payments Scheme.
This would be wrong, and can be avoided if the self-styled ‘Welsh Government’ insists that food must be produced for any land or landowner to qualify for SFS payouts. Otherwise, it’s not farming, is it?
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NEIGHBOURS
Let’s take a closer look at the land in question, and its surroundings. Such as the planned windfarms. Didn’t I mention the windfarms! How remiss of me.
The map shows four planned windfarms and the land Tir Natur is claiming. As you can see, they are very, very close. (I am indebted to the group that provided the map.)
The orange access road running south from Bryn Cadwgan goes over National Trust land to the village of Pumsaint. This is the only viable access for the turbine parts and the vast amounts of concrete needed for each turbine base. I covered this issue in November 2023 in The Road To Hell.
Now you might think that the peace and tranquility promised by an area returned to nature doesn’t sit well with an industrial site next door. With work going on for years.
But it doesn’t end there. Word I’m getting from locals says Bute is scouting more land over towards Teifi pools and Pontrhydfendigaid, north east of Tregaron.
And then there are the three farms in the area reportedly bought by the Foresight Group, which has been been busy in recent years buying Welsh farms and planting trees for investors.
But now it gets rather curious. Because I’m told the farms sold to Foresight had not long before been bought by a stranger to the area who’d made his pile in pet cremations! Yes, honestly.
This man, James Uys, is originally from Stroud in Gloucestershire. He played rugby and cricket for the local teams, and is big in sheepdog sales.
His business was almost certainly Limekiln Pet Crematorium, sold to Pet Cremation Services. Pet Cremation Services Ltd is the trading name for Time Right Ltd.
I don’t know how much Uys got for the pet cremation business, but he seems to have sold it in November 2017. And subsequently sold Limekiln Farm in September 2023 for a stated £3,000,000.
Some locals think Uys is a stalking-horse for Foresight, maybe others. Which would be odd, given what he’s on record as saying.
The value of agricultural land is hitting record highs as rich people seek loopholes to avoid inheritance tax, it is being reported.
Wealthy investors who have discovered the legal technicality are snapping up fields – and as a consequence prices are soaring to around £11,000 an acre, making life difficult for farmers. One newspaper reported on the case of a 50-year-old farmer from Gloucestershire who is in the process of selling his hundred-acre estate so he can buy a larger plot elsewhere. James Uys says he hopes to make £3m from the sale.
Did Uys move west, where land is cheaper, to find that “larger plot“. For in addition to what’s discussed here, I’m also told he’s bought a farm near Rhandirmwyn.
Bizarrely, the most recent report I have of Mr Uys is that he is the new tenant of Penlan Farm, Upper Chapel, near Brecon. There were 22 other candidates, including many young locals.
The farm is owned by the Penllergaer Estates in Swansea. Which has an interest in solar farms, as I reported in November 2021. (Scroll to the section ‘Follow the Money’.)
UPDATE: As this section is headed ‘Neighbours’, here’s two of Tir Natur’s supporters talking about the project. One is Jon Moses of Right to Roam. The other is Alasdair Campbell, Executive Director of Somerset Wildlands.
Campbell talks dismissively of “these guys“, who are of course the local farmers. Believing, it would seem, that people like him should have more say about what happens in Wales than local people.
Two arrogant outsiders. Which about sums up ‘rewilding’ in Wales.
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CONCLUSION
Whatever Tir Natur may say, I believe they’re fronting for somebody else. Somebody hoping to make lots of money. I say that for a number of reasons.
First, the land Tir Cymru claims to have acquired is, as the video I linked to tells us, already a Site of Special Scientific Interest. It is already protected. For Tir Cymru to want to take it over can only mean they want to make changes.
Perhaps ‘reintroduce’ species like the Eurasian lynx.

Second, and in addition to be being an SSSI, the Elenydd is perhaps the last true wilderness in Wales. Consequently, to suggest it needs ‘rewilding’ is absolute bullshit. Like suggesting the Mona Lisa would be improved with a moustache and sunglasses.
Only those with a hidden agenda would insult our intelligence in this way.
But let’s take the claim at face value. If ‘developers’ have their way this ‘rewilded’ area will be surrounded by wind turbines. How will the constant hum and vibration, the flicker, affect wildlife? The lynx and other species will move out.
And the large, slow-moving birds that Tir Natur hopes to attract won’t stand a chance against the blades of the wind turbines.
Going back to the video again, the commentary claims to be “celebrating Welsh history and culture” – while snidely condemning that heritage for the bad farming practices Tir Natur wants to remedy.
Tir Natur promoting themselves as knights in shining green armour coming to save the Welsh environment – from those who have cared for it for over two millennia.
The video talks of bringing in Carneddau ponies. But a contact who knows the farmers that look after these animals says they’ve had no approach from Tir Natur. Which makes me remember a ‘rewilding’ scheme, near Machynlleth, that talked of “reintroducing” Welsh horses – then they brought in a Polish breed!
Put it all together and you might understand why I’m a wee bit cynical. Why I don’t buy the story that the land Tir Natur has acquired in the Elenydd is just a ‘rewilding’ project, and nothing more.
I believe there’s much more to it.
FOOTNOTE: This week’s piece was to have been in two parts. The second part about a 625 acre farm on the Gwynedd side of Machynlleth bought by Montgomeryshire Wildlife Trust with Aviva-Blackrock money. I’m waiting for further information.
But that’s the state of rural Wales today. Those with roots in this land are being elbowed out by recent arrivals and groups serving the Globalists’ anti-human agenda. With many of them funded and supported by the ‘Welsh Government’ to do the elbowing.
It’s a form of Clearance.
♦ end ♦
© Royston Jones 2026







Just a guess, but the “enhanced biodiversity” will be sold to the wind farms to compensate for biodiversity loss
As it’s already a SSSI they will not be able to change much from current usage or they may impact whatever it was that caused it to be designated in the first place. They probably have to maintain grazing
Any mention of Stroud makes me think of Dave Vince, owner of Ecotricity
Grazing is intrinsic to ‘rewilding’; I’ve even read of increased grazing. And as you say, it’s already a SSSI. Which tends to undermine the whole premiss. Which is why I’m convinced there’s more to it than we’re being told.
I hadn’t made the Vince connection, but it makes you think.
Something else to factor in is that this SSSI is also one of the sites for Celtic Rainforest restoration.
Isn’t that just planting a few oaks on the ffriddoedd though?
Who knows?
I suspect that if one could find out who has loaned Tir Natur this sizable bridging loan, then the picture for the future of Elenydd will become clearer.
I think you’re right. And the fact that Tir Natur is saying nothing makes it rather suspicious.
Commissar Drakeford through one the opaque funds he has to deploy, allegedly
“Allegedly”?
Well Jac as you know I’m not inclined to fire unnecessary shots at the old bugger. These funds may be at his disposal or under the control of some other Labour Minister in the Bubble well versed in the art of lobbing cash and goodies indiscriminately at people who profess an undying love for the green gospels. It’s take your pick really and his name was the first I thought of !!
You have prompted a FoI request to the ‘Welsh Government’.
Good luck with that. I wonder what style of obfuscation will be stimulated. Those civil servants missed their calling, they would thrive as limbo dancers, contortionists, or even as illusionists.
I heard from ‘bush telegraph’ months ago that Bute Energy had bought Nantllwyd Farm. This Tir Natur splurge at Doethie incorporates a large chunk of Nantllwyd, where the farmer has recently sold to Tir Natur. But if the kind person/firm which has given Tir Natur this bridging loan is Bute; Belltown/ Foresight Holdings or Galileo – which are the three ugly sisters who are out to trash Elenydd with their energy parks – then we know the motive for their largesse.
Another thing that is a mystery is what was on the menu when Plaid Cymru honchos met with Bute Energy at the Falcondale Hotel, Lampeter, a year or two back? Could it be a covert pow wow to discuss the ‘final solution’ for Elenydd
That makes sense. It’s difficult to divorce Tir Cymru’s interest in this area from what’s happening around it. The two are linked.
What is very strange about this Tir Natur saga of buying Doethie is the price they paid for it. Whether I’m right, or not, is that there is little or no buildings coming with the 2.2 million price tag.
The quality of the land is very poor because it is rough, low productive ground. Unless there is something there that I cannot see, then I believe Tir Natur have burnt their fingers!
Someone mentioned in your comments that animals will be farmed there. I tell that person this. If Tir Natur intend to make some money to pay the loan off by farming Doethie, then I’m Shirgar! I’m afraid Tir Natur is going to bring an ill wind to Elenydd Jac.
That’s a bit of a shocker. I had not connected this Tir Natur venture with Nantllwyd. Maybe I didn’t read enough detail although Tir Natur’s info is conspicuously light on detail.
Nantllwyd featured on TV years ago as one of the last farms that ran “the old way”. As I recall there were brothers running the place, members at Soar chapel, seemed to run livestock over a big piece of Elenydd as though it was an open range which I guess is what common land was all about.
Did the Trawscoed Estate have any of its holdings up there on the higher ground? The only reason I ask is cos they were trying to dispose either as a whole or in lots a few years ago. Their lowland holdings would have been snapped up even at inflated prices, and I vaguely recall that there was some land on the Elenydd too maybe further up beyond Bont- Teifi Pools area, but all part of a wilderness that the vultures want to tuck up into their portfolios. Or maybe they hung onto it especially if they were attracted by the net zero gold rush !
To be fair, why would you. I happen to know through various connections.
You are right, Nantllwyd was farmed by the Jones brothers, who were great characters. The farm is is now owned by their nephew who, I believe, has sold a large piece of his property to Tir Natur.
For the life of me, I cannot see how Tir Natur are going to manage this piece of Elenydd any better than nature itself. It is very bleak up there!
The trouble with Tir Natur, and others like them, is that they think they can improve on Nature.
Whilst I don’t have unlimited funds to perform multiple land registry searches. I have searched for the farm itself and a section of the land highlighted as Tir Natur on Jacs map.
The following is the latest information on the register – if it helps with ownership details or questions as they currently stand
land lying to the north of Nantllwyd (taken from the triangle section below the text on Jacs map)
Last sold for £100,000 on 11 July 2008
Registered owners
Rhys Jones Nantllwyd,
Olwen Mai Jones Nantllwyd,
Nantllwyd, Tregaron
Value stated £150,000 on 26 July 2011
Registered owners
Rhys Jones Nantllwyd,
Olwen Mai Jones Nantllwyd
Make of that what you will.
I’m familiar with that name.
I’m normally extremely wary of these types of schemes but from what I’ve read about these guys they seem to be going about it a different way?
They’re a charity, not a business, and they’re putting more animals on the land, which can only be a good thing. I’ll be watching carefully but I’m not sure I see what you’re seeing.
Most of the groups involved in such activities are registered charities. And a charity can also be in the business of making money.
The issue I and others have have with groups like Tir Natur is that too often they front for corporate interests concerned solely with making money. Usually from some insane scheme introduced by either the UK gov’t or the ‘Welsh gov’t’.
In Wales, this is justified by the ‘climate crisis’, which is being debunked every day; or the equally spurious claim that Wales is suffering a serious depletion in wildlife species and environmental degradation. This latter claim has no independent scientific support. The claim comes from the very groups hoping to capitalise on the acceptance of the lie.
But the bigger picture is the claim that livestock farming is damaging to the atmosphere, or the environment. This is nonsense. It’s a claim used to destroy farming in the West so that the hitherto shadowy friends and funders of Jeffrey Epstein can exert greater control over the food supply. And over us.
The Welsh family farm is fundamental to both the economy of rural Wales and the survival of the Welsh language and identity. Consequently, I will not stand silent while Welsh farming is destroyed by a combination of anti-human Globalists, corrupt or stupid politicians, and zealots on a misguided and completely unnecessary crusade.
I agree with most of what you say, Jac, but I do think that there’s a real case to be had for the decline of nature. I’m a fisherman and I’ve seen it during my lifetime. Things just aren’t the same and the rivers are in some state.
As for livestock, I agree with you that it’s hard to believe that cows are damaging to the atmosphere – especially grass fed cattle like we have here. But aren’t they putting more livestock on the land according to their press (whether this comes to pass is another question…)?
I guess the proof will be in the pudding – I shall follow with interest.
I agree that there’s a decline in certain species, and certain areas. Commercial trawlers that ‘hoover up’ almost everything have a lot to answer for. And just yesterday I read about gangs of foreigners on Australian beaches picking just about everything. We’ve had something similar in Wales with cockle pickers. Then there’s the plastic and other pollution in the oceans. But none of this has anything to do with a changing climate.
As for the animals, I don’t think anyone believes that cow farts are destroying the atmosphere.
But as you suggest – let’s wait and see.
I’m not saying there is anything questionable about Tir Natur, but I’m expecting to see schemes propping up in Wales funded by developers over the border
With the need for a net gain in biodiversity from development, ideally on site or immediately adjacent, but if not possible elsewhere, developers pay into a fund (forget the name) which then funds biodiversity enhancement elsewhere
With the big house building drive developers will want an easy to access scheme that wants money. This could be one, but no idea
Similarly it will be far easier for the wind farms to pay Tir Natur to enhance biodiversity adjacent to the wind farms than bother doing anything themselves
The report on the horses bought into Bwlch Corog near Machynlleth are the Konick breed and says “from a herd in Kent, are descendants of the now extinct European horse, the Tarpan”. It is of course complete BS. Recent genetic analysis find they are just a feral breed of genotype originating in the 1920s and enhanced by some rather dubious selective breeding during WW2 under German occupation.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7552212/
They are not ‘ancient native’ at all. Wicek—34.4%; Myszak—9.6%; Glejt I—9.6%; Goraj—17.2%; Chochlik—18.2%; Liliput—11%. All modern shire stock. A bizarre introduction to Wales when you consider that it’s the British Isles that has a pre-existing archaic breeds as you mention, the Carneddau ponies and those of Exmoor. Both genetically proven, wild and of course documented by the Romans some one thousand five hundred years older. Uniquely adapted to the Welsh climate and landscape.
That’s the problem with these people, Brychan. Like all zealots they believe that facts don’t really matter in pursuit of the agreed objective. And that’s why we’re in the mess we are. The outcome was handed down to them from above – the world’s climate is screwed and it’s all the fault of humanity. Then they had to dream up the reasons for this, nonsense such as the danger of carbon, and also the ‘remedies’, which presented the great scams we see today such as wind farms and ‘rewilding’.
They are not motivated by the care of nature and wildlife. It’s a cash cow.
Dipping into the flow of profits from zoos and ‘wildlife parks’, an international trade in exotic species. For that you need land and all the better if they can get ‘funding’ from the climate change prophesy. Thing is that genuine agriculture and the native population are in the way. Koniks on Cors Dyfi, Bison on Bannau Brycheiniog and Lynx on Lwynhendy.
Science and real ecosystems don’t come into it.
You won’t be surprised to learn that I’ve had a quite a few visits to this piece from Ashford, Kent.
The proposed investments in a number of wind farms along the southern edge of the Elenydd range tells us that any real concerns about the natural environment have been cast aside. It would be interesting therefore to know where the participants in Tir Natur stand on this matter. My interest was prompted when I first read of their investment around the Doethie river valley a few weeks ago. In the absence of any clear comments about the industrialisation of adjacent land I have to presume that the denizens of Tir Natur are “perfectly relaxed” about those developments much like Sneaky Petey Mandelson said he was when asked about a class of super wealthy emerging in British society. All that’s given us is a bunch of robber barons whose sense of entitlement knows no boundaries.
They plan even more wind farms in the Elenydd. And as you suggest, Tir Natur’s silence over the wind farms speaks volumes.
I would suggest they are relaxed about these developments as they will be sat waiting to provide biodiversity offsets to these sites. This is how mixed up these people are; content to see renewable onshore wind destroy nature and landscape in the pursuit of ‘net zero’ and someone else’s energy security while cashing in on the piss weak SFS and offsets.
Some involved are ideologically opposed to animal agriculture, therefore the notion of using native breeds is not farming, as they will be kept as grazing pets.
Tir Natur and other developers (and I use that word purposefully, as the charity / not-for-profit element is merely a charade) are literally hedging land purchases on the basis they can remediate damage for a fee.
If the above is not the case, then lets see Tir Natur be open about the philanthropic bridging loan, its source and terms.
Something I’ve noticed in recent years, over and beyond the environmental zealotry, is that so many of those involved are vegetarian or vegan, and wish to impose their dietary choices on the rest of us; or worse, they want to stop us drinking cows’ milk. I’ve even heard it described as ‘white supremacy’ because white people are lactose tolerant!
Hiding in the undergrowth are some absolute nutters.
Oh Yes there is definitely a kind of sectarian hatred being fostered among the weird extremes of lifestyle choices. In my meat/dairy tolerant/orientated “bubble” we just live and let live. However the missionary zeal of the obsessive plant guzzlers shows no such tolerance and it gets worse when you wrap their ideology with a thick coating of climate radicalism. Their way is the only way and it is that silly stance that dictates that they must be resisted to avoid a total breakdown of our way of life.
We are dealing with fanatics who want to impose their choices on the rest of us, and the contrived ‘climate crisis’ provides the ‘justification’. This then serves the agenda of those who want to end traditional farming in order to control the food supply.
I have no problem with people choosing to be vegetarian or vegan. My own daughter is vegan. But she doesn’t preach to her partner or to me and her mother when she visits. By the same token, I don’t force anyone to eat meat or drink milk. And I expect the same toleration from those who reject both.
But as I say, we’re dealing with fanatics. And they are encouraged in their fanaticism by forces they probably don’t understand.
These zealots will effectively become my northern neighbours and claim that the land is not suitable for farming anymore and that the dothie river is too warm. They are fixing that of course.
Keep us informed, Jason.
How is that land accessed? Is there a viable track from below Brianne, or past SoaryMynydd, or from the west around LlanddewiBrefi, or from south around theupper Cothi? Or best done on foot or horse?
up the Dothie trail on foot or horse back or via Ty Connel Youth hostel up around Llyn Brianne to Soar y Mynydd from Rhandirmwyn going one way, Tregarron the other, or as you say up from Llanddewi Brefi towards Ty Connel. Its the land just down stream from Lynn Berwin along the Dothie valley.
Very remote but always been sheep country before.
Thanks. All rough tracks with bits of narrow country lanes here and there. Been while since I been up Brianne and over to Soar on to Tregaron. Is the track from Llanddewi any better?
This sounds like a fantastic project with the full support of the local community and farmers. I wish it all the best.
Bless!
Thanks Roy. Keep up the work.
?
Me too