-
Clogwyn Du'r
Arddu (Welsh pronunciation: [ˈklɔɡwɨ̞n ˈdɨːr ˈarðɨ̞],
translates as the "black
cliff of the
black height"), is a north-facing
rhyolite set...
- to the
summit station from May. The
cliff faces on Snowdon,
including Clogwyn Du'r Arddu, are
significant for rock climbing, and the
mountain was used...
-
Clogwyn is an
intermediate station on the
Snowdon Mountain Railway. It is
located on an
exposed ridge overlooking the
Llanberis P**** and
Clogwyn Du'r Arddu...
- It is also
linked to Cwm Glas to the
northeast via a
steep arete called Clogwyn y Person,
which joins the main Crib y
Ddysgl ridge about 500
metres (1...
-
Hebron on Sa****ay 26
September 1896. On 9
April 1897 the line re-opened to
Clogwyn. By June the
trains were
again reaching the summit. This time
there were...
-
traditional climbing route on the
rhyolite "Great Wall" of the East
Buttress of
Clogwyn Du'r Arddu, in Wales. When
English climber Johnny Dawes completed the first...
- Axe (E4 6a) at
Clogwyn Du'r Arddu, in Snowdon. The
photograph was
reproduced as a
poster and
featured on the
cover of the 1989
Clogwyn Du'r
Arddu Guidebook...
- The Devil's
Appendix (Welsh: Nant
Clogwyn y Geifr) is the
tallest single-drop
waterfall in
Wales and one of the
tallest in the
United Kingdom. It is a...
- Fell,
which was
modelled on Snowdon: the
ridge of Devil's Back
copies the
Clogwyn ridge on Snowdon. The
summit is
reached by the
Culdee Fell Railway, which...
- (bearing the
famous line of
Cenotaph Corner),
Carreg Wastad (flat rock),
Clogwyn y
Grochan (these are
together called the
Three Cliffs); and
further down...