-
called Grwyne Fawr,
flows between your
second and
third fingers and then
curves the
other way, south, to join the
fifth river, now
called Grwyne Fechan...
- The
Grwyne Fawr is a
river in the
Brecon Beacons National Park in
south Wales. A
section of it
forms the
administrative border between Powys and Monmouthshire...
-
neighbour Corn Du). It is
situated at the head of the
Grwyne Fechan valley,
above and to the west of the
Grwyne Fawr reservoir. It has an
undistinguished (and...
- The
Grwyne Fawr
Reservoir is
located in the
valley of the
river Grwyne Fawr in the
Brecon Beacons National Park, Wales.
Completed in 1928, it has the capacity...
- the
Rhiangoll and Usk Vale Mill at
Glangrwyney draws it
water from the
Grwyne Fawr. The
first two are post-mediaeval corn-mills, the
latter a nineteenth...
- 1908–1909. The
church remains an
active church in the
parish of the Vale of
Grwyne. The
church comprises a nave,
chancel and
porch with a
separate shrine-chapel...
- The
southern part of the
Grwyne Fechan valley in the
Black Mountains...
- Brecknockshire),
close to its
border with Monmouthshire. It is in the
valley of the
Grwyne Fawr, in the
Black Mountains of
South Wales,
within the
Brecon Beacons National...
- Legge-Bourke
allowed the
young princes to
abseil down the fifty-metre dam of
Grwyne Fawr
Reservoir in
Wales without safety lines or helmets.
Staff at St James's...
- The
southern part of the
Grwyne Fechan valley in the
Black Mountains,
Welsh Borders...