
BRECON BEACONS October 24th-27th •Pen y Fan Horseshoe •Seven Waterfalls Trail •Lyn y Fan Fach hike •Lyn y Fan Fawr hike •Llangorse Lake
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The Ultimate Bannau Brycheiniog Weekend (Brecon Beacons)
October 24th-27th
Select from several walk options each day and join us for one or any number of days you would like:
- Friday: 7 Waterfalls or Llyn y Fan Fawr or Llangorse Lake
- Saturday: 7 Waterfalls or Pen y Fan
- Sunday: 7 Waterfalls or Llyn y Fan Fach
- Monday: Llyn y Fan Fawr or Llangorse
Each day hike can be booked separately from the drop down menu.
Seven Waterfalls Trail
Waterfall Country
(available Friday, Saturday or Sunday)
We continue with a brief road section, before a cafe’ and toilet stop, which are then followed by the largest and most impressive waterfalls of the day, Sgwd Isaf Clun-gwyn (Fall of the White Meadow), Sgwd y Pannwr (Fall of the Woollen Washer), Sgwd Isaf Clun-Gwyn (Lower Fall of the White Meadow) and Sgwd yr Eira (Waterfall of Snow). The last of which provides the highlight of the day, as we walk behind its incredible fall.
Time permitting, we may fit in a short drive to Henrhyd Falls, the highest in South Wales, with a single drop of over 90ft. Formed at the end of the last Ice Age, millions of years ago, it was famously used as the entrance to the Bat Cave in the Dark Knight Rises movie and you can actually walk behind it!
Meet Instructions
- Time: 12noon meet
- Location: Pontneddfechen village
- Parking: in the layby as you approach.
- Arrive: early to secure a parking space.
- Toilets: public toilets at start and finish.
- Walk Distance: 9 miles (hilly)
Pen y Fan Horseshoe
Bannau Brycheiniog's highest peak
(available Sunday only)
This horseshoe ridge route to Pen y Fan's magnificent 886m summit is just over 9miles long and takes around 6 hours to complete.
An early start sees us meet in Bannau Brycheiniog (Brecon Beacons) beautiful Taf Fechan Forest. The hike starts with the short flat walk along the country road leading to the disused Neuadd reservoir pump house. This spot provides an incredible view of the ridge and circuit of the four peaks ahead.
Next comes the most challenging part of the hike. A steep climb up to the Graig Fan Ddu Ridge via a long, steep flight of steps. The views become more and more magnificent during the ascent. Once at the top, a walk along the ridge takes us through moorland with the distant peaks growing slowly larger and larger until we reach the final steep climb to the first of our 4 summits, Corn Du.
On a clear day, we are met with the most magical view for miles, towering over the surrounding Welsh countryside. Spectacular views of the surrounding hills and valleys, the Bannau Brycheiniog National Park, Sugar Loaf and the Black Mountains.
After Corn Du, we drop a little, before climbing to our highest point, the impressive summit of Pen y Fan at 886m. A great place to stop for lunch, while enjoying the view on a nice day.
We continue around this circular horseshoe route with a quick descent before climbing once more to the top of the next peak, Cribyn. As we look back, the views of Pen y Fan's steep face arching around behind us is one of the most iconic in Bannau Brycheiniog.
Finally walkers have the option of either taking a well earned rest or tackling the shorter sharp out and back ascent of Fan-y-Big. This final peak is the home of the famous "Diving Board", from which the brave can take some impressively daring pictures!
We return via the Roman Road, which takes us back through the peaceful Neuadd Valley and back to the car park.
Both more challenging and far more rewarding than the short simple walk up from the main tourist car park, which the masses take at haste to the top of the highest mountain in southern Wales. This route around the U-shaped Neuadd Valley provides a far more spectacular way to truly experience the Bannau Brycheiniog (Brecon Beacons).
Meet Instructions
- Time: 8:30am meet*
- Location: Pontsticill, Merthyr Tydfil.
- Parking: Taf Fechen Forest free car park
- Arrive: early to secure a parking space.
- Toilets: none**
- Walk Distance: 9 miles (hilly)
*When you arrive, please assemble with the Get Outdoors team at the far end of the car park and check-in again at the finish. The group will be led all the way, but we would like to make sure everyone gets home safely.
** Please take a comfort break on the way; no toilets in the car park or on the walk.
Free parking, but we need to arrive early to secure parking spaces.
Difficult roads often lead to beautiful destinations
Llyn y Fan Fach
and Picws Du
(available Sunday only)
We begin our walk at the car park in Llanddeusant below Llyn y Fan Fach, setting out across open ground rather than taking the more direct, well-trodden track to the lake. Instead, we keep to the west, following a gentle ridge that rises gradually towards the mountains. Almost immediately, we feel a sense of solitude, the vast landscape stretching in every direction with little sign of human presence. The ground beneath us is a mix of short grass and scattered rocks, shaped by the glaciers that once covered these hills. The Black Mountain range was carved by ice and water over thousands of years, leaving behind the dramatic escarpments and deep valleys we see today.
Continuing our ascent, we gain height, and the towering cliffs of the glacier-shaped escarpment come more and more into view. The terrain gets steeper as we climb up to the sheer face of Fan Foel (the bald mountain). From here, the view opens up, revealing the wide sweep of the Black Mountain range to the west and the rolling ridges of the Brecon Beacons to the east. Beneath our feet, the reddish-brown sandstone tells a much older story—formed some 400 million years ago when this land lay in an ancient desert, crisscrossed by rivers that left behind layers of silt and sand. Over time, these rocks have been shaped by wind, water, and ice into the dramatic cliffs and valleys we see today.
Atop Fan Foel, the highest point on this section of the ridge, a Bronze Age burial cairn stands as a silent witness to the past. Over 3,000 years ago, people climbed to this remote summit to lay their dead to rest beneath a mound of stones, perhaps believing the spirits of their ancestors would watch over the land from here. Even now, standing by the cairn, there is a sense of connection to those who walked these hills long before us.
From Fan Foel, we follow the ridgeline to Picws Du, where the escarpment plunges steeply to the north. The contrast between the smooth, grassy slopes to the south and the sheer cliffs to the north is striking—a result of millennia of erosion shaping the land. The summit offers a perfect vantage point, with Llyn y Fan Fach glinting far below, its dark waters still and silent, tucked beneath the towering cliffs.
The lake, formed in a hollow left by retreating ice, has long captured the imagination of those who pass this way. According to legend, this is the home of the Lady of the Lake, a mystical fairy woman who emerged from the waters to marry a local farmer. She set three conditions for their marriage: he must never strike her three times. Inevitably, over the years, he did—though not in anger but through moments of misunderstanding. With the third blow, she returned to the lake, vanishing beneath its surface. Their children, however, remained and became the famed Physicians of Myddfai, healers whose knowledge of herbal medicine was passed down through generations. Some of their remedies were even recorded in medieval manuscripts, linking this remote place to a tradition of healing that endured for centuries.
We follow the shape of the escarpment high above the lake to the west, admiring the steep and almost elegant green and red sheer face that reaches all the way down into the dark waters of the lake. Once we have circled to its western edge, we begin our descent towards the lake, leaving the ridge behind. Beyond the lake, the curve of a dam stands as a reminder of more recent history. Built in the 19th century, it was designed to regulate water flow for the tinplate works in Llanelli, part of the industrial expansion that once reshaped South Wales. Now, it sits quietly in the landscape, a small mark of human engineering against the ancient rocks that surround it.
We follow the shoreline of Llyn y Fan Fach, reflecting on the stories and history held in this landscape. We leave the lake behind and follow a quiet route along the base of the escarpment. Walking beneath the towering cliffs, we get a different perspective, looking up at the rock faces that have stood for thousands of years, their surfaces worn smooth in places and jagged in others where frost and time have broken them apart.
As we reach the foot of Fan Foel once more, we turn north as we continue our descent, with sweeping views of the remote upland bogs that mark the source of the River Usk, its waters beginning their long journey towards the sea. Beyond, in the distance, we can make out the Usk Reservoir nestled among the hills, and beyond it, the broad, rolling expanse of Mynydd Myddfai, a land of open moor and quiet solitude, where the famed Physicians of Myddfai are said to have lived. It is a fitting final view, a reminder of the vast and untamed beauty that defines this landscape. This final stretch takes us back down to the car park, carrying with us the echoes of those who have passed this way before—ancient settlers, medieval healers, and generations of walkers drawn to the wild beauty of these hills.
Meet Instructions:
- Time: 9:30am
- Location: Llanddeusant
- Arrive: early to secure a parking space.
- Walk Distance: 9 miles (hilly)
- Leader: Ingrid meet our leaders.
We only regret opportunities we don't take
Llyn y Fan Fawr
Fan Foel - Fan Brycheiniog - Fan Hir
(available Friday & Monday)
Our journey begins at Tafarn-y-Garreg, a small inn tucked away in the Swansea Valley, standing at the edge of one of Wales' most breathtaking landscapes — Y Mynydd Du (the Black Mountain). From here, we step into a world shaped by fire, ice, and time itself. The vast sandstone escarpment ahead, part of the Old Red Sandstone formations that define much of the Bannau Brycheiniog / Brecon Beacons, tells the story of a landscape that was once a scorching floodplain over 350 million years ago. Over time, glaciers sculpted these sheer cliffs and deep cwms, leaving behind a dramatic wilderness of craggy ridges, glacial lakes, and sweeping moorland.
We begin by following the lower trail, where the towering rock faces of Fan Hir loom to our left. As we move along the valley floor, wild ponies graze on the open slopes, their hardy ancestors having roamed these hills for centuries. In spring and summer, the air is alive with the calls of skylarks, their spiraling songs filling the wide sky above us. Among the tufts of moorland grass, we might catch a flash of movement—a wheatear flitting between rocks or a meadow pipit hopping through the heather.
Before us lies Llyn y Fan Fawr - literally "the lake of the large summit” which is referring to Fan Brycheiniog, the peak that towers above it. Fan Brycheiniog is the highest peak in the Black Mountain range, named after the legendary 5th-century prince Brychan who ruled this region and to who’s kingdom we still refer today when we talk about the Bannau Brycheiniog - Brychan’s Mountains. Llyn y Fan Fawr is a vast glacial lake cradled beneath these cliffs, its dark waters reflecting the shifting sky. This is a place of stillness, where the wind whispers through the grass and the water laps gently at the shore. In summer, bog cotton dances in the breeze, and if we’re lucky, we may glimpse a dipper bobbing along the shoreline, searching for food beneath the water’s surface.
We continue on lower ground, skirting beneath the cliffs until we reach the foot of Fan Foel (the bald summit), where we beginn to climb up steadily. A Bronze Age burial cairn welcomes us to the summit —a quiet monument to the people who once roamed these hills some 4,000 years ago. Standing at this ancient site, it’s easy to imagine how these peaks might have been seen as sacred, their towering presence dominating the surrounding lands.
To the west we can see the shimmering dark of a second glacial lake in the distance: Llyn y Fan Fach - literally “the lake of the small summit” - which is the smaller of the two lakes, but even more famous due to the ancient legends connected with it: some say Llyn y Fan Fach was home to the Lady of the Lake, a fairy who in ancient times emerged from its waters to marry a local shepherd, giving rise to one of Wales' most loved folk tales. Her children were said to become the great physicians of Myddfai, known for their herbal wisdom, some of which is still referenced in Welsh traditions today.
From here we begin our ascent onto the high ridge, climbing steadily toward Fan Brycheiniog. The landscape here feels ancient and untouched—wide, open skies, windswept ridges, and a sense of isolation that makes this part of Wales truly special. The path follows the ridge over Fan Hir (the long summit), where we tread carefully among patches of bilberry and cloudberry, both thriving in these high-altitude conditions. On quieter days, we may hear the haunting call of a golden plover echoing across the moors, a bird that thrives in these upland habitats.The path follows the crest of the escarpment, where the sheer drop of Fan Hir falls away beside us, a thrilling and exposed ridge walk. Often we may spot red kites, ravens or peregrine falcons below us, riding the thermals along the escarpment edge.
Our final descent leads us back down toward Tafarn y Garreg, where the inviting warmth or the sunny beer garden of the pub awaits. After a day among prehistoric landscapes, soaring birds, and wild, untamed beauty, there’s no better way to end than with a well-earned drink, reflecting on the timeless magic of the Black Mountain.
Meet Instructions:
- Time: 9:30am
- Location: Tafarn-y-Garreg
- Arrive: early to secure a parking space.
- Walk Distance: 9 miles (hilly)
- Leader: Ingrid meet our leaders.
We only regret opportunities we don't take
Selecting Accommodation & Walks
Accommodation is available to book in shared houses with other members of the group and can be booked by selecting from the drop down menu near the top of this page.
You can book walks without any accommodation; book walks with your own single occupancy room; book walks with a room that you share with a partner friend or another member of the group. Booking a shared room relies on another person also making exactly the same booking in order that you have a roommate. Please let us know if you do have a particular person you would like to share with.
As the houses are reserved for the duration of our stay, it is unlikely we can accommodate anyone wanting to pay for a shorter period (might be worth checking with us by email/message). However, if you would prefer, please feel free to book your own accommodation and join us for the walks you would like to by selecting each one and adding them to your cart from the the drop-down menu.
The accommodation is self-catered, so no breakfast or other meals are included. However we hope everyone will join the group for dinner on at least one evening.
IMPORTANT INFO:
- A WHATSAPP group will be created to share info and photos on the day. In signing up to the event you are agreeing to be added to this group, which will contain other participants. This is necessary so that details can be shared in the run up to the event, including last minute changes, reminders or cancellations.
- Charity involvement: many of our walks are being run in partnership with charities. As such, sign up information is shared with the charity involved for the purpose of running the event and communicating its purpose, which is to help raise awareness and funds for the charity. By signing up, you are agreeing to receive information from Get Outdoors and the charity.
- Booking Terms & Conditions (Including cancellation policy): are found here. PLEASE READ BEFORE MAKING A BOOKING.
- Kit: Packed lunches, walking boots, multiple layers and waterproofs (including trousers!) are essential. The weather could be very cold and wet. Please visit our recommended kit list.
- While on the walk: we ask you to remain with the group and following instructions from Get Outdoors leader(s), who have the final decision in all instances.
- Parking Charges: may apply. Good idea to bring cash/change.
- Problems: on the day call Chris: 07885157903
- Dogs: are welcome on the walks, but are entirely the owner's responsibility, must have a lead and be under close control at all times. Please check your accommodation's policy.
- Livestock: If encountered do not walk too close or get between a cow and calf. If threatened, let go of your dog so it can escape and reduce the risk to yourself.
- Public rights of way: please keep to them and respect the landowner’s property at all times.
- Stiles: are often present on the route to negotiate on this type of walk.
- Countryside walking: can often include hills and uneven terrain. Our group ethos is to support everyone in group to achieve their maximum potential in terms of completing the route. As such, we endeavour to walk at a pace all participants are comfortable with. We apologise if this causes any frustration to fitter walkers.
- Health: please consult your doctor if you are at all worried about your fitness and ability to take part. Please inform the walk leaders, Get Outdoors, of any underlying health conditions that may affect your walking ability before signing.
Health & Safety Application Form:
If you have not already (or if circumstances have changed), please complete the participant health & safety form at this link, so we know how best to look after you.
Future Walk Info:
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