WHIMBREL
A lifelong Naturalist...
The road above the village of Trefil now has signs warning that its an offence to take a motor vehicle onto the 'private' road leading to the quarries.
Some very helpful quarry employees told me that the area has become a magnet for the totally irresponsible 'off-roaders' (on two and four wheels) and also the 'fly-tippers' |=@| so sadly the genuine lovers of the countryside have been punished for the actions of utterly thoughtless morons!!!
The moorland in the area is/was home to some of our most interesting (and threatened) birds; Red Grouse, Ring Ouzel, Curlew, Lapwing and a host of others. You could drive slowly right along the quarry road and pull over to scan the area for rarities such as wintering Hen Harrier or Short-eared Owl, now if you venture beyond the barrier you could be in trouble, the barrier closes the road off completely from 5pm weekdays and for most of the weekend. Of course you can still access the area on foot, but the road was very useful (but really rough) it saved a 3 mile jaunt along its length, probably even more, so I'm afraid its park in the village and leg it - that's if your fit enough! Its a big area to cover casually, you need to spend time there to do it justice.
Before I finish, I'm interested to know exactly where the existing boundary is between the vice-counties of Monmouthshire (Gwent) and Brecknock in this area, I know the border is located somewhere on the moorland above the Trefil area, so perhaps a local birder reading this could be of some help, but please don't confuse the modern county boundaries between Powys and Gwent/Monmouthshire with the old 'vice-county boundaries' that are still used for natural history recording (Watsonian Vice Counties) - Monmouthshire/Gwent is VC35 and Brecknock is VC42, and this is the border I'm interested in...anyone know for certain?
Some very helpful quarry employees told me that the area has become a magnet for the totally irresponsible 'off-roaders' (on two and four wheels) and also the 'fly-tippers' |=@| so sadly the genuine lovers of the countryside have been punished for the actions of utterly thoughtless morons!!!
The moorland in the area is/was home to some of our most interesting (and threatened) birds; Red Grouse, Ring Ouzel, Curlew, Lapwing and a host of others. You could drive slowly right along the quarry road and pull over to scan the area for rarities such as wintering Hen Harrier or Short-eared Owl, now if you venture beyond the barrier you could be in trouble, the barrier closes the road off completely from 5pm weekdays and for most of the weekend. Of course you can still access the area on foot, but the road was very useful (but really rough) it saved a 3 mile jaunt along its length, probably even more, so I'm afraid its park in the village and leg it - that's if your fit enough! Its a big area to cover casually, you need to spend time there to do it justice.
Before I finish, I'm interested to know exactly where the existing boundary is between the vice-counties of Monmouthshire (Gwent) and Brecknock in this area, I know the border is located somewhere on the moorland above the Trefil area, so perhaps a local birder reading this could be of some help, but please don't confuse the modern county boundaries between Powys and Gwent/Monmouthshire with the old 'vice-county boundaries' that are still used for natural history recording (Watsonian Vice Counties) - Monmouthshire/Gwent is VC35 and Brecknock is VC42, and this is the border I'm interested in...anyone know for certain?