8 Sustainable Walks
Denbighshire is a prime walking destination. It’s probably the best way to see our iconic countryside and give yourself the time to truly relax.
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Interesting facts, town trails, and leaflets focusing on areas of interest or where to go for the best sporting facilities.
Denbighshire is a prime walking destination. It’s probably the best way to see our iconic countryside and give yourself the time to truly relax.
A couple of centuries ago Rhyl was an obscure fishing village on the North Wales coast.
The little market town of Corwen has punched above its weight for many centuries.
Llangollen has long been one of Wales’s most popular inland resorts – and no wonder.
Prestatyn has been one of the most famous seaside resorts in North Wales since the trains first arrived in 1848.
This is a tale of two towns. One is the great walled garrison of Edward I with its iconic castle, ruthlessly built on top of an ancient Welsh fortress.
This strategic spot beside a ford of the River Clwyd, just three miles from the sea, has been a flashpoint in Welsh history since 795AD.
St Asaph – population about 4,000 – has always thought of itself as a city but the rest of Britain didn’t catch on until the Queen awarded it civic honours during her Diamond Jubilee.
Writer and former National Trust chairman Simon Jenkins describes Ruthin as “the most charming small town in Wales”.