Hafod Garregog is a quiet, isolated reserve.
It includes a large area of woodland established on rocky crags and
areas of wetland on low-lying land between the crags.
It is also designated the Coedydd Dyffryn Nanmor SSSI.
You can walk in some of the woods or wander down to the river.
The views from here back to the mountains are particularly
fine.
The road is quiet and has some gentle hills (up to 1:10 for
short stretches).

Photographs, ©CCW
The track leading to the river is level, and runs alongside the
Welsh Highland Railway line currently under construction.
How to get there
The reserve is located 6.5 kilometres north of Porthmadog on the
A4085 midway between Penrhyndeudraeth and Beddgelert.
There is informal car parking at the end of the tarmac road
which leaves the A4085 at Pont Talyrni, about 5.5km south of
Beddgelert. Limited car parking also exists at Hafod y Llyn Uchaf
farmyard, which you can reach from a minor road leaving the A4085
on a hairpin bend about two miles south of Beddgelert.
Public
Transport
A bus runs along the A4085 from Penrhyndeudreath to Beddgelert. For
more information contact Traveline Cymru on 0871 2002233 or visit
www.traveline-cymru.org.uk
Look out for details of the new Welsh
Highland Railway service from Caernarfon (and eventually
Porthmadog). The track is currently being built and more
information will be available nearer completion.
The National Trust owns the reserve (along with the adjacent
farmland which includes the Glaslyn river) and manages it with
CCW.
Contact the National Trust Welsh Regional Office on 01492 860123.
You can also contact CCW’s Northern Team via our enquiries
helpline, 0845 1306229, e-mail, enquiries@ccw.gov.uk or write to us
under the ‘Contact the team’ section on this website.
Wildlife
Photo,©CCW
There is a wide range of habitats here within a relatively small
area, supporting a wide variety of plants and animals.
The woodland is a fine example of the Atlantic sessile oakwoods
characteristic of this part of Wales. Birch and rowan mix with the
oak in places and there is a sparse understorey of hazel and
holly.
The ground layer consists of flowers such as sweet vernal grass,
sheep’s fescue, cow-wheat, bluebell, bracken and a variety of
mosses and liverworts and lichens. The wood is also important for
its diversity of tree lichens.
There are also areas of acidic mire. Plants here include
bogmyrtle. In less acidic areas there are bog-mosses, sundews, bog
asphodel and white-beak sedge.
Photo by Mike Bailey, ©CCW
The reserve is also notable for its variety of insects, some of
which are extremely rare, such as the silver studded blue butterfly
and the uncommon damselfly Ceriagron tenellum.
RELATED ARTICLES...
SEE ALSO...
Countryside Access Map
for a more detailed
map of the area showing access information including:
Promoted routes, national trails, and CROW access land.
Protected Sites
Map
for a more detailed map of the area, also showing
special sites including:
national parks, reserves and Areas of outstanding natural beauty
(AONB).
OTHER WEBSITES...
Traveline Cymru
Traveline Cymru, your one-stop shop, in Wales, for bus, coach and
rail journey planning and timetable information.