Self Catering, Anglesey
Many people like to get self catering accommodation on the Welsh island of Anglesey so they can have a place to stay while on vacation. Some may want to stay at large accomodation or small accomodation. Some may want to stay at luxury or cheap accommodation. They may want to stay at self catering saccommodation in a specfic part of the island. Some may want to stay at well known tourist regions on the island. They may want to see the tourist attractions of the region.
Many people like to get self catering accommodation on the Welsh island of Anglesey so they can have a place to stay while on vacation.
Anglesey is an island and principal area off the northwest coast of Wales, with a predominantly Welsh speaking population. It is connected to the mainland by two bridges spanning the Menai Strait: the original Menai Suspension Bridge (carrying the A5), designed by Thomas Telford in 1826; and the newer reconstructed Britannia Bridge (originally designed by Robert Stephenson); which carries the A55 and the North Wales Coast Railway line.
Anglesey is a relatively low-lying island with low hills such as Parys Mountain, Cadair Mynachdy ("chair of the monastery"; or Monachdy); there is a Nanner, "convent", not far away), Mynydd Bodafon and Holyhead Mountain. The island is separated from the Welsh mainland by Menai Strait, which at its narrowest point is about 250 meters wide.
There are a few natural lakes mostly in the west, such as Llyn Llywenan, the largest natural lake on the island, and Cors Cerrig y Daran, but rivers are few and small.
Llyn Llywenan (English: Yew Tree Lake) is a lake in western Anglesey, Wales found just over a kilometre north of the village of Bodedern and 9 kilometres east of the town of Holyhead. This does however make it the largest natural lake on the island (although Llyn Alaw and Llyn Cefni are larger they are man made).
Afon Cefni is one of the major rivers on the island of Anglesey, Wales. It is 16.9 kilometres long. The river starts at the Llyn Cefni in the centre of the island and then runs south through the county town of Llangefni. Just north of the A55 the river turns and flows south-west. It passes through the flatlands of the Malltraeth Marshes, where the river course was altered into canal in 1824. Finally it flows into the Irish Sea at Malltraeth Sands in the south-west of the island.
Anglesey hosted the National Eisteddfod in 1999, 1983, and 1957.
Penmon is a promontory, parish and community on the south-east tip of Anglesey, North Wales, about three miles east of the town of Beaumaris. The name comes from the Welsh word "pen" (which can mean "head", "end" or "promontory") and "Môn", which is the Welsh word for Anglesey. It is the site of an historic monastery and associated 12th century church. Walls near the well next to the church may be part of the oldest remaining Christian building in Wales. Penmon also has an award-winning beach and the Anglesey Coastal Path follows its shores. Quarries in Penmon have provided stone for many important buildings and structures, including Birmingham Town Hall and the two bridges that cross the Menai Strait. The area is popular with locals and visitors alike for its monuments, tranquillity, bracing air and fine views of Snowdonia to the south across the Menai Straits.
Cemlyn Bay is a bay on the northwest coast of Anglesey, North Wales, approximately 2.5 km west of Wylfa nuclear power station, within the parish of Llanfairynghornwy. Separated from the bay by a shingle beach is a brackish lagoon, which is fed by a number of small streams. A weir at the western (Bryn Aber) end of the beach regulates the lagoon's water level.
Traeth Coch (Welsh for Red Beach) is a wide sandy bay and an area of outstanding natural beauty on the east coast of the island of Anglesey in Wales. The bay is also known in English as Red Wharf Bay and lies between the villages of Pentraeth and Benllech. Each year the Red Wharf Bay Sailing Club Anglesey Offshore Dinghy Race takes place from Beaumaris to Traeth Bychan. A race over 14 miles up the Menai Straits and down the Anglesey coast. It is an exhilarating sail. There was once a railway line which terminated at the bay, the Red Wharf Bay branch line, which left the Anglesey Central Railway at Pentre Berw.
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