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OUTSIDE

A good walk: Llanvihangel Crucorney and the Skirrid in Monmouthshire

How hard is it? 6½ miles; strenuous, some stumbly parts

The summit of Ysgyryd Fawr
The summit of Ysgyryd Fawr
ALAMY
The Times

The River Severn’s estuary was at a fantastically low tide as we crossed the “new” bridge on a day of no cloud whatsoever. Looking seawards through the stroboscopic flicker of the bracing wires, we could see the tidal outcrop of the English stones fully exposed and slathered in red mud.

Downriver the little hump of Denny Island off Portishead stood marooned in a huge desert of sand. Other sand and mud banks lay around the widening tideway like beached whales.

We were heading to Llanvihangel Crucorney, a place name whose sound put the immortal walking writer John Hillaby in mind of “a toy train scampering over points”. Llanvihangel Crucorney lies in the River Monnow valley that forms the eastern boundary of the Black Mountains and Brecon Beacons. It’s a great jumping-off point for walks westwards into those mountains, but today we were aiming east to climb the Skirrid (Ysgyryd Fawr, the “big split one”), a tall hill that lies north-south with its head cocked and spine raised like an alert old dog.

The Skirrid Inn
The Skirrid Inn
DAVID MUSCROFT/GETTY IMAGES

The Skirrid is made of tough old red sandstone lying in a heavy lump on top of thin layers of weaker mudstone — hence its history of slippage. We came up to it in cold wind and brilliant sunshine across fields of sheep, skirting its western flank through scrub woods, gorse bushes blooming yellow and holly trees in a blaze of scarlet berries, with the dark purple crags of the northern end hanging over little rugged passes of landslide rocks fallen in a jumble.

The ascent is short, steep and stepped, but it’s the sort of “starter mountain” that families with six-year-olds can manage. Many were out — mums, dads, children, students, “maturer” folk such as us. Once at the peak in this unbelievably clear weather we gasped to see the landscape laid out in pin-sharp detail a thousand feet below and 50 miles off — Malverns, Black Mountains; farmlands rising and falling towards the Midlands and Gloucestershire; the slanting tabletops of Pen y Fan and Cribyn over in the Brecon Beacons; Cotswolds, Mendip, Exmoor; the south Wales coast trending round into Pembrokeshire.

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The yellow flowers of a gorse bush
The yellow flowers of a gorse bush
ALAMY

Nearer at hand a grey streak of softly glimmering sea showed the tide rising in the Severn Estuary past Brean Down’s promontory, the slight disc of Flat Holm and the hump of her sister island Steep Holm, their lower edges lost in mist so that they looked like floating islands in some fabulous sea.

Directions

Start
Skirrid Mountain Inn, Llanvihangel Crucorney, Abergavenny NP7 8DH (OS ref SO 326206)

Getting there
Bus: X3 (Hereford-Abergavenny). Road: Llanvihangel Crucorney is on the A465 (Abergavenny-Hereford)

Walk
(OS Explorer OL13): Opposite church, lane (gateposts) to cross A465. Down drive; right at wall (325204); follow Beacons Way/BW arrow waymarks. Pass wood-framed barn; in 100m, right (328202, BW, gate). Follow BW across fields to lane at Pen-y-Parc (336192). Right; beyond “Steppes” house, left (332191, stile); follow BW to foot of Skirrid (333186). Right on path along west side of Skirrid to rejoin BW at southern foot of mountain (327169). Follow BW up to Skirrid summit (331183). Return; in 200m, sharp left beside hollow (331181); path descends to north foot (333185). Retrace BW back to lane at Steppes (332191). Left; in ½ mile, opposite Llwyn Franc, right (325190, gate, fingerpost “Crossways”). Follow hedge on right to gate/stile (325192). Half-left across field, crossing Great Llwyn Franc drive (324193); on down to Crossways House (323200) and Llanvihangel Crucorney.

Lunch/accommodation
Skirrid Mountain Inn, Llanvihangel Crucorney (01873 890258, skirridmountaininn.co.uk)

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More information
Abergavenny tourist information centre (01873 853254, visitwales.com)

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