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Encyclopedia > Aberdovey

Aberdyfi (English: Aberdovey) is a village on the estuary of the River Dyfi in Gwynedd, Wales. The village was founded around the shipbuilding industry, but is known best known as a seaside resort. Attractions in the village include the Plas Penhelig Gardens and a yacht club.


While the town center is the seafront, yacht club, pier and beach, the town itself stretches back from the coast and up the steep hillside. The town lies in the midst of typical Welsh coast scenery (steep green hills and sheep farms). It is four miles from Tywyn, on the north bank of the Dyfi estuary, with commanding views of Snowdon, Cadair Idris, Aran Fawddwy and Plynlimon.


Aberdovey is still a popular tourist attraction, with many returning holidaymakers, especially from the metropolitan areas of England, including West Midlands, which is less than 100 miles east. Popular activities, apart from spending time on the beach, include many watersports, such as windsurfing, sailing, and canoeing on the estuary.


The village was the subject of the folk song, The Bells of Aberdovey (Welsh: Clychau berdyfi). The song refers to the legend of a submerged former kingdom under Cardigan Bay (Seithennin, the drunkard, having created the bay itself), and its bells which can, they say, be heard ringing beneath the water. The composer is unknown, but the words were written by John Ceiriog Hughes, during the 19th century. The same legend also inspired a Victorian era-novel The Misfortunes of Elphin (1829), by Thomas Love Peacock. The drowned kingdom of the legend also plays a major role in Silver on the Tree, the last book of The Dark is Rising by Susan Cooper, parts of which are set in Aberdyfi.


External link

  • The Dovey Inn (http://www.doveyinn.com), Aberdovey's main pub



  Results from FactBites:
 
Aberdovey (165 words)
Aberdovey is a seaside village of Merionethshire[?], North Wales, on the Cambrian railway[?].
The village was immortalised by the folk song, The Bells of Aberdovey (in Welsh, Clychau Aberdyfi).
The song refers to the legend of a submerged former kingdom under Cardigan Bay[?] (Seithennin, the drunkard, having created the bay itself), and its bells which can, they say, be heard ringing beneath the water.
Aberdovey and Harlech - Golf in Wales (1456 words)
England’s most celebrated golf writer Bernard Darwin wrote of witnessing as a child the construction of the course in the 1880’s when his uncles sent him to a shop in town to buy flower pots which they buried in the ground for the holes, the general locations of which are still in use today.
Aberdovey is a town where they cherish their traditions of the game, and where they’ll welcome any other golfer who does likewise.
Getting back on the train at Aberdovey, the little train hugs the lovely coastline, stopping at several picturesque family vacation destinations, with the mountains reaching straight down to long stretches of white sand, and clusters of sailboats dotting every harbor.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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