Mynydd Epynt - Written Guide
Mynydd Epynt - Written Guide
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Contents
Introduction 4
Route overview 5
Safety notice 5
Practical information 6
Detailed route maps and stopping points 8
Important information about navigation 10
Alternative route 10
Commentary 11
Credits 34
© The Royal Geographical Society with the Institute of British Geographers, London, 2013
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One place, two identities
Explore a spectacular mountain plateau in mid Wales
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Route overview
Safety notice
This walk takes place in an active military training area so you might see
or hear soldiers on training exercises. Don’t be afraid of them, but neither
should you interrupt their training activities.
It is safe to walk in this part of the training area as live ammunition is
not used here but if you do see some military debris on the ground please
DO NOT touch it, move it or take it away.
Up to date information about firing times is available online:
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/sennybridge-firing-notice
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Practical information
6
Terrain The route follows a mixture of gravel tracks, defined footpaths,
undefined footpaths across rough ground, and tarmac roads. It can
be boggy in places and there are some streams to ford.
Conditions Most of the walk is on a mountain plateau which can be windy and
exposed; the weather can change quickly so take suitable clothing
and footwear.
Best time of This walk is suitable all year round but we only recommend doing it
year in fair weather conditions when visibility is good as the route crosses
some open moorland with few landmarks for navigation.
Opening times The Epynt Visitor Centre is unmanned but it is unlocked every
morning by the MoD and closed again at night.
Suitable for Dogs – Keep under close control or on a lead because sheep roam
freely along the entire route
Wheelchairs and pushchairs - A short circuit from the Visitor Centre
is suitable. See page 10 for details.
Refreshments There are no refreshments en route. Take plenty of provisions and
water as the walk is long. The scenic dingle (Stop 8) is a good location
for a picnic. Sometimes there is an ice cream van at Garth Viewpoint
(Stop 13).
Toilets There is a toilet at the Epynt Visitor Centre at the beginning and end
of the walk; there are no other facilities en route.
Tourist Brecon Tourist Information Centre
information Cattle Market car park, Brecon, Powys, LD3 9DA
Builth Wells Tourist Information Centre
The Groe car park, Builth Wells, Powys LD2 3BT
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Detail of first and last part of route
8
Detail of middle section of route
9
Important note about navigation
Most of the walk (Stops 3 to 13) follows the Epynt Way. Although
this is a designated route, it is not shown on Ordnance Survey
maps and there are not always clear footpaths on the ground.
Wooden marker posts are located every 100 to
200 metres along the route to guide you.
Six figure grid references are also provided for
each stopping point.
We strongly recommended that you obtain
maps and directions for the Epynt Way in
advance.
The Epynt Way Official Route Guide can be purchased from
the local Tourist Information Centres (Brecon or Builth Wells)
or directly from the Epynt Way Association for £4.99.
Alternatively you can download the maps and directions from
http://www.epyntway.org/route_from_1_to_2.htm
Alternative route
For those with less time, limited abilities or who prefer an easier walk, we recommend
a short 1 mile circuit.
Follow the track from the Visitor Centre (Stop 1) up to the observation posts (Stop 3)
from where there is an excellent view of the surrounding landscape.
This route along a track has a gentle gradient and is suitable for all ages and abilities,
including wheelchairs and pushchairs. There are also 3 sets of picnic tables and
information boards along the way.
It is also possible to drive the last part of the walk route in reverse from the Visitor
Centre (Stop 17) to Garth Viewpoint (Stop 13). Along the way you can stop at the Drovers
Arms (Stop 16) from where you can apprecicate the openness of the moorland. There
is a parking area as well as picnic tables at the viewpoint.
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1. Welcome to Sennybridge Training Area
Epynt Visitor Centre
Directions 1
When you are ready, go down the driveway of the Visitor Centre, over the cattle grid and
stop by the road.
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2. The dividing line
B4519 road by Epynt Visitor Centre
Directions 2
Turn left onto the B4519 road. Almost immediately turn left again through a gate. Follow
the track steadily uphill for about 600 metres passing two visitor viewpoints each with picnic
benches and an information board. Shortly before the track reaches its highest point, it
divides. Take the left track which takes you up to a third viewpoint with picnic benches and
several information boards. This is marked on the OS map as ‘Observation Posts’.
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3. Upland country
Observation posts
For example, the long fingers of high ground separating the densely populated South Wales valleys
are quite different from the steep scarp faces of the Brecon Beacons; the rolling moorland of the
Cambrian Mountains stands in contrast to the craggy summits of Snowdonia.
This upland area of mid-Wales is called Mynydd Epynt. Mynydd means mountain in Welsh and
we’ll find out more about what Epynt means later. This landscape has been sculpted over millions
of years by different forces.
Underlying this area is a type of rock called Silurian shale. It was formed when this area was under
the sea. Over time, movements of the earth’s crust caused the layers of rock to crack, crumple and
fold into different shapes. Then came the ice ages when the movement of glaciers eroded the rock
in some places and deposited vast amounts of sediment in others. So the landscape that you see
today has been shaped by a geological drama that has occurred over almost incomprehensible
measures of time.
Directions 3
Take the track away from the viewpoint along the ridge of the hill to a fingerpost. Turn
left following the sign for the Epynt Way which takes you downwards to the left to cross a
stream and then traverses diagonally right up the hillside for about 500 metres towards a
plantation of trees. Stop when you reach the corner of the plantation.
Note: At the fingerpost, the walk route joins the Epynt Way which follows the edge of the
military training area, mostly just inside the boundary fence. We will be following the Epynt
Way for the next 8 miles. There are wooden posts every 100-200 metres and you should
use these to guide you. Full directions are not given in this guide.
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4. Forests and woods
Corner of first plantation
Although we’ve just arrived at the edge of a wood, this upland environment is largely a treeless
place. The poor soil quality and high winds make it difficult for tree species to thrive on uplands so
they tend to cluster in the more sheltered combes and valleys that are cut by streams and rivers.
However, look on the Ordnance Survey map of
this area and you will see a number of small green
rectangles of woodland.
These woods are not remnants of ancient forest that
covered this area but rather have been deliberately
planted by the military.
They provide strategic markers, shelter, camouflage
Rectangular plantations scattered across the moorland and cover for troops during exercises in contrast to
© Ordnance Survey the otherwise open terrain.
Elsewhere in Wales, in other upland areas that are not owned by the military, there has been large
scale plantation of trees called blanket forestation by the Forestry Commission.
During the First World War, Britain had difficulties in meeting the demand for timber so the Forestry
Commission was founded in 1919 with the aim of rebuilding and maintaining a strategic timber
reserve.
The Second World War again placed a huge demand on our national timber reserves with
Commission forests producing an estimated 51 million cubic feet of wood between 1939 and 1945.
In the aftermath of the war, the Forestry Commission embarked upon a great replenishment and
expansion of its forests, particularly in upland areas where the land was not suitable for agriculture.
Dense tree plantations were established across Wales in the 1950s and 60s.
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These are managed as commercial forests and are planted with evergreen trees such as conifers.
The trees are fast growing and have straight trunks providing a renewable source of good timber;
in contrast our native deciduous trees are much slower growing so are less suitable for commercial
exploitation.
Again look on the OS map, particularly to
the west of the training area, to see these
very different types of forest.
Blanket forestation has a big visual impact
on the skylines and views of otherwise open,
naturally un-forested upland areas so it is
not a popular practice.
Furthermore, the dense planting of single
Area of blanket forestry to the west of SENTA
© Ordnance Survey species does not encourage biodiversity.
Other than these small patches of trees, military areas have remained relatively free of blanket
forestation in comparison to other uplands.
Directions 4
Follow the edge of the plantation and go through a gap in the stone wall at the far corner.
The route then traverses grassland towards the bottom edge of the next large plantation.
After going along the bottom side of the next plantation, go round the far corner and then
diagonally left up the hillside until you reach a gravel track. Turn right onto the gravel track
which immediately bends round to the left. Follow the track for about 500 metres until you
reach the highest point where there is a trig point and flag post.
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5. Empty and exposed
Trig point on gravel track
Did you know that military land makes up one
per cent of our entire national territory?
Much of this military land is located in uplands
which are ideal because the open spaces allow
large scale troop manoeuvres.
For example, troops were trained on Dartmoor
in the early 1800s when Britain was at war with
France and the United States of America.
Through the nineteenth century the War
Open spaces away from towns and cities
Office began to lease land for ongoing training are ideal for military training
– parts of Dartmoor were leased from the © Graham Horn, Geograph (CCL)
Duchy of Cornwall and parts of Salisbury Plain
were purchased from 1897 onwards.
The military added to its landholdings bit by bit through the early decades of the twentieth century
with the two world wars accelerating the process. The collection of land owned by the military
is called the Defence Estate and is managed by the Defence Infrastructure Organisation. The
Defence Estate today continues to be a mixture of lease and freehold land.
This area of Mynydd Epynt was established as a military training area in 1940. It was identified as
being particularly suitable for several related reasons.
First the natural features of the landscape
– a highland plateau – provided the open
ground for testing machinery and weaponry.
Second the location – in mid-Wales away
from large towns and cities – meant that
military manoeuvres could be carried out
without bothering too many people, but it is
not so remote as to be inaccessible.
Third the predominant weather – including
rain, snow and strong winds – provided
tough conditions to test the mettle of troops
Soldier crossing a stream at SENTA
Stuart Bingham © Crown Copyright
and create a range of fighting conditions.
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The bleak moorlands were particularly useful in preparing soldiers for similar environments in the
Falkland Islands and the testing conditions were also used to prepare British soldiers for recent
engagements in Afghanistan.
Not only are British troops trained here. Soldiers from other NATO countries are sent to be trained
on these Welsh mountains. The weather here is renowned among troops for being particularly
testing.
Directions 5
From the trig point, follow the track downhill for about 350 metres. Where a track joins
from the left, keep to the right. Immediately before the cattle grid onto the B4520 road,
turn along the track on the left. Go between two plantations. At the far end you can see
down the hillside where there is a pond and a building that used to be a roadside pub.
The route traverses left down the hillside for about 400 metres to a flat area of ground at the
bottom. Follow the track uphill at the other side of the flat area. A short way up the track, the
Epynt Way bears off to the right onto the top of a knoll. From the knoll follow the marker posts
down the other side and over to the left.
The path crosses over a track and goes up the hillside to a plantation. Go through the
plantation and exit at a metal gate at the far side. Go right around the plantation and follow
the path across grassland to a steep ravine of Nant Bwch. Go down the ravine, cross the
bridge, and climb up the other side. Follow the path across the grassland (there may be a
few streams to cross here) to a metal gate which leads into farmland.
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6. Unimproved grassland
Gate into field after crossing ravine of Nant Bwch
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The military land is managed in a very different
way. It is classified as ‘unimproved grassland’.
For centuries, local hill farmers grazed their
sheep on these uplands but did not interfere
with the land in any other way by ploughing
or fertilising.
After the arrival of the military, they allowed
grazing to continue as it provided a cheap and
natural way of maintaining short grass which
is good for training as it allows soldiers and
machines to move around easily. Sheep grazing the unimproved grassland
inside the boundary fence
© Marianna Dudley
Unimproved grassland is also highly valued by
conservationists because of the high density
of plants and wildlife it can support.
Much unimproved grassland has been lost due to the intensification of agriculture and building on
former farmland so remaining areas like these are very significant as they provide rare habitats for
some equally rare species of plants and animal, as we shall see in due course.
Unimproved grassland
© Graham Horn, Geograph (CCL) / Jenny Lunn
Directions 6
Go through the metal gate and follow the path across the bottom side of the field by the
ditch and hedgerow until you reach a track. Turn left along the track and follow for just
under 1 kilometre. Stop where the track skirts around the left side of a bog.
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7. Bogged down
Peat bog beside track
Directions 7
Continue along the track. After a short distance there is a fingerpost and the track crosses
a stream. A short way further along the track the Epynt Way bears left up the hillside
(shortly before a metal gate).
Follow the path up and across the hillside of mainly grass and bracken for about 1½ kilometres.
It is boggy in places and there are several streams to cross. Keep following the Epynt Way
marker posts and ignore the signposts for other paths and tracks. The route passes through
a few modern metal gates.
After passing by the end of a plantation on the left the path descends steeply into a
sheltered valley. There is a stream at the bottom and this is a pleasant spot for a break.
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8. Haunt of the horse
Scenic valley
Directions 8
When you are ready to move on, climb up the other side of the valley. Follow the path
for about 500 metres as it traverses upwards across the hillside. Stop at the highest point
(marked on the map as 400 metres) near a plantation from where there are expansive views
down the Blaen Duhonw valley.
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9. Special status
Hillside above Blaen Dunhow valley
The unimproved grassland and the blanket
bog that we saw earlier are both important
habitats for native species.
Several areas within the military training area
have been designated as a Site of Special
Scientific Interest (SSSI).
This is a conservation designation that
legally protects areas from damage through
development or unsustainable management.
Twelve per cent of land in Wales is protected Moss on a tree
© Marianna Dudley
in this way (in contrast to seven per cent in
England).
Many SSSIs are internationally important for wildlife so they are also designated as Special Areas
of Conservation (SAC) protecting them even further.
SACs are part of the European Habitat Directive which has created a network of important, high
quality sites across Europe that are protected for the quality of their habitat and of individual
species.
Sennybridge Training Area has been awarded SAC protection which goes to show what an
exceptional landscape this is with such rich habitat and species thriving here.
Directions 9
Follow the marker posts as the route traverses across and steadily down the hillside. After
about 700 metres you reach the bottom and cross the stream, Blaen Duhonw.
Turn right up the gravel track. After a short distance the footpath bears off to the right
following a more level route below the ascending track. After passing a field boundary the
path climbs the hillside up to the left, past a fingerpost and through some trees. Then it
traverses the hillside to the right to a small ravine.
Go carefully down the ravine and up the other side. The path then climbs steadily with a
wall and field boundary of Cae’r Mynach farm on the right. Stop part way up this grassy
hillside.
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10. Fabulous fungi
Hillside above Cae’r Mynach farm
At the last stop we heard about the SSSI and SAC
designation that protects particular habitats and
species.
One of the rare species thriving here on the
Sennybridge Training Area are waxcap fungi.
(hygrocybe).
They are found in drier stretches of grassland
like this hillside rather than wet and boggy areas.
They depend on nutrient-poor grassland but
disappear immediately if fertiliser is added to
Hygrocybe coccinea and Hygrocybe virginea
the soil. © Rosemary Winnall, Wikimedia (CCL)
Waxcaps are lovely, colourful fungi. The ‘fruiting’ season runs from late August to November with
the peak time here in October. If you are here during this late summer or autumn period look out
for little jewels of red, purple, pink and yellow studding the grass beneath your feet.
Directions 10
After a short distance the path joins a gravel track. Turn right along the track and follow it
for about 1 kilometre. The track is relatively level and starts to curve round to the left. Stop
when you have a steep escarpment and views to the North on your right side.
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11. Opening up
Track at top of escarpment
that allows public access to the countryside. The Act provided the British public with a right to
roam on open, uncultivated and upland areas – a right that walking groups such as the Rambler’s
Association had been campaigning for since the mid-nineteenth century.
Military areas have unique access restrictions, mainly due to safety issues of live weapons and
ammunition in the soil, but the Defence Estate committed to increase access to militarised areas.
In the last decade they have worked hard to open up some military land for more public access
and recreation yet without limiting training activity.
Sennybridge Training Area was identified from among the various military sites in Britain as having
the greatest potential for improving public access. Part of the reason for this was the proximity
to the town of Brecon and the Brecon Beacons National Park, both of which are popular tourist
areas. Sennybridge Training Area has pioneered the provision of better public access and the
centrepiece of this strategy is the Epynt Way.
The Epynt Way is a permissive footpath and bridleway which traces the edge of the training area
and, in places, takes you right inside it. It was conceived and launched in 2003 with support from
Powys County Council as well as walkers and other local recreation groups. The entire Epynt Way
is 50 miles (80 kilometres) long and our walk follows it for 12 miles around the northern section of
the training area and this is the most northerly point.
The beauty of the Epynt Way lies in its simplicity. Military areas are dangerous by their very nature
and it is very difficult to provide full public access when they are constantly being used for training.
By tracing the edge of the training area, the Epynt Way keeps walkers and riders a safe distance
from the central impact zone (where the live ammunition is used) yet gives them expansive views
of the training area and a really good experience of being in a militarised landscape.
Directions 11
Continue along the track along the top of the escarpment for just over a kilometre. Stop
near where a track comes down from the left.
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12. Epynteering
Track along top of escarpment
At the last stop, we found out about the
creation of the Epynt Way in response to
calls to open up more of the countryside for
public access and recreation.
The Epynt Way is designed for walkers and
riders and has information points, parking
areas, horse unloading and holding areas,
and viewing points dotted along the way.
A group of local people who use the Epynt
Way regularly have named themselves the
‘Epynteers’. Horse corral provided for riders using the Epynt Way
© Marianna Dudley
They aim to encourage others to use the Way and provide information about it. You may encounter
some of them during your walk. I have always found them happy to stop and chat about the
landscape and point out interesting features. And upon completion of this walk, feel free to anoint
yourself a new Epynteer!
The Epynt Way has been a great success and is seen by the Defence Estate as a shining example
of opening up access to military landscapes. It has received 2 Silver Otters, the award given for
outstanding contributions to conservation, public access and heritage on the Defence Estate.
I expect that more paths like this will be introduced over the next few years at other training areas
in the UK, allowing us to experience more landscapes in Britain that have previously been out of
bounds to the public.
Directions 12
Continue along the track. After a short distance the Epynt Way veers right off the track and
traverses the hillside. It follows the contour for about 1 kilometre with the spectacular Cwm
Graig-ddu down to the right.
Pass the bottom corner of a plantation and follow the path up the hillside for another half
kilometre to the Garth viewpoint where there are picnic benches and a car park. If you are
in luck, there will be an ice cream van parked here and you can enjoy a well-earned rest
and refreshment break!
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13. Soaring above
Garth viewpoint
the edge of the steep escarpment. This is one of the best places in the country to see Red Kites in
the wild.
Red Kites were actually persecuted as vermin for centuries. They are predominantly predators,
feeding on a range of small mammals, amphibians and birds but they also scavenge and are
known to feed on sheep carcasses. Today research has shown that they wait for larger birds such
as buzzards and ravens to open up the carcasses for them but their association with dead livestock
is likely to have contributed to their reviled status.
By the late eighteenth century they were extinct in England
and Scotland although a few breeding pairs survived in
rural mid-Wales.
Here, the rarity of the birds prevented them from being
seen as vermin and instead they became valued as
the symbolic ‘bird of Wales’. Generations of farmers,
landowners and the rural community unofficially
protected these last few birds.
In the past 20 years the number of Red Kites has soared
and the birds are now a common sight here.
Elsewhere in England and Scotland their numbers are
increasing too following re-introduction programmes
Red Kite
© Tony Hisgett, Wikimedia (CCL) using birds brought over from Sweden and Spain.
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The Ministry of Defence plays a role in safeguarding the birds on its
lands. In fact, in 1993 the RSPB asked the military to help protect
vulnerable nest sites. The 160th (Wales) Brigade stepped in with a
military operation.
Hides were constructed and soldiers posted around the clock to
keep watch over the nests, ready to apprehend ‘enemy forces’ – in
this case egg thieves. The operation was also used as training for
surveillance duties in Northern Ireland.
The mission succeeded in protecting the birds. Chicks hatched in
all three nests and the RSPB wrote to thank the Brigade. This is one
example of how the military and conservation can complement
one another.
Two Red Kite nestlings
© Buteo, Wikimedia (CCL)
In case poor weather obscures your view of the spectacular Cwm Graig-ddu from Garth Viewpoint (left)
here is what it looks like (right)!
© Peter Evans / Richard, Geograph (CCL)
Directions 13
With your back to the viewpoint, turn left along the B4519 road. Stop after a short distance
where a gravel track joins the road from the left.
Note: This is the last leg of the walk (about 3 miles) and will follow the road all the way back
to the Visitor Centre. Take care as you walk along the road as some people drive rather too
fast for a winding country road. Stick to the verges where possible. Also remember that
the land to the right (southeast) of the road is a Live Firing Area and must not be entered.
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14. Rally together
B4519
Directions 14
Continue along the road as it descends gradually. At the lowest point it crosses the
headwaters of Blaen Duhonw. Follow the road upwards and round the corner until you
reach a building on the right side which is marked on the OS map as ‘Ffrwd-wen’.
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15. The end of an era
Ffrŵd-wen, B4519
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The evictions were made in the name of wartime
sacrifice although there were more vociferous
protests by the Welsh Nationalist Party who
saw the isolated hill-farming communities
as important cradles of Welsh language and
culture that were becoming threatened as the
twentieth century progressed.
On the side of this building you can see a sign
that gives the original Welsh name of the farm
that stood here, Ffrwd-wen.
The ruins of Babell chapel which once served
the community of Cwm Cilieni
© Graham Horn, Geograph (CCL)
In fact many of the farms in the area have such
signs after a campaign by the Fellowship for
Reconciliation in Wales, a pacifist organisation that
protests against the ongoing training of military
troops here. The MoD permitted these signs to be
put up.
Directions 15
Continue along the road as it ascends gradually. Stop at the highest point where, on the
right side amidst some trees, is another building which is marked on the OS map as ‘Drovers
Arms’.
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16. Hardy inhabitants
Drovers Arms, B4519
Caroline Evans on the doorstep of the Drovers Arms The Drovers Arms today,
which she ran with her husband, Thomas requisitioned in 1940 and used as a troop shelter
By kind permission of Hilary Williams © Graham Horn, Geograph (CCL)
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As we have already heard, the requisition of
this land by the military led to the eviction of
the local population.
However, farmers on land just outside the
military zone were permitted to graze their
sheep on the training area.
As we have already discovered, sheep are an
effective means of keeping the grass short
which is better for military training.
This practice continues to this day. Sheep guarding a military access point
© Graham Horn, Geograph (CCL)
Unlike civilians and military personnel, sheep are free to roam the entire area, including the central
impact zone where shells are fired. They occasionally pay for this freedom, though.
The Ministry of Defence keeps records of sheep deaths. In 2005, for example, a total of 51 sheep
were lost – 20 of these on the firing ranges and 31 were on the roads.
In the firing line! Sheep grazing in sight of a firing range (left) and in front of fake tanks (right)
© Marianna Dudley / Nigel Davies, Geograph (CCL)
Directions 16
Continue along the road as it descends gradually until you reach the Visitor Centre on the
left side.
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17. One place, two identities
Epynt Visitor Centre
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Credits
The RGS-IBG would like to thank the following people and organisations for their assistance in
producing this Discovering Britain walk:
• Marianna Dudley for researching and writing the walk, providing the commentary and taking
photographs
• Jenny Lunn for editing the walk materials, acting as narrator and providing photographs
• Richard Brooks (Senior Environmental Advisor, Access and Recreation, Defence Infrastructure
Organisation) and James Nevitt (Environmental Advisor, Access and Recreation, Defence
Infrastructure Organisation) for advice on access issues on the Defence Estate
• The Ministry of Defence for permission to use images of soldiers training on SENTA
• Hilary Williams for kindly sharing pictures of her Great Grandmother, Caroline Evans, who ran
the Drovers Arms
• Anne Burgess, Graham Horn, Ian Nadin, Joshua Folks, Nigel Davies, Peter Evans, Quartl,
Richard, Rosemary Winnall, Tim Cole and Tony Higgett for additional photographs
• The Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) for providing funding for the production
of this walk under the programme ‘Enhancing the Role of Arts and Humanities Perspectives on
Environmental Values and Change: Policy, Practice and Public Discourses’
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