With a renewed enthusiasm for photography and local history, I set out this blog as a record of my experiences with images and narratives.
It is my hope that you find something of interest on this site.
Please feel free to contact me for more information on any of the posts.
You can see a comprehensive list of my blogs at my website :-
http://www.davidnurse.co.uk
The "Players here are the "The Porthcawl Ukulele Bandits"
"The Porthcawl Ukulele Bandits is a tight 6-piece performing band which features harmony, backing vocals and additional instruments like bass, cajon percussion, melodica, accordion, mouth organ and mandolin (Taken from their publication)
They certainly have a most unique sound with unusual renditions of well-known songs.
Almost 20 years ago I moved away from the small mining village where I spent most of my life growing up and raising my family. For some time now I have been wanting to go back and revisit some of the places I remember. A few weeks ago I decided that the time had come and I would like to go on a walk that I did many times while growing up to see what had changed in the 25 years + since I walked this track.
From the main "Garw Valley" there are many smaller valleys leading off and the one I took was from the lower village of Pontycymer.
I walked a familiar course to this scene.
What you can see here is very different from the scene I remember as this small waterfall would have been part of a feeder reservoir which was one of the main water supplies to the colliery.
In my youth, the area was completely surrounded by an 18ft high fence and was inaccessible to all but the very daring.
Unfortunately, it does not have good memories for me as when I was a teenager a youth just a year or two older than I was drowned here.
Climbing up from the small river floor I could look back on the village that I know so well.
This scene is very beautiful now and is as I remember however The small green patch at the bottom of the image, now a rugby field which also occasionally plays hosts to fetes and is enjoyed by all, I can remember being built. It was built on the local refuse tip and when I moved to Ponycymmer as a young boy I had many adventures here playing on the tip and sharing the experience not only with my friends but also the large population of rats that lived off the refuse that was tipped there.
As I moved up this valley I could see the clean river which we often dammed with stones and pieces of turf so that we were able to swim in the river during the summer months. I recall that however hot the air temperature got the river was always freezing cold.
Generally speaking, the water here was clean unlike the "Garw River" that flowed down the main valley. This was known as "The Black River" as it appeared black due to all the coal particles that would have been carried in it from the colliery washery further up the valley a by-product of the coal being washed.
I remember if you put your had in the water it would come out dark and speckled in this fine coal dust as the dust did not seem to get dissolved in the water.
The pool that we build was clean and fresh except for a couple of times a year when the river would have been dammed further up the valley by the local farmer who would have "Dipped" his large flock of hill sheep in it. Luckily for us, no nasty chemicals were used to dip sheep back then.
During the walk there were a number of distinctive things came to mind that I used to come across during my walks here.
One of the main things I was keen to see on this walk was an old boiler tank I believe was from some sort of steam engine that I remember being cast aside and left alongside the river.
After taking a small detour from the main path I could bearly see the path that I and many of my friends regularly took. It was really well overgrown now and I could bearly make it out. I guess with the advent of video games and mobile phones not so many venture up here anymore if indeed anybody does.
I did manage to find the pathway and also the boilers. Or should I say boiler? I could only find one but I am sure the other one is here somewhere in the undergrowth.
The second of the milestones that I wanted to see I know was not going to be well hidden and I know the path from the boilers to it, as it was just up the stream.
It was this waterfall. It is not very big but looked very nice in the summer sun.
Moving further up the valley I then got onto the path that I know would take me on my next part of this journey.
The path we called "The Dram Road".
The Dram Road is a path cut into the hillside and was used to carry coal from the mine out of the valley before the main railway line was installed. This would have been a small gauge line and it's path I was told was across one side of the river to the other. The path can be seen between the heather and orange bracken on the other side and came onto the path I was on.
On the other side of the river, there are small outcrops that the sheep use now for some cover.
An old man told me that these were where local colliers came to dig out coal for their own use during the hard times of the 1926 general strike.
During my walk along "The Dram Road" it dawned on my that I had never seen evidence, other than the boilers, of the rails of the track along this pathway, so today I paid a lot of attention to try and find any.
I was almost at the end of the track before finally, I found buried in the pathway an old piece of rail and also a sleeper which was lying in the undergrowth.
It is a very peaceful place but the tranquillity hides the Blood sweat and toil that was mining in the first part of the last century.
I remember the Ffaldau colliery and the Ocean colliery being combined and then closed.
It was a bitter blow to the valley because even in the 1970s and 1980s the work was hard labour.
I did not work in the colliery but many of the schoolmates when they left school did.
I remember vividly being in the local workingmen's clubs midweek and there would be just a handful of us there until the colliery afternoon shift came to an end. Within an hour the bar would be full of these work hardened men their eyes dark with coal dust that the showers could not remove and the blue scars that they had from cuts underground being engrained in coal.
Despite doing a dangerous job in a dangerous place I only remember them as happy go lucky people.
There is a sculpture on the site of the old mine.
It is a moving scene of a fallen Pit Pony being attended to by a young man while to miners carry on working.
Despite the work still being hard, by the time the colliery closed for good in 1983 the miners were at least earning a decent living from their work so it was a great blow to the area when the end finally came.
There were many hard-working loyal face-workers who would never earn such good wages again and the valley people would have to adapt to a new future.
This post now ends here. This was a blog that I had previously made as a stand-alone blog, now however I see it as the first part of a three-piece blog with the second and third parts taking place later this year, (hopefully). Exploring the other side of the valley and the forest and mountain paths.
I have made a short video photowalk which can be found here:-
YOU CAN CLICK ON ANY OF THE IMAGES TO GET A LARGER VIEW!
Google references to point along the way (Note these are approximate) The First Waterfall: 51.61355120428729, -3.5787354313861806 The boilers: 51.616333902482864, -3.571497376234325 The second Waterfall: 51.616582503969425, -3.571079630305689 Route Start: 51.61333664429233, -3.5793740249838346 Route End: 51.62602694887964, -3.583753079861704 Miners sculpture: 51.62646191192561, -3.5817175713442486
Note a Comprehensive list of my blogs can be found on my website HERE
Many ancient monuments have the name "Arthur's Stone, but this dolmen situated in the centre of the Gower peninsula in South Wales is mounted on top of what is a small mountain and is overlooking the mouth of the River Loughor and onto Carmarthen Bay.
This Neolithic burial site is known locally as Maen Ceti or the Stone of Ceti.
The Site dates back at least to 2500 BC and possibly even earlier.
The capstone of a quartz conglomerate has an estimated weight of 25 tons, and measures around 13 feet wide and 7 feet high. It was once larger than this, but at some time in the past, a 10-ton section of the stone broke off and now lies cracked at the side of the cairn. Legend has it that the patron saint of Wales, St. David cleaved the stone apart with his sword in protest of Druid worship.
The capstone is supported by 4 uprights although the evidence is that there may have been more originally.
This monument has been well known and well documented and was probably first mentioned in Welsh Triads of the 10th Century. In the 15th Century, it is recorded that Henry VII's (born in Pembrokeshire castle), troops, en route to the battle at Bosworth Field, made a one hundred mile detour to visit the stone. This was presumably to support Henry's claim to be the new Arthur.
Another legend relates to the Dolmens English name, Arthur's Stone, and tells how King Arthur while marching to the Battle of Camlann, found a pebble in his shoe, Tossed it aside and the stone grew with pride to it's current size.
Like many of these legends relating to this type of megalith, it is also said that the capstone travels down to the estuary on New Year's Eve to drink from the river.
Maen Ceti was once referred to as one of “the three arduous undertakings accomplished in Britain.” the other two being Stonehenge and Silbury Hill.
Close by, just a few hundred metres to the west of Maen Ceti there is another mound that could be the site of another Cairn.
Footer:
Visit Information:-
Google Reference:- 51.59352460633934, -4.1793914504919405
What Three Words reference:- ///quitter.sandpaper.bearable
OS Details:- SS 49134 90547 Altitude: 482 ft
Additional information.
Visiting is easy as it is alongside the B4271 out of Reynoldstown on the Gower peninsular. I visited by parking close by and there is a car park near the start of the walk (51.588877417146136, -4.180022525744314).
Although the site can't be seen from the road walk North from the car park along the country path and after a short while the site will come into view.
There are wild horses here on the common and they are friendly and not wary of people but take care.