Things to do
The Bannau Brycheiniog National Park is full of beautiful and interesting places to visit. Take a look at some of our suggestions
Eating and drinking
Bannau Brycheiniog National Park has excellent dining and drinking options for every visitor
Where to stay
The Bannau Brycheiniog National Park has loads of accommodation options for every type of visitor.
Visitor information
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Mynydd Illtud Common Walk
Mynydd Illtud Common Walk
A leisurely amble or a bracing walk, Mynydd Illtud common has a walk for everyone and all within a short distance of the National Park Visitor Centre with its facilities.
Venture out to get panoramic views of all four mountain massifs which make up the Brecon Beacons. This route is a grade 3 walk: routes with occasional long gradients, poor surfaces and kissing gates or stiles. There are no seats.
Of interest
Keep your eyes peeled for red kites soaring above the common in search of carrion to feed off. These masters of the air currents, twist and switch their forked tail and long wings to glide effortlessly.
Other wildlife to listen out for and spot in spring and summer are larks, wheatears and stonechats as they busy themselves with finding mates, nest building and rearing young. As you stand on the magnificent vantage point of Twyn y Gaer Hill fort, with its widescreen views of Pen-y-Fan and Corn Du, the Black Mountains and the river Usk snaking below, give a thought to those who lived in this hillfort during the Iron Age.
The nearby 19th century church dedicated to St Illtud was demolished in the 1990s but this Celtic Christian missionary’s name lives on in the common.
A leisurely amble or a bracing walk, Mynydd Illtud common has a walk for everyone and all within a short distance of the National Park Visitor Centre with its facilities.
Venture out to get panoramic views of all four mountain massifs which make up the Brecon Beacons. This route is a grade 3 walk: routes with occasional long gradients, poor surfaces and kissing gates or stiles. There are no seats.
Of interest
Keep your eyes peeled for red kites soaring above the common in search of carrion to feed off. These masters of the air currents, twist and switch their forked tail and long wings to glide effortlessly.
Other wildlife to listen out for and spot in spring and summer are larks, wheatears and stonechats as they busy themselves with finding mates, nest building and rearing young. As you stand on the magnificent vantage point of Twyn y Gaer Hill fort, with its widescreen views of Pen-y-Fan and Corn Du, the Black Mountains and the river Usk snaking below, give a thought to those who lived in this hillfort during the Iron Age.
The nearby 19th century church dedicated to St Illtud was demolished in the 1990s but this Celtic Christian missionary’s name lives on in the common.
Grade 3
ChallengingNavigation
This section helps you find your way to the start of the trail.
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