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Private Tours of Wales

Discover Wales on a Private Tour of Britain

Discover Wales

Although it retains its own language, spoken mainly in the north by about one-fifth of the population, Wales was conquered by the English King Edward I in 1281 and the union of the two countries was formalised in 1536. Yet, even now, it maintains a separate identity, partly due to the Cambrian Mountains that provide a protective barrier against excessive influence from England to the east. So, for example, the Welsh maintain a strong non-conformist and socialist tradition. The Welsh are a Celtic people, with a tradition of choral singing. Every year a large national eisteddfod, or festival, is held at which the best choirs compete for honours. Wales has a climate that ranges from mild on the coast to quite severe on the hills, the high rainfall underpinning a long tradition of dairy farming.

The country was largely rural until the 19th century, when a rich seam of coal was discovered in Glamorgan, bringing an influx of people from other parts of Wales and the rest of Britain. A thriving steel industry was also established. South Wales has undergone a rapid transformation in the last 25 years from a coal-and-steel-dependent economy to a mixed economy based on high-tech manufacturing, port facilities and oil-refining, tourism, and services. Cardiff, capital of the region and of Wales as a whole, has benefitted from the general trend within Europe to regionalisation, and many major corporations have chosen the city as their base for doing business in Wales. The landscape of South Wales, from Newport westwards to Swansea, bears the scars of the industrial past, especially in the former South Wales coalfield region, known as the Valleys, where lines of miners' cottages cling to the hillsides among the grassed-over spoil tips. Beyond Swansea and Llanelli, however, the counties of Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire take in some of the most beautiful, unspoiled coasts and landscapes in the British Isles, with their bird-filled estuaries and islands, their fishing ports, and their prosperous farming towns.

The Snowdonia National Park extends from the mountains overlooking Conwy Bay in the north to the peak of Cader Idris and the estuary of the Dyfi in the south. At its core is Snowdon, at 1,085 metres (3,560 feet) the highest mountain in England and Wales. As well as some of the country's most spectacular mountain ranges such as the rounded Carneddau, the rugged Rhinogs, or the less well-known Arans, the national park also includes splendid stretches of coastline, lush valleys, rugged stone villages, and an array of lakes. Although farming and tourism are the main activities today, there are many traces of the industries which once flourished here, from old copper mines to the great slate quarries at Llanberis and Blaenau Ffestiniog. Britain's only rack-and-pinion railway climbs to the very summit of Snowdon, while other steam railways chug inland from Porthmadog and Tywyn on the coast.

Discover Wales - Historic Castles and Rugged Coastlines Discover Wales - Historic Castles and Rugged Coastlines

A private, chauffeur-guided tour lasting eight days (seven nights) starting and ending in London

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We accept payment with the following credit/debit cards:
American Express, Delta, Electron, Eurocard, JCB, Mastercard, Solo and Visa.
Telephone 020 8404 2356 or 011 4420 8404 2356 from USA/Canada