Stories tagged "Fishguard": 53
Stories
Welcome to the Mauretania
Welcome to the Mauretania
J. D. Symmonds
Thrice welcome, Mauretania,We hail thee, kindly seer,Who speaks of Fishguard's futureIn accents loud and clear;From down the midnight shadows Where towns have not a name, She mounts up now to noonday Among…
The Last Invasion: Fishguard and Goodwick
Bring the past to life and reimagine the present with a range of perspectives as diverse as the connections between Ireland and Wales across the Irish Sea.
Developed by Mary-Ann Constantine and Cathrine Agnew of the Ports, Past and Present Project…
Rosslare Harbour to Fishguard | Rosslare Harbour i Abergwaun
Bring the past to life and reimagine the present with a range of perspectives as diverse as the connections between Ireland and Wales across the Irish Sea.
Developed by James L. Smith of the Ports, Past and Present Project using project material…
Dyffryn Fernant
A fifteen-minute drive from Fishguard/Goodwick Port Dyffryn Fernant lies at the end of a narrow lane where hedgerows are spangled with rose-red campion and cow parsley. This six-acre garden is tucked neatly into the Preseli uplands; the Irish Sea is…
Soul Food from the Sea Shore | Bwyd i'w ganfod Lawr ar Lan y Môr
If you’ve ever noticed sheets of what appears to be a translucent brown plastic film covering the rocks and the sand where the surf rolls in, you’ve seen the seaweed known in Wales as laver (or sloke in Ireland).
If you’ve ever enjoyed sushi you…
Stars on Its Face | Sêr ar ei Wyneb
Poised between the windswept coast and the stony volcanic spine of the land above Fishguard and Goodwick, the Pencaer peninsula’s acid soil has never borne rich harvests. Pembrokeshire’s early potato crop has become famous but once upon a time root…
Fishguard and Goodwick Through Time | Abergwaun ac Wdig dros y Blynyddoedd
With images and articles ranging from shipping, built heritage and everyday life to suffragettes and twentieth-century film history, the Fishguard and Goodwick Local History website has it all.
Here, we provide a snapshot of the much deeper dive…
This is the Sea, Part I | Dyma'r Môr, Rhan I
There is a song by the folk rock band The Waterboys called ‘This is the Sea’. It concerns the changes in life, using the sea as a metaphor: Once you were tethered, Now you are free, That was the river, This is the sea. For some reason I had those…
Carn Wnda Prehistoric Chambered Tomb | Beddrod Siambrog Cynhanesyddol Carn Wnda
Set high up in the Pencaer peninsula to the east of Strumble Head, Carn Wnda is one of six surviving prehistoric chambered tombs located along this headland. To the east of Carn Wnda are the megalithic sites of Parc y Cromlech (Penrhiw), and the…
The works of Richard Fenton, Part I | Gweithiau Richard Fenton, Rhan I
During the 1790s Richard Fenton was busy touring his native Pembrokeshire and gathering material for his Historical Tour of Pembrokeshire, published in 1811 to highly positive reviews. This enormous work, beginning and ending in Fishguard, contains…