Clogwyn Mannod: 'The Crag of Light Grey Snow' Located in the Crafnant valley, 'Mannod' is a premier dry tooling venue located in an abandoned slate quarry with a host of fantastic routes, covering all grades and all gradients!
Routes are well bolted and range from easy slab warm-ups to 35 metre endurance-fests on a consistently overhanging wall. There's even several large roofs to delight the Fig-4/Fig-9 monkey. The climbing uses predominately natural hooks and features - with the odd drilled pocket where required - and thus creates a realistic and perfect winter training crag. Access is only 5 minutes from the parking layby, and the rock is predominately sound.
Due to the highly-featured nature of the routes, they're usually tough to onsight but easy when you know how.
The quiet Crafnant valley provides the ideal setting for you to get totally, utterly, completely boxed out of your tree!
Some recent comments: 'If Chuck Norris needed to train for winter climbing, he'd come here!''Bosh that choss, get mad for it and smash this route in!''Easier when you know how!''I'm so pumped I can't even hold onto my axes''Soft!'
Climbing Area:
Wales
Rock Type:
Slate
Importance:
Local
CRoW Land:
No
Ownership:
Private
No. of Routes:
13
Within National Park:
No
Year Developed:
Grid Reference:
SH743603
Parking and Approach
The village of Trefriw is located in the Conwy valley, well signposted from the main road (A470).From the centre of Trefriw (opposite the Fairy Falls Hotel), follow signposts up the hill to Llyn Crafnant. After 3/4 km, you'll reach Llyn Crafnant (the massive great big lake). Keep driving for another 2km on the single track road. Keep driving until you hit the gate at the end of the road - this is the Mynydd Climbing Club hut. Park just inside this gate, as for parking for SH Wall (aka Clogwyn Y Eryr).From the car park, walk back down the road, until you reach the trees.It looks like this: https://www.google.co.uk/maps/@53.1260763,-3.8790986,3a,75y,86.88h,64.64t/data=!3m4!1e1!3m2!1sj6gnBWN0a6cMq_JJ1P6iSQ!2e0 Turn right on a vague path parallel to the fence, which takes you to a stile. Turn right again, following an old mining track as it rises gently uphill. Walk another 500m until you reach the crag. It can be seen from the road. There are no known access restrictions to Mannod.
A wide range of cliffs - mainly traditional and multi pitch inc. the popular Llanberis Pass, Idwal Slabs, Clogwyn du'r Arddu and Cwm Silyn cliffs, but also outlying outcrops such as Carreg Alltrem. Many crags are on CROW access land - but not all especially some of the outcrops which lie on private enclosed land. Most of central Snowdonia is both designated an SSSI and also is an European Special Area of Conservation on account of the upland habitat and associated geology and plants found here.
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