Clocaenog Forest

The Clocaenog Forest is in west Denbighshire and east Conwy, Wales on Mynydd Hiraethog. It takes its name from the village of Clocaenog, near Ruthin.

Clocaenog Forest at head of Clywedog Valley.

History

It is 40 square miles (100 kmĀ²) in extent, mostly coniferous softwoods under the control of Natural Resources Wales. It was planted in 1905 on what was mostly moorland and many hill farms. It is a highland region, mostly above 350 metres. It experienced a severe winter in 1946/47 with over 150 cm of lying snow on flat ground recorded at Clawdd-newydd (a nearby village), and there was another hard winter in 1962/63. It is also one of the last mainland strongholds of red squirrels in Wales.[1]

Geography

There are high points which rise above the tree level, affording views of Snowdonia and Arenig Fawr to the west, the Berwyn Range to the south, the Clwydian Range to the east, and the Denbigh moors to the north. The highest point in the forest is 'The Mast' at Craig Bron Bannog 501m (1,644 feet).

Wildlife includes many birds, including the crossbill which are adapted well to the conifers. Nesting platforms have been built at the top of bare trees. There is also an enclosed area where wild horses (Przewalski's Horses) can be viewed. In addition, there are several examples of ancient remains, including at least one stone circle and the 'credstone', an ancient worship site.

Streams run through the forest, including the source of the River Clwyd; Llyn Brenig lies on the western flank.

Events

The Clocaenog Forest was the murder and burial location of Edward Carthy who, at 28, was the youngest victim of serial killer Peter Moore.

In March 2002, a 47-year-old man with schizophrenia by the name of Richard Sumner died after handcuffing himself to a tree in the forest and throwing away the key. He wasn't found until April 2005, when a woman and her dog found his skeleton.[2] It was believed he struggled to break free after scuff marks on the tree were found.[3]

In 2015 the body of an unidentified murder victim was discovered in the forest by two brothers who were attending the 2015 Wales Rally GB.

Halifax based Collett Transport deliver tower sections to Clocaenog Wind Farm

In 2005 a wind farm with 25 wind turbines was constructed. The 3 groups of turbines, north to south are:- Tir Mostyn (8), Foel Goch (7) and Marial Gwyn (10). Many more wind turbines are planned. In 2019 deliveries of components for the Clocaenog Forest Wind Farm begun. Consisting of 27 Vestas V105 turbines, transport of the components from Ellesmere Port to the development site.[4] Deliveries took place over 6 months, with a total of 270 components. Halifax based specialist, Collett Transport delivered the components with the final three tower sections being delivered on 26 July 2019.

gollark: (which is RF)
gollark: How would we generate RFTools power?
gollark: Indeed. I only use it because I like doing browsery stuff but can't really get away from using JS-y stuff without 10MB of JS build output.
gollark: It's certainly likely to be better than JS tooling.
gollark: I believe Gradle is famed for taking ages.

References

  1. "Protecting the Red Squirrel in Clocaenog Forest". Red Squirrels Trust Wales. 12 March 2018. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  2. "Artist died 'handcuffed to a tree'". BBC News. 20 September 2005. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  3. "Handcuffed to a tree... artist died trying to get free; Remains found three years after he vanished". The Free Library. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  4. "Clocaenog Wind Farm Begins". Collett Transport. Retrieved 27 September 2019.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.