Wales
Pen Twyn Glas
646M
2119FT
About Pen Twyn Glas
Pen Twyn Glas is the unassuming middle child of the Black Mountains. A grassy, rounded hump, it offers expansive views of the Usk Valley—assuming you haven't been swallowed by the notorious peat bogs. It’s the hiking equivalent of a sensible cardigan: reliable, understated, and occasionally damp.
Key Statistics
Rank
167th Highest in Wales
Parent Range
Brecon Beacons
Prominence
?
20.1m
Nearest Town
Minehead
Geology
Ordovician Volcanics
Classifications
Nearby Fells
Find It
OS Grid Reference
SO213257
Latitude
51.9242°N
Longitude
3.1458°W
Did You Know?
- •Pen Twyn Glas translates to 'Head of the Green Ridge,' and it serves as a vital structural link in the Black Mountains' great eastern horseshoe. It overlooks the Rhiangoll valley, providing a strategic viewpoint that has been utilized by travelers since the Iron Age.
- •The fell is composed of Old Red Sandstone, a geological signature of the region that creates its characteristic flat-topped silhouettes. This ancient rock creates a plateau that is spectacular for views but famously efficient at retaining water in the form of ankle-deep sludge.
- •The summit area is part of the vast Mynydd Du SSSI, protected for its blanket bog and upland heath. This means you aren't just getting mud on your trousers; you are participating in a delicate ecological encounter with prehistoric peat.
- •Hikers often use this peak as a tactical waypoint to reach the more imposing Pen y Gadair Fawr. It’s the psychological 'halfway house' where you decide whether to push on or start fantasizing about the pub in Cwmdu.
- •The 'path' near the summit is often more of a suggestion than a reality, leading many hikers to engage in a spontaneous game of 'Find the Trig Point' in the mist. It is the only place where you can be staring at a map, a compass, and a sheep, and find that only the sheep knows where it's going.
