ONE OF OUR ULTIMATE PHOTOGRAPHY LOCATIONS | UPLIFTING SCENES | PORTHKERRY | BARRY

Check out this seasonal photography location guides. We introduce Porthkerry Country Park in Barry. A great photography location for any season but it can be magical in the Winter.

There are many photo locations in Barry, South Wales but Porthkerry Park is one our ultimate photography locations with its woods, fields, viaduct and extensive pebble beach. When it is stripped bare in the Winter it is at its more inspiring.

ULTIMATE PHOTOGRAPHY LOCATIONS GUIDE; PORTHKERRY COUNTRY PARK IN WINTER

USE THE MAP TO FIND YOUR WAY TO PORTHKERRY COUNTRY PARK BARRY ONE OF OUR ULTIMATE  PHOTOGRAPHY LOCATIONS GUIDES
FROST COVERED LEAVES ON THE FOREST FLOOR AT PORTHKERRY COUNTRY PARK BARRY,  A WINTER PHOTOGRAPHY LOCATION

WINTER PHOTOGRAPHY AT PORTHKERRY COUNTRY PARK

Porthkerry Country Park has fields, extensive woodland and nature trails, cliff-top pathways, a pebble-stone beach and is visited by around 250,000 people a year.[7

With 220 acres of land, Porthkerry Country Park is a perfect location for seasonal photography and particularly in Winter. No two days are ever the same and there is so many opportunities and challenges for rich and varied photographs you will never get bored there.

In Winter the intricate shapes of the bare trees stand out against hazy sunshine, grey skies and early morning frosts. Frozen dew can be captured against misty backdrops. Fallen leaves are covered in frost on the forest floor, the last remnants of Autumn

The hamlet of Porthkerry (Welsh: Porthceri) lies on the Bristol Channel coast of South Wales within the community of Rhoose between that village and the town of Barry to the east. It is very close to the end of the runway of Cardiff International Airport. To the east of the hamlet is Porthkerry Country Park which occupies the valley leading down to the coast.

BARE TREES AND FROSTY ON THE FIELDS AT PORTHKERRY COUNTRY PARK BARRY A WINTER SEASONAL PHOTOGRAPHY LOCATION

The park has a long history;

EXTRACTS FROM TAKEN FROM WIKIPEDIA with references to other sources

The land was acquired by the Romilly family in 1412 to build a country house, and cottages, stables and a sawmill for local workers. Cliff Wood Mill was in use for a period but it believed to have been destroyed during the Glyndwr revolt in the early 15th century. The remains of it are a Scheduled Ancient Monument. Cliff Wood Cottage was originally built in 1583 by Owen Williams and fully rebuilt in the early 1790s. It was once the residence of a woman believed to be a witch, Ann Jenkins.[7] 

BARE TREES AND FROSTY ON THE FIELDS AT PORTHKERRY COUNTRY PARK BARRY A WINTER SEASONAL PHOTOGRAPHY LOCATION
BARE TREES AND FROSTY ON THE FIELDS AT PORTHKERRY COUNTRY PARK BARRY A WINTER SEASONAL PHOTOGRAPHY LOCATION

The park was fully landscaped by the Romilly family in the 1840s,[8] and they sold it to Barry Urban District Council in 1929. The park was occupied by British and American forces during World War II in the approach to D-Day, and earthworks and defences were built along the coast.[7]

The park is particularly noted for the sixteen arch Porthkerry Viaduct crossed by a railway that served as a transportation for coal from the South Wales Valleys to the port in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

THE VIADUCT IN PORTHKERRY PARK IN WINTER, SEASONAL PHOTOGRAPHY LOCATIONS

Built in the late 1890s, the viaduct has sixteen arches which vary between 45 and 50 feet (15 metres) in width and rising to a height of 110 feet (33 metres).[9] It became Grade II listed in 1963.[10] The former Egerton Grey Country House Hotel lies near the viaduct. The house was originally built in the 17th century and functioned a rectory for some time.[11]

THE VIADUCT IN PORTHKERRY PARK IN WINTER, SEASONAL PHOTOGRAPHY LOCATIONS

On the northern side of Porthkerry Park there was a small hamlet named Cwmcidi (meaning Valley of the Black Dog in Welsh). It first appeared in the mid 13th century and by 1622 had five houses and several farm buildings, but by 1812, only three cottages and a farmhouse remained. The cottages were demolished in the 1840s by the Romilly family when Porthkerry Park was landscaped.[8] 

TRAIN OVER THE VIADUCT IN PORTHKERRY PARK: 3 EYED RAVEN PRODUCTIONS ULTIMATE PHOTOGRAPHY LOCATIONS

The name – although slightly anglicised – lives on in the area, in the form of a nearby public house, The Cwm Ciddy. An area of the park known as Cwm Barri, along the main approach road, was used for farming and contains a woodland of about 1.3 hectares with hawthorn, blackthorn, hazel, ash and sycamore trees alongside Barry Brook. The brook flows into a pond at Fishponds Hill, near the main road.[12] Cwm Barri Cottage was built in around 1845 to house the park warden but was demolished in 1972; all that remains is a low boundary wall and fruit trees in the woodland which were once part of the cottage garden.[7]

Porthkerry Country Park is the perfect location for seasonal photography. With 220 acres the Winter is particularly spectacular imagery