Day 3 (5 September): Coastal footpath around St. Ann’s Head
It is very windy in the night and our pitch, idyllic though it is, is quite exposed. I worry about the pop up roof and make Simon put it down in the early hours. We wake to a rainbow over the sea and then blue skies. We’re on the track at 9.45 and head west around St. Martin’s Haven towards St. Ann’s Head. The scenery is stunning and we keep stopping for photos. There are very few people and we are chuffed to see Choughs with their red legs and characteristic cry swooping on the thermals. We see a seal basking in the clear waters near Marloes Sands below us. The terrain is pretty flat here and we make good progress along wide grassy tracks and gorse lined paths to the lighthouse at the end of St. Ann’s Head. We see an Irish Ferry making it’s way up the estuary towards Pembroke docks: the industrial towers now on the horizon. We picnic in the sunshine on a stone bench and then fall upon a hidden gem of a beach at Watwick Bay. A detour down brings great reward with a swim in clear waters, still bracing but conditions more satisfying than yesterday. After about 5 hours we reach Dale feeling rather weary but revive ourselves with the most delicious cup of coffee and our first taste of Welsh Barabrith. Dale is quite busy with a rustic seaside feel and cockle pickers in the mud flats at low tide. We now have a bit of a trudge on road in order to complete our circuit and get to Marloes Village where we stop for milk. Then back onto the coastal path above Musselwick Bay: another sweeping golden bay at low tide. Nice cup of tea before hot showers and pre-prandials.








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