Vale Of Glamorgan
United Kingdom
- Coastline
- Clifftop charmer
- Coast life
- Devolution, evolution, revolution
In Wales, they say a little bit of everything never did anyone any harm – and diversity is what you’ll get in spades in the Vale of Glamorgan.
On this southernmost tip of Wales, green rolling hills give way to a splendid natural coastline where dinosaurs once roamed; their fossilised remains still regularly poke through the sand along rock-strewn shores. You couldn’t pick a better place to sample the best of many Welsh worlds: Penarth, with its elegant Victorian esplanade, and Llantwit Major, an important Roman headland, both offer steps back in time; and modern-day daytrippers will find that the genteel boutiques of market town Cowbridge – the Knightsbridge of South Wales – play chalk to the cheese of Barry’s seaside-resort rollercoaster mayhem. Plus, the region is on the doorstep of the capital Cardiff, with all its new-millennium-enhanced attractions.
Pictured: Holm House
Boutique hotels in Vale Of Glamorgan
Our round-up of the hippest hideaways and boutique hotels in Vale Of Glamorgan
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Getting there
Planes, trains, automobiles, or maybe even helicopter – we tell you the best way to go.
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Worth getting out of bed for
Highlights the best Vale Of Glamorgan has to offer, from art and culture to fun-packed activities; we've even found the most inspiring place to enjoy the views from.
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Eating, drinking & dancing
We've tracked down the best cafés for people-watching, the bars with the coolest cocktails, the most accomplished restaurants and the liveliest local nightlife in Vale Of Glamorgan.
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Smith Maps
Here is the map of Vale Of Glamorgan; each Mr & Mrs Smith hotel is marked by a flag; click it for more details.
moreLocal knowledge
- Taxis
- You can’t hail a cab in this neck of the woods, so book local journeys with a minicab firm. For travel in the east, try Cowbridge and Vale Cars (+44 (0)1446 774714); in the west, ring Penarth Cars (+44 (0)29 2070 1122).
- Tipping culture
- 10–15 per cent is standard, but many restaurants now add a discretionary 12.5 per cent, so be careful not to tip twice.
- Packing tips
- Bring all the boys’ toys you can fit in the boot: your fishing rod and kite will definitely get an airing. Give your mountain bike a workout on the Heritage Coast Footpath, a 14-mile seafront trail from Aberthaw to Porthcawl that passes the largest sand dunes in Europe.
- Recommended reads
- Kingsley Amis’ Booker prize-winning The Old Devils raises a glass to growing old in South Wales. For a poison-pen mystery that escalates into a murder trail around the Vale, read Glyn Daniel’s 1954 detective story, Welcome Death. John Williams’ contemporary novel Cardiff Dead reveals the Welsh capital’s underbelly in a romp that connects politics, rugby fans and Dame Shirley Bassey.
- Regional specialities
- That dark pattie that arrives on your breakfast plate is laverbread cake, a protein-packed mix of oats and laver seaweed picked from local shores. If your bacon no longer tastes the same without it, buy a jar of Parsons Traditional Laverbread from the excellent Farthings at Home Delicatessen in Cowbridge (+44 (0)1446 773545; www.farthingsofcowbridge.co.uk). Although Cardiffians favour a pint (usually of Felinfoel), the region boasts some good wines. Teetotallers will find that a slice of bara brith, a ‘speckled cake’ packed with dried fruit, goes down very nicely with a cuppa.
- Currency
- Pound sterling.
- Time zone
- GMT.
- Dialing codes
- Country code for the UK: +44. Cowbridge: (0)1446; Penarth/Cardiff area: (0)29.
