Pwll y wrach
Appearance
Pwll y wrach or Pwll-y-wrach (Welsh for "pool of the witch") is a feature on the River Ennig near Talgarth in south Powys, Wales. The river plunges in two separate streams over a lip of hard rock (Bishop's Frome Limestone, formerly known as Psammosteus Limestone) into a pool scoured in the softer mudstones of the underlying Raglan Mudstone formation.
The feature occurs within Cwm Pwll-y-wrach, a deep wooded valley that is a Site of Special Scientific Interest and a nature reserve managed by the Brecknock Wildlife Trust.[1] The trust has established trails within the wood to enable public access.
It is suggested that the name derives from the ancient practice of ducking witches in the plunge pool.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ "Pwll-y-Wrach Nature Reserve". Brecknock Wildlife Trust. Archived from the original on 2 April 2016. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
- ^ Interpretive material provided on site by BWT.
External links
[edit]- Pwll-y-Wrach at cavinguk.co.uk
- Pwll-y-Wrach at Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales