Canolfan_Tryweryn

Canolfan Tryweryn

Canolfan Tryweryn

White water sports venue near Bala, Wales


Canolfan Tryweryn is the National White Water Centre for Wales, and is based near Bala in north Wales. In 1986, it developed the first commercial white water rafting operation in the UK. The centre is home to paddlesport National Governing Body Canoe Wales.

Approach to Stone Bridge
Stone Bridge aka Miss Davis
Café Wave
Fingers
Beside Tyn Cornel Campsite

The River Tryweryn

The Tryweryn is a river in north Wales. It flows from Llyn Celyn in the Snowdonia National Park and after 19 km (12 mi) joins the river Dee at Bala. It is one of the main tributaries of the Dee and has been dammed to form Llyn Celyn. Water is stored in winter when flows are high, and released over the summer to maintain the flow in the Dee, meaning that the river often has suitable water levels for kayakers and rafters at time of year when natural rivers throughout Wales may be too low. The dam usually releases between 9 and 12 m3/s (2,000 and 2,600 imperial gallons per second).

The whitewater rapids have been modified by placing boulders in strategic points along the course of the river to create eddys, drops and play spots.

Access to the centre requires payment for both commercial and non-commercial users.

The river is generally split into three sections: Top Site, Centre Section and the Lower Tryweryn.[needs update]

The Top Site

The Top Site (often called the Upper Upper Tryweryn) is the section of river leading from the stilling basin below the Llyn Celyn dam down to where the fish trap was located. The fish-trap – known as the chipper because it resembles a chip-slicer – was removed in November 2019.[citation needed] This section is a nice Grade II to Grade III, with a good play-hole (the "Top-Hole") and a playful weir. The section is often used for safety and rescue courses, as well as kayaking freestyle competitions. Officially there is no raft or canoe access to this top section.

The Centre Section

This section (commonly known as the Upper Tryweryn) is the main part of the Tryweryn, it runs for approximately 1.25 miles (2.0 km) from the site of the chipper down to the Tyn Cornel camping site, and is a good Grade III. It contains most of the main white-water features of the river:

  • Graveyard
  • Ski Jump
  • Fedwr Gog Falls (aka Miss Davis' Bridge, or 'Stone' bridge),
  • Café Wave
  • Fingers
  • NRA (National Rivers Authority) Bridge
  • Chapel Falls

The Lower Tryweryn

Running the 2.5 miles (4.0 km) from the Tyn Cornel campsite down to Bala, this is a good Grade II bordering on Grade III section which finishes spectacularly at Bala Mill Falls (an easily portaged Grade IV rapid). This section is not managed like the upper Tryweryn, although the centre has been known to remove fallen trees and other obstructions/hazards quickly.

See also


References

    52.947°N 3.651°W / 52.947; -3.651


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