Cresselly Cricket Club Ground
Cresselly Cricket Club Ground is a cricket ground in Cresselly, Pembrokeshire. The first recorded match on the ground was in 1979, when Welsh Schools played Irish Schools.
Pembroke (/ˈpɛmbrʊk/; Welsh: Penfro pronounced [pɛnˈvroː]) is an historic settlement and former county town of Pembrokeshire in West Wales. The town features a number of historic buildings and complexes and is one of the major population centres in the county. It was the birthplace of Henry Tudor, later Henry VII of England.
Population: 7,294
Latitude: 51° 40' 28.70" N
Longitude: -4° 54' 46.30" W
Cresselly Cricket Club Ground is a cricket ground in Cresselly, Pembrokeshire. The first recorded match on the ground was in 1979, when Welsh Schools played Irish Schools.
Lying a few kilometres west of Carmarthen, near the hamlet of Llanllwch, Cors Goch National Nature Reserve is one of the few raised bogs in West Wales.
Cold Inn is a small village in the Welsh county of Pembrokeshire and community of East Williamston.
Castlemartin was a hundred in Pembrokeshire, Wales. Initially created by the Marcher Lords of Pembroke in the 14th century from the western part of the pre-Norman cantref of Penfro, it was confirmed by the Laws in Wales Acts 1535-1542. The hundred, …
Brandy Hill is a hill in South Wales between Pendine and Whitland, and south-west of St. Clears.
The Benton Fault is a geological fault in southern Pembrokeshire in Wales that was active as a normal fault during the deposition of the Old Red Sandstone during the Devonian period, forming a thick half graben.
Crunwere (Welsh: Cronwern - also written Crunwear and Cronwere) is a hamlet and parish in Pembrokeshire, Wales. It is situated 3 km north of the Carmarthen Bay coast, 8 km north-east of Saundersfoot. The parish includes the village of Llanteg . Toge…
Skomer Marine Conservation Zone is an underwater marine nature reserve located off the coast of Pembrokeshire in Wales.