This year marks 50 years of the Offa’s Dyke Path National Trail.
There are local walking festivals to look out for and a revamped visitor centre in the Welsh border town of Knighton to open later this summer.
An ITV series about the Path, Wonders of the Border, will be shown over summer.
The 177-mile national trail, which runs from near Chepstow on the River Severn to Prestatyn on the North Wales coast, divides into 12 day sections.
As lockdown restrictions eased, I walked the trail for a day from Castle Mill [pictured above] near Chirk Castle in North Wales into the Shropshire Hills to get a taste of the path.
The earliest reference to Offa’s Dyke is attributed to Asser, King Alfred’s biographer, who wrote:
“A certain vigorous king called Offa … had a great dyke built between Wales and Mercia.”
Offa was the king of Mercia (the modern-day Midlands) and ordered the construction of the dyke around 785AD to mark a de-facto border between England and the rebellious Welsh tribes to the west.
National Trail Officer Rob Dingle says: “King Offa is something of a shadowy figure from history, but we do know that he was keen to expand his kingdom, and the design of the Dyke was quite deliberate, acting as a warning shot to the west.”
National Trails is encouraging walkers to share their memories of 50 years of Offa’s Dyke. Read more.
Read my feature via the i newspaper here
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