Historically August has been my worst month for the number of trips outside the winter. But this year I have been making up for it with three trips already and yesterday I managed a fourth. The weather forecast for my home area was rain – at last – but for South Wales west of Cardiff the predictions were much better. So the alarm was set for an unearthly hour and by 7.20 I was parked in the large car park west of the station in Neath. Time to grab a coffee, a roll and buy some lunch before my first journey. The good weather was just arriving at Neath, the eastern sky still cloudy but the western sky was blue.
My first journey was with First South and West Wales (as were all but one journey) so I bought a day ticket on the Volvo B7RLE that was on the X8 up the Dulais Valley. This passes Aberdulais Falls and we paused for a moment beside this, then on past the Cefn Coed colliery museum and through Seven Sisters. The further up the valley the quieter this became and it did not seem at all prosperous. I didn’t expect the X8 to be busy as it was against the flow, we did have a few passengers most of the way but I was the only one left after Banwen. The X8 we met seemed busier but it was hard to be sure. I alighted at Coelbren, the terminus. This was a very run-down village, most of the cars seemed pretty old, little money spent on the houses, one store, a health centre that was closed and a school long closed. Some views of surrounding country but not inspiring and 45 minutes here was about 44 minutes much more than necessary. The top of the valley here is linked a few times a day with the valley of the River Tawe, the Swansea Valley, by the Adventure Travel 62. This was on time, an E200, and came with one passenger already on board but, sadly, none of the good people of Coelbren came out to use the service and we only picked up a few more going round an estate as we entered Ystradgynlais. I have been here before and then visited the remains of the old iron works on the edge of town, worth seeing. This time I did not have long but Ystradynlais is well-presented in the centre of town including a couple of well patronised cafes with outdoor tables.
There are two routes from Ystradgynlais to Swansea, the T6 from Brecon, via Neath and run by Adventure Travel, and the First X6 running more directly, but much slower, down the Swansea Valley and, deliberately or not, both leave at 5 minutes past each hour. At 10.05 the T6 was pretty busy, very few of us on the X6 and all the others left before we were far out of town, although more joined. First in South Wales is not on BusTimes so I felt rather naked as regards information, I had thought the X6 was mainly double deckers but my bus was a Streetlite. I took this as far as Pontardawe, a journey of 6 miles which First manages to spin out to half an hour. The reason is simply that it goes very slowly and takes a few diversions including one up the side of the valley. I got off at Pontardawe and had a look around the town centre, seemed quite pleasant with a small river running through it. I then continued towards Swansea on the next X6, the service is every 20 minutes from here into Swansea, and this one was a double decker, a Volvo B9TL. Overall I saw all 7 buses, 4 were deckers and 3 were Streetlites. A reasonable journey in and we were quite busy especially at Morriston where we picked up a good number, by the end the downstairs was full with standing.
In Swansea I alighted at the station and took a train to Burry Port. This trip was knitting together a couple of gaps in where I had been and the train was the quickest way to get from one to the other. Burry Port is a little gem with a very attractive harbour area. It would have been better still if it had not been really low tide and there had been some water in it as opposed to boats sitting on mud. There is a small beach too and a number of people enjoying the sunshine on it as well as others wandering around and sitting outside. Not much of the town but it seemed pleasant. I spent just over half an hour here before proceeding on an X11 to Kidwelly, an E200 in the Cymru Clipper livery. The journey passes Pembrey but there’s nothing of interest visible from the road here. Kidwelly is another delightful small town with attractive castle ruins, a section of river and quite a pretty town centre. Another half an hour here before getting another X11 (also an E200) back through Burry Port to Llanelli. In Burry Port a weight limit on the bridge by the station means the bus has to go via a level crossing east of the town centre and we were held up here for some time. Checking Real Time trains the one we were waiting for was the lunchtime train from Fishguard which misses out Swansea, to my surprise it had a handful of passengers. We were nearly 10 minutes late arriving at Llanelli and I hopped straight onto a 111 heading east having visited the town before. I got off the 111 straight after the bridge over the estuary at Loughor to spend 20 minutes here before the next 110 onwards. A lovely spot here down by the estuary (out of earshot of the bridge) and there are remains of a castle as well. Both 110/111 journeys were red E200s and were very short of passengers although I did see one later which was more well loaded. I alighted from the 110 at Gorseinon, took a brief look at the stone circle adjacent to the bus station - yes, really, but they are not ancient, they were put there for an Eisteddfod. Then I took another red E200 on the 16 back to Swansea through Gowerton by way of variety having not been this way.
I have explored Swansea thoroughly before so I did not take much time here, just took a quick look at the Grand Theatre before boarding another E200 on the X1 to Port Talbot. This was quite busy but it was now late afternoon departures from the city. I hadn’t been to Port Talbot before and I don’t think I will bother to go again, I couldn’t find anything of interest. Back to Neath on a Streetlite on the 87 through the massive Aberavon and Sandfields estates, I noted there were a couple of double deckers out on this route. Neath was now much sunnier than first thing so I had a short wander before setting off home.
Everything went according to plan, all buses ran and were pretty much on time and quite a bit of sitting about waiting time on some routes. Good value (petrol excepted) for all day of First for £7.60 while the short Adventure Travel trip and the train were not expensive. Of course overall not a patch on my two days in the Borders and Northumberland but I like to keep visiting a variety of places.
My allowance of 10 pictures:

Aberdulais

View from Coelbren

Pontardawe

Burry Port

Kidwelly castle

Kidwelly castle and river

Kidwelly
Loughor

Gorseinon
Swansea
My first journey was with First South and West Wales (as were all but one journey) so I bought a day ticket on the Volvo B7RLE that was on the X8 up the Dulais Valley. This passes Aberdulais Falls and we paused for a moment beside this, then on past the Cefn Coed colliery museum and through Seven Sisters. The further up the valley the quieter this became and it did not seem at all prosperous. I didn’t expect the X8 to be busy as it was against the flow, we did have a few passengers most of the way but I was the only one left after Banwen. The X8 we met seemed busier but it was hard to be sure. I alighted at Coelbren, the terminus. This was a very run-down village, most of the cars seemed pretty old, little money spent on the houses, one store, a health centre that was closed and a school long closed. Some views of surrounding country but not inspiring and 45 minutes here was about 44 minutes much more than necessary. The top of the valley here is linked a few times a day with the valley of the River Tawe, the Swansea Valley, by the Adventure Travel 62. This was on time, an E200, and came with one passenger already on board but, sadly, none of the good people of Coelbren came out to use the service and we only picked up a few more going round an estate as we entered Ystradgynlais. I have been here before and then visited the remains of the old iron works on the edge of town, worth seeing. This time I did not have long but Ystradynlais is well-presented in the centre of town including a couple of well patronised cafes with outdoor tables.
There are two routes from Ystradgynlais to Swansea, the T6 from Brecon, via Neath and run by Adventure Travel, and the First X6 running more directly, but much slower, down the Swansea Valley and, deliberately or not, both leave at 5 minutes past each hour. At 10.05 the T6 was pretty busy, very few of us on the X6 and all the others left before we were far out of town, although more joined. First in South Wales is not on BusTimes so I felt rather naked as regards information, I had thought the X6 was mainly double deckers but my bus was a Streetlite. I took this as far as Pontardawe, a journey of 6 miles which First manages to spin out to half an hour. The reason is simply that it goes very slowly and takes a few diversions including one up the side of the valley. I got off at Pontardawe and had a look around the town centre, seemed quite pleasant with a small river running through it. I then continued towards Swansea on the next X6, the service is every 20 minutes from here into Swansea, and this one was a double decker, a Volvo B9TL. Overall I saw all 7 buses, 4 were deckers and 3 were Streetlites. A reasonable journey in and we were quite busy especially at Morriston where we picked up a good number, by the end the downstairs was full with standing.
In Swansea I alighted at the station and took a train to Burry Port. This trip was knitting together a couple of gaps in where I had been and the train was the quickest way to get from one to the other. Burry Port is a little gem with a very attractive harbour area. It would have been better still if it had not been really low tide and there had been some water in it as opposed to boats sitting on mud. There is a small beach too and a number of people enjoying the sunshine on it as well as others wandering around and sitting outside. Not much of the town but it seemed pleasant. I spent just over half an hour here before proceeding on an X11 to Kidwelly, an E200 in the Cymru Clipper livery. The journey passes Pembrey but there’s nothing of interest visible from the road here. Kidwelly is another delightful small town with attractive castle ruins, a section of river and quite a pretty town centre. Another half an hour here before getting another X11 (also an E200) back through Burry Port to Llanelli. In Burry Port a weight limit on the bridge by the station means the bus has to go via a level crossing east of the town centre and we were held up here for some time. Checking Real Time trains the one we were waiting for was the lunchtime train from Fishguard which misses out Swansea, to my surprise it had a handful of passengers. We were nearly 10 minutes late arriving at Llanelli and I hopped straight onto a 111 heading east having visited the town before. I got off the 111 straight after the bridge over the estuary at Loughor to spend 20 minutes here before the next 110 onwards. A lovely spot here down by the estuary (out of earshot of the bridge) and there are remains of a castle as well. Both 110/111 journeys were red E200s and were very short of passengers although I did see one later which was more well loaded. I alighted from the 110 at Gorseinon, took a brief look at the stone circle adjacent to the bus station - yes, really, but they are not ancient, they were put there for an Eisteddfod. Then I took another red E200 on the 16 back to Swansea through Gowerton by way of variety having not been this way.
I have explored Swansea thoroughly before so I did not take much time here, just took a quick look at the Grand Theatre before boarding another E200 on the X1 to Port Talbot. This was quite busy but it was now late afternoon departures from the city. I hadn’t been to Port Talbot before and I don’t think I will bother to go again, I couldn’t find anything of interest. Back to Neath on a Streetlite on the 87 through the massive Aberavon and Sandfields estates, I noted there were a couple of double deckers out on this route. Neath was now much sunnier than first thing so I had a short wander before setting off home.
Everything went according to plan, all buses ran and were pretty much on time and quite a bit of sitting about waiting time on some routes. Good value (petrol excepted) for all day of First for £7.60 while the short Adventure Travel trip and the train were not expensive. Of course overall not a patch on my two days in the Borders and Northumberland but I like to keep visiting a variety of places.
My allowance of 10 pictures:

Aberdulais

View from Coelbren

Pontardawe

Burry Port

Kidwelly castle

Kidwelly castle and river

Kidwelly


Gorseinon

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