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Coordinates: 51°48′00″N 3°03′41″W / 51.80005°N 3.06148°W / 51.80005; -3.06148
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== Recreation ==
== Recreation ==
[[File:Foxhunter grave plaque.jpg|right|thumb|Plaque marking the grave of Foxhunter]]Most visitors are walkers and sightseers. Some come to see [[Harry Llewellyn]]'s famous [[showjumping]] [[horse]], [[Foxhunter]] which won Britain's only [[Gold medal]] in the [[1952 Summer Olympics]] is buried near to the [[Blaenavon]] to [[Llanover]] road on Blorenge with a car park sited here in his honour.
[[File:Foxhunter grave plaque.jpg|right|thumb|Plaque marking the grave of Foxhunter]]Most visitors are walkers and sightseers. Some come to see the grave of Sir [[Harry Llewellyn]]'s famous [[showjumping]] [[horse]], [[Foxhunter]], who won Britain's only [[Gold medal]] in the [[1952 Summer Olympics]]. Foxhunter is buried near to the [[Blaenavon]] to [[Llanover]] road on Blorenge. A car park here is named in his honour.<ref>{{cite web|title=A trip to Blorenge at Abergavenny from Hereford|url=http://goherefordshire.blogspot.com/2013/07/a-trip-to-blorenge-at-abergavenny-from.html#.Uxqqsl5kLsk|work=Goherefordshire|accessdate=8 March 2014|format=Directions for a scenic walk. Photo of the sign: FOXHUNTER Car Park {{!}} Maes Parcio|quote=The path should be fairly obvious from the car park as it is well worn, and there are usually some other people around who look as though they know where they are going. Look out for the Foxhunter memorial as you leave the car park.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=A walk up the Blorenge mountain|url=http://www.abergavenny.org.uk/blorenge.htm|work=Abergavenny: Gateway to Wales|accessdate=8 March 2014|quote=Foxhunter car park In 1952, Sir Harry Llewellyn rode Foxhunter to take Gold in the Helsinki Olympic. The remains of the horse are buried near the car park, with a small memorial dedicated to him. Sir Harry Llewellyn himself died at the age of 88 in November 1999, at his home in Abergavenny. His ashes were scattered over the Blorenge mountain.}}</ref>


The SE Wales [[Hang Gliding]] & [[Paragliding]] Club's members regularly take off from the summit which is now owned by the club. Paragliders performing 'top to bottom' flights land in Castle Meadows beside the River Usk at Abergavenny.
The SE Wales [[Hang Gliding]] & [[Paragliding]] Club's members regularly take off from the summit which is now owned by the club. Paragliders performing 'top to bottom' flights land in Castle Meadows beside the River Usk at Abergavenny.
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==Etymology==
==Etymology==
The name is problematic. It has been suggested that it may derive from the Welsh 'plor' ('pimple') and relating to Middle English 'blure' ('blister') or else from 'blawr ais' (meaning'grey ribbed') but neither explanation is wholly satisfactory.<ref>Owen, H.W. & Morgan, R. 2007 ''Dictionary of the Place-names of Wales'', Gomer Press, Ceredigion</ref>
The name is problematic. It has been suggested that it may derive from the Welsh 'plor' ('pimple') and relating to Middle English 'blure' ('blister') or else from 'blawr ais' ('grey ribbed') but neither explanation is wholly satisfactory.<ref>Owen, H.W. & Morgan, R. 2007 ''Dictionary of the Place-names of Wales'', Gomer Press, Ceredigion</ref>


==Blorenge in popular culture==
==Blorenge in popular culture==

Revision as of 05:40, 8 March 2014

The Blorenge
Highest point
Elevation561 m (1,841 ft)
Prominencec. 134 m
Parent peakCoity Mountain
ListingDewey
Geography
LocationMonmouthshire, Wales
Parent rangeBrecon Beacons
OS gridSO269118
Topo mapOS Landranger 161
View from a point near the summit of Blorenge

The Blorenge or simply Blorenge (/ˈblɒr[invalid input: 'ɨ']n/; Welsh: Blorens) is a prominent hill which overlooks the valley of the River Usk in Monmouthshire, southeast Wales. It is situated in the southeastern corner of the Brecon Beacons National Park. The summit plateau reaches a height of 1,841 feet (561 m).

Geography

Blorenge overlooks the market town of Abergavenny and the villages of Llanfoist and Govilon in the Usk Valley to the north. At the foot of the mountain lies the Monmouthshire & Brecon Canal. It drops away steeply to the northwest into Cwm Llanwenarth. To the south, gentler slopes fall away to Blaenavon at the head of the Lwyd valley.

Geology

The Blorenge is composed in layer-cake fashion of a number of different rock types. Its lower slopes are formed from the sandstones and mudstones deposited during the Devonian period and known collectively as the Old Red Sandstone. Its higher reaches are formed from a suite of mudstones, limestones and sandstones of Carboniferous age. The summit plateau is formed from coarse sandstones that lie at the boundary of the Millstone Grit and the Coal Measures. All of these beds tilt south-westwards into the South Wales Coalfield basin.

The shape of the hill was modified during the ice ages as the Usk Valley glacier flowed past it to its north. A small glacier nourished by windblown snow from the plateau excavated the hollow on the eastern side of Blorenge which is known as The Punchbowl. Cwm Craf on the hill's north-eastern slopes has a cirque-like form though probably never harboured a full-grown glacier.[1]

Protected areas

Blorenge is situated within both the Brecon Beacons National Park and the Blaenavon Industrial Landscape World Heritage Site. Much of the hill has also been designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest principally for its heather moorland which is important for breeding Red Grouse. The Punchbowl is owned and managed by the Woodland Trust as a nature reserve.

Access

Most of the hill is open access for walkers and there are a number of footpaths and bridleways which run to and over it. There is a hillwalking trail that runs around Blorenge and is a very popular destination for tourists and walkers alike. The ascent on foot to the summit from Llanfoist / Abergavenny via Cwm Craf is very steep but the effort is repaid by the panoramic views from the summit across the valley of the River Usk to Abergavenny and the Black Mountains, Wales. Easier access both to the summit and the northern edge of the plateau can be had from the Foxhunter car park.

Recreation

Plaque marking the grave of Foxhunter

Most visitors are walkers and sightseers. Some come to see the grave of Sir Harry Llewellyn's famous showjumping horse, Foxhunter, who won Britain's only Gold medal in the 1952 Summer Olympics. Foxhunter is buried near to the Blaenavon to Llanover road on Blorenge. A car park here is named in his honour.[2][3]

The SE Wales Hang Gliding & Paragliding Club's members regularly take off from the summit which is now owned by the club. Paragliders performing 'top to bottom' flights land in Castle Meadows beside the River Usk at Abergavenny.

Every November a Category A Fell Race takes place on the mountain starting and finishing at St Faith's Church at Llanfoist. The race route passes under the Monmouthshire and Brecon Canal.

There is also a Great Taste Great Taste Awards Award winning pale ale named after this hill and produced in the local brewery in Abergavenny.

Industrial heritage

The remains of a tramway, built about 1796, linking a limestone quarry on the north side of the mountain with the ironworks at Blaenavon can be seen near 51°48′25″N 3°03′36″W / 51.807°N 3.060°W / 51.807; -3.060.[4] Hill's Tramroad extends around the western flanks of the hill and drops steeply down to Llanfoist by means of a series of inclines beneath Cwm Craf. There are extensive abandoned workings for limestone around the northern and eastern rim of Blorenge.

Etymology

The name is problematic. It has been suggested that it may derive from the Welsh 'plor' ('pimple') and relating to Middle English 'blure' ('blister') or else from 'blawr ais' ('grey ribbed') but neither explanation is wholly satisfactory.[5]

Blorenge in popular culture

The Blorenge was mentioned in the TV panel show QI (which aired on 8 October 2004) as the only word in the English language rhyming with 'orange'.

The Blorenge is believed[by whom?] to be a source of inspiration for Cecil Frances Humphreys Alexander's hymn "All Things Bright And Beautiful". The forth verse starts "The purple headed mountain, the river running by". "The purple headed mountain" is believed to be the Blorenge, "The river running by" the Usk beneath.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ British Geological Survey 50K Map sheet 232 'Abergavenny' & accompanying memoir
  2. ^ "A trip to Blorenge at Abergavenny from Hereford" (Directions for a scenic walk. Photo of the sign: FOXHUNTER Car Park | Maes Parcio). Goherefordshire. Retrieved 8 March 2014. The path should be fairly obvious from the car park as it is well worn, and there are usually some other people around who look as though they know where they are going. Look out for the Foxhunter memorial as you leave the car park.
  3. ^ "A walk up the Blorenge mountain". Abergavenny: Gateway to Wales. Retrieved 8 March 2014. Foxhunter car park In 1952, Sir Harry Llewellyn rode Foxhunter to take Gold in the Helsinki Olympic. The remains of the horse are buried near the car park, with a small memorial dedicated to him. Sir Harry Llewellyn himself died at the age of 88 in November 1999, at his home in Abergavenny. His ashes were scattered over the Blorenge mountain.
  4. ^ "Blorenge Tramroad". Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
  5. ^ Owen, H.W. & Morgan, R. 2007 Dictionary of the Place-names of Wales, Gomer Press, Ceredigion

External links

51°48′00″N 3°03′41″W / 51.80005°N 3.06148°W / 51.80005; -3.06148