What goes up must come down - Cwmcarn - South Wales Trail Offensive Part 1

After all of the marketing leading up to the opening of Bike Park Wales this weekend, I decided to avoid being swept up in the hype train and chose to visit two nearby centres instead.

Cwmcarn rose to popularity as a regular downhill uplift venue in south Wales.  Just north of Newport, the centre boasts a black downhill run and a red XC route courtesy of Cognation, complemented by a few freeride lines at the top of the mountain.

Setting off bleary eyed at 6:30 in the morning meant I arrived at the visitors centre car park just after 9:00.  The facilities are pretty impressive with super-clean looking toilet blocks including changing rooms for those that don't want to strip down in the car park.  The parking fee is really low at £1 for 2 hours or £3 all day.

The Boar
The Twrch trail is red graded and 15.5km long, just shy of 10 miles.  The initial climb up through the wooded valley starts out gently but ultimately can be summed up in one word: long.  Crazy long.  I'm not the fittest rider in the world and I'm sure I hadn't reached the summit after 45 minutes of solid ascent.  In fairness I stopped off half way up to check out some wood carvings to the side of the Mabinogion section and get my breath back, but still, the length of time that you will be climbing here is substantial.

As well as the length of the climb, it's worth mentioning that it is nearly all fairly technical singletrack with many rocks, roots and loose or slippery sections.  If you can clean this on your first time, you should be pretty chuffed!  There are some mellow switchbacks which should pose no problem to any experienced rider as, for example, the ones on Cannock's Monkey are far tighter.

Breaking out of the wooded singletrack brings you to a section of fire road before a short exposed singletrack section, not unlike some of those at Llandegla, brings you to the summit and some excellent views out across Newport and the Bristol channel.

Major climb done with - views at the start of the freeride section
After admiring the views, the next section involves picking one of the lines making up the freeride park.  This relatively brief section meandered down the hill and gave me some good cornering practice, but ultimately wasn't that heavily built up, feeling more like a worn in slalom line than a heavily bermed groomed run.  This seemed like a great area to spend a couple of hours but I was more inclined to push on, hoping I'd seen the back of the ascent.

The Twrch trail follows a more or less straight line skirting around the tops of the hills, dipping in and out of wooded sections and making the rider pass through numerous "bike stiles" which really break up the flow.  I'm sure they're there for a good reason, but they are not wide enough to ride though without significant hassle and, in a perfect world, a gate opening in the direction of travel would be infinitely easier for the riders to deal with.  Also, some of the downhill sections here were almost fall line, gulley-run style affairs, which was disappointing as height is lost pretty quickly here without much technical challenge.

Downhill at least
Entering the Castle Valley section, the trail takes on an overall downhill feel and follows the curve around the mountainside through light woods, which in my opinion, was fairly unremarkable.  I'd heard this was on really steep hillside but the trail was wide enough that it didn't feel sketchy at all and if I hadn't been told, I would not have even noticed the gradient of the hillside I was traversing.

Angels Posts is a rocky section that allows you to power down the mountainside quickly, providing a great place to practice your line choice and looking-ahead skills so that you can carry as much speed as you can.  Following a local down this section was awesome as I really could let off the brakes and try to match his speed as much as possible.

Entering Castle Valley - annoying bike stiles 
The last section leading back to the car park cranked up the speed and man-made feel and featured a couple of features where you can get airborne the largest berms of the trail outside the freeride zone.

All in, I was satisfied with my 2hr time, although it felt like I had been climbing for an eternity and the downhill payoff was not enough to outweigh all that effort put in to get to the top.  While there was a lot of singletrack on the route, much of it was quite wide and felt more like old walking trails and not purpose built for MTBs as I was expecting.  The initial climb (all the way up to the end of Giant's Finger) was tech but, I felt, lacked flow. It made me feel that the climb was an afterthought to add some XC-capability to a DH bike-oriented centre.

Bottom line - This place is a solid ride for sure but to an experienced rider the actual experience does not match the hype.  One of "Wales' hidden gems"? This is marketing gone mad.  

Next time I go it will be with my DH bike I'll make full use of the uplift service to sample the DH tracks with none of the climbing-induced pain!

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