Cenarth Falls Resort Limited

“Quality leisure facilities draw folk to this beautifully landscaped park” - AA Inspector

LOCATION

NEWCASTLE EMLYN, CARMARTHENSHIRE

Official Rating
Inspected by
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Awards
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Our Inspector's view

Located close to the village of Cenarth where the River Teifi, famous for its salmon and trout fishing, cascades through the Cenarth Falls Gorge. With beautifully landscaped grounds and spotless amenities, the park also benefits from Coracles Health & Country Club with an indoor swimming pool, well-equipped gym, sauna and steam room, a bar serving evening meals (with a dog-friendly section), and a function room.

Cenarth Falls Resort Limited
Cenarth, NEWCASTLE EMLYN, SA38 9JS

Features

Leisure
  • Indoor Pool
  • Outdoor Pool
  • Gym
  • Game Room
  • Playground
  • Licensed Bar
  • Entertainment
Facilities
  • Launderette
  • Ice pack facility
  • Cafe/Restaurant
  • Wifi available
  • Baby bathing/changing
  • Motorvan service point
  • Calor Gas
  • Camping Gaz
  • Battery Charging
Site Information
  • Total Touring Pitches: 30
  • Total Static Pitches: 89
  • Caravan Pitches Available
  • Motorhome Pitches Available
  • Tent Pitches Available

About the area

Discover Carmarthenshire

Carmarthenshire is the largest of the historic counties of Wales, and known to have been inhabited since prehistoric times. Carmarthen, its county town, with its Roman fort, claims to be the oldest town in Wales.

Carmarthenshire was a heavily disputed territory between the Welsh and the Normans in the 12th and 13th centuries, and many of the castles and forts dotting its landscapes date from this period. They include ruins at Carreg Cennen, Dinefwr, Dryslwyn, Laugharne, Llansteffan and Newcastle Emlyn, as well as the slightly better-preserved Kidwelly Castle. Carmarthen Castle, meanwhile, saw further fighting during both the Wars of the Roses and the Civil War, when it was captured twice by the Parliamentary forces, and ordered to be dismantled by Oliver Cromwell.

In these more peaceful times, the economy of the county is mainly agricultural (the 19th-century Rebecca Riots, in which local farmers and agricultural workers protested against higher tolls and taxes, started in Carmarthenshire), and its fertile farmland is known as ‘The Garden of Wales’. A more literal garden, the National Botanic Garden of Wales, opened in 2000.

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