Red Wharf Bay

{{Short description|Bay and village in Anglesey, Wales}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{More citations needed|date=July 2008}}

File:TraethCoch-01s.jpg

Red Wharf Bay, also known as Traeth Coch (Welsh for "red beach"), is a village and a sandy bay in Anglesey, Wales. The bay lies between the villages of Pentraeth and Benllech. It is also close to Castell Mawr Rock, thought to be the site of an Iron Age fort.

Description

Red Wharf Bay is on the western side of the bay. It is linked to Benllech and Pentraeth via the Anglesey Coastal Path. Red Wharf Bay has three restaurants—The Tavern on the Bay, The Ship Inn, and The Boathouse.

Wildlife

The bay attracts wildlife, including waterfowl and wading birds, such as oystercatcher, shelduck, purple sandpiper, curlew and dunlin. The bay's bordered by salt marshes and sand dunes. Some of these dunes are rich in shell fragments that support the flora common to lime-rich areas, including the pyramidal orchid.

Events

Each year the [https://www.redwharfbaysc.co.uk/ Red Wharf Bay Sailing Club] [https://www.redwharfbaysc.co.uk/anglesey-offshore-dinghy-catamaran-race Anglesey Offshore Dinghy Race] takes place from Beaumaris to Traeth Bychan. The {{convert|14|mi|km|adj=on}} race runs up the Menai Strait and down the Anglesey coast.{{Cite web |title=Anglesey Offshore Dinghy Race to be held on 13th August 2023 |url=https://www.yachtsandyachting.com/news/262643/Anglesey-Offshore-Dinghy-Race-preview |access-date=2023-07-04 |website=www.yachtsandyachting.com}}

History

The name of Traeth Coch is believed to originate from a battle involving Vikings in 1170 that left the beach soaked in blood.{{Cite web |last=Owen |first=Annie |date=2022-07-02 |title=The centuries old North Wales beach bar on a site with a blood soaked past |url=https://www.dailypost.co.uk/whats-on/food-drink-news/centuries-old-north-wales-beach-24379264 |access-date=2023-07-04 |website=North Wales Live |language=en}}

A hoard of five Scandinavian type arm-rings was discovered at Red Wharf Bay between c. 1887 and c. 1894.{{Cite web |title=Viking Archaeology - Arm-Rings from Red Wharf Bay, Anglesey |url=http://viking.archeurope.info/index.php?page=arm-rings-from-red-wharf-bay-anglesey |access-date=2023-07-04 |website=viking.archeurope.info}} Historian Mark Redknap wrote that "The Red Wharf Bay arm-rings are probably contemporary with the Cuerdale Hoard (buried c. 905), and it's been suggested that Ingimund’s activities on Anglesey in 903 might have led to the deposition and their non-recovery."{{Cite book |last=Redknap |first=Mark |title="The Vikings in Wales" in "The Viking world" |date=2012 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-203-41277-0 |editor-last=Brink |editor-first=Stefan |edition=1. publ. in paperback |series=The Routledge worlds |location=London}}

There was once a railway line which terminated at the bay, the Red Wharf Bay branch line, which left the Anglesey Central Railway at Pentre Berw. Stone for the Admiralty Arch, Holyhead was quarried near the bay.{{cite web|title=George IV Arch and Salt Island, Holyhead|url=http://historypoints.org/index.php?page=george-iv-arch-and-salt-island-holyhead|access-date=23 February 2018}}

References

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