Crags
5 crags in North Wales
Filters 3
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Wavelength Boulders
North Wales
Today
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The rock has had roughly 24 hours of drying since the last light rain (1.3mm on May 6th), with today remaining dry and moderate southerly winds aiding evaporation on this south-facing venue. However, several days of light but persistent precipitation (May 1–6 totalling ~9.3mm) combined with high ambient humidity (~73–81%) mean some seepage areas and sheltered faces may still hold residual moisture. |
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Cromlech Boulders
North Wales
Today
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The Cromlech Boulders have had a damp week with light but frequent precipitation, and today sees only trace amounts; the SW/W-facing rhyolite should be largely surface-dry by late morning but high humidity (77%) and overcast skies limit confidence. A good window exists midday through early evening, but climbers should check holds for residual dampness on arrival. |
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Sheep Pen Boulders
North Wales
Today
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Light rain fell yesterday (2.5mm) and today has seen only a trace (0.3mm), but high humidity (avg 80% over the last week) and limited sunshine at 400m mean surface moisture may linger in sheltered spots. The exposed, wind-swept plateau and non-porous rhyolite favour quick drying, so a morning climbing window before the light afternoon drizzle looks plausible — but visual assessment on arrival is essential. |
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| 5-Day Outlook |
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Caseg Fraith
North Wales
Today
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Recent days have seen repeated light precipitation and persistently high humidity, with today bringing further showers through the afternoon; the rock is unlikely to be reliably dry. Tomorrow brings 11.6mm of rain, and the five-day outlook shows continued unsettled weather with no meaningful dry window. |
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| 5-Day Outlook |
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RAC Boulders
North Wales
Today
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Light but persistent rain over recent days and intermittent showers today mean the boulders are likely damp, with poor friction on the rhyolite surfaces. Tomorrow brings 12mm of rain, so conditions are not improving imminently. |
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| 5-Day Outlook |
Fri
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Sat
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Sun
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Mon
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Tue
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—
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| View crag | |||||
The rock has had roughly 24 hours of drying since the last light rain (1.3mm on May 6th), with today remaining dry and moderate southerly winds aiding evaporation on this south-facing venue. However, several days of light but persistent precipitation (May 1–6 totalling ~9.3mm) combined with high ambient humidity (~73–81%) mean some seepage areas and sheltered faces may still hold residual moisture.
The Cromlech Boulders have had a damp week with light but frequent precipitation, and today sees only trace amounts; the SW/W-facing rhyolite should be largely surface-dry by late morning but high humidity (77%) and overcast skies limit confidence. A good window exists midday through early evening, but climbers should check holds for residual dampness on arrival.
Light rain fell yesterday (2.5mm) and today has seen only a trace (0.3mm), but high humidity (avg 80% over the last week) and limited sunshine at 400m mean surface moisture may linger in sheltered spots. The exposed, wind-swept plateau and non-porous rhyolite favour quick drying, so a morning climbing window before the light afternoon drizzle looks plausible — but visual assessment on arrival is essential.
Recent days have seen repeated light precipitation and persistently high humidity, with today bringing further showers through the afternoon; the rock is unlikely to be reliably dry. Tomorrow brings 11.6mm of rain, and the five-day outlook shows continued unsettled weather with no meaningful dry window.
Light but persistent rain over recent days and intermittent showers today mean the boulders are likely damp, with poor friction on the rhyolite surfaces. Tomorrow brings 12mm of rain, so conditions are not improving imminently.