Driving from the north (Brecon)
Arriving at Llandovery on the A40 from the north (Brecon / Merthyr Tydfil)
When you arrive in Llandovery, you'll pass various shops - the middle of town is effectively a narrow passing place with The Castle Hotel on the left and a garage selling cars on the right. The road takes a 90 degree right hand bend at the West End Café.
After about 500 metres.
Turn Right on to the A483
This is signposted Lynn Brianne and Builth Wells.
If you cross a level crossing you've gone too far. Turn back.
Follow the A483 for a couple of hundred metres until you come to a diagonal zebra crossing.
Turn left. The road is signposted Cilycwm.
The junction is by the fire station and a blue painted Mace corner shop.
Follow this road for about two kilometres.
You'll go under a railway bridge, pass occasional houses and a left hand turn (signposted Porthyrhyd) that crosses a stone bridge. Ignore this left hand turn.
Another couple of kilometres on you come to a single house on a gentle right hand bend. It has pretty cream edges to its windows. Start looking out for the next left turn. It's not immediate, but it pays to be alert! If it's day light, you should see a lovely whitewashed barn on your right at the foot of the hill. The left turn is not long after this. In the dark, you'll spot red reflectors by the junction.
Turn left - it is signposted Cilycwm. The road takes you immediately over the river.
Follow this road round until it brings you into the village of Cilycwm. You'll pass a school and a pub called the Neuadd Arms on the right.
Go through the village and about two hundred metres after the pub is a left hand turn. It's not so obvious until you're nearly on it - so drive slowly. Also the kids around here own the roads (In actual fact the dog from the pub owns the road but he lets the kids play on it).
Turn left and follow the road up the hill. At the top, there's a gravel track that goes straight on while the road turns sharply to the left.
Take the gravel track.
Follow the track for about half a kilometre.
You're here!
