Cyfeiriad: 1 The Croft, Llanrhian, Tyddewi, SA62 5BQ
Symudol: 07771 975 059
E-bost: vervetourswales@outlook.com
Gwefan: https://vervetours.cymru
Siwd Mae – I’m Keith, a Welsh speaking driver guide who’s lived, worked or visited all over Wales and would love to introduce you to her history, landscape and most importantly her culture – basically what makes Cymru (Wales!) different to the rest of the UK!
As every visitor to Cymru is different, I tailor each itinerary to suit your particular preferences and interests. I especially enjoy taking visitors to towns, villages, sometimes even farms where their forebears came from. It’s great to see people making a physical connection to a place.
Amaethyddiaeth a Ffermio
Living in West Wales within a stone's throw of a dairy farm, and with a mother born into a farming family in Mid Wales, I've taken an interest in agriculture for many years.
Y Gorau o Gymru - teithiau diddordeb cyffredinol
As a driver guide I can be flexible and take you to wherever suits your needs or interests. One of my favourite guided trips are those taking people to find where their forebears come from - whether it's a small village buried in the Cambrian mountains, or a former mining village in the Glamorgan valleys.
Cestyll
We've got a few of them! I can't claim to have visited every one, but maybe I can guide you to the less well known ones, like Cilgerran, Castell Carreg Cennen, Castell y Bere, Dolforwyn or Llansteffan. I'm equally happy in one of the "big hitter" castles, such as Pembroke, Caerphilly, Caernarfon or Beaumaris.
Copr Glo a Haearn
My father was a mining engineer, and his father and grandfathers were colliers hence my lifelong interest in the history of coal mining in Wales - from the early phases linked with metal smelting (copper, then iron) through the steam coal phases of the late 19th century, and then onto the recent past. I also had the opportunity to go down 6 working mines on dozens of occaisons Learn on my guided driver tours how Wales was once the most important producer of both copper and iron in the world, and how the largest navies in the world relied on Welsh Rhondda coal for power.
Cefn gwlad
You're never far from countryside in Wales. Even when I lived in Cardiff, Bannau Brycheiniog (the Brecon Beacons) were under an hour away. Today I live in a tiny hamlet in West Wales, surrounded by the sights, smells and ways of the countryside. As a driver guide I can take you on the back roads to see the real heart of Wales.
Daearyddiaeth a Daeareg
Mae Cymru yn baradwys i ddaearegwyr - ac mae dwy ardal (Ynys Môn a Sir Benfro) yn eithriadol hyd yn oed o fewn Cymru. Gallaf ddangos i chi anticlines anhygoel, morgloddiau folcanig hyfryd a synclinau pefriol! Ychydig o bethau eraill mae'n debyg, ond ni allaf feddwl am y cyflythreniad!
Hanes a Rhaghanes
Dydw i ddim yn hanesydd trwy hyfforddi - ond rydw i wedi dysgu cymaint trwy geisio cysylltu'r Gymru a welwn heddiw, ei threfi a'i phentrefi, hyd yn oed eu henwau lleoedd, â hanes Cymru. Gadewch i mi ddangos llinell Landsker i chi – un yn rhannu Sir Benfro ag enwau lleoedd gwahanol ar y naill ochr a’r llall – ac wrth gwrs y cestyll a orfododd y rhaniad hwnnw, bron i 900 mlynedd yn ôl!
Tirwedd Llechi a Llechi
I live a mile from an old slate quarry (now repurposed for leisure activities!), but the history of how the natural riches of Wales were developed and exploited is a fascinating part of Welsh history. It's every bit as fundamental to our identity as coal mining and iron making were. In my twenties I worked in one of the main slate quarries in North Wales, so can easily identify with the industrial and cultural heritage of the region, and why it became an UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Iaith Gymraeg
As a native Welsh speaker, I beleive that the story of how the language of Wales has not only survived but promises to thrive is something that every visitor to Wales should hear about. If there's ONE thing that really distinguishes Wales, it's the Welsh language - Cymraeg - even for those Welsh men and women who aren't fluent in it.