From Pen-y-Pass to Glaslyn

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Walk directions
From the far right of the car park go through a gap in the wall and follow the popular path up rough slopes high above the Pass of Llanberis. It’s steep and rocky in places but well-engineered and so never really difficult. After a particularly steep climb, the gradient eases and the path reaches Bwlch y Moch, a wild pass on the northern ridge of Snowdon’s horseshoe.
Ignoring the smaller path to the summit of Crib Goch, cross a stile and follow the wide path that rounds the corner to traverse Crib Goch’s lower slopes. It’s level at first, but then climbs again, picking its way across the slopes high above Llyn Llydaw. On the skyline above look out for walkers crossing the knife-edged ridges of Crib Goch and Crib-y-Ddysgl.
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Location
Additional information
  Terrain  - Engineered paths
  Landscape  - High mountain corries and tarns
  Dog friendliness  - Sheep around in summer – keep dogs on a lead
  Parking  - Pen-y-pass car park (get there early or use Nant Peris Park-and-Ride)
  Toilets en route  - At car park
About the walk
Tucked beneath the cold, hard rocks of Glyder Fawr and Crib Goch, the high Pass of Llanberis would have been an awesome sight for early travellers. There wasn’t a road until 1830, so traders and farmers would have had to take their horse-drawn sledges over the boulder-strewn and boggy ground you...
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About the area
The county of Gwynedd is home to most of the Snowdonia National Park – including the wettest spot in Britain, an arête running up to Snowdon’s summit that receives an average annual rainfall of 4,473mm. With its mighty peaks, rivers and strong Welsh heritage (it has the highest proportion of Welsh-speakers in all of Wales), it’s always been an extremely popular place to visit and live.
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From Pen-y-Pass to Glaslyn

Recommended by
Dog friendly
Location
Nearest postcode:
Additional information
  Terrain - Engineered paths
  Landscape - High mountain corries and tarns
  Dog friendliness - Sheep around in summer – keep dogs on a lead
  Parking - Pen-y-pass car park (get there early or use Nant Peris Park-and-Ride)
  Toilets en route - At car park
About the walk
Tucked beneath the cold, hard rocks of Glyder Fawr and Crib Goch, the high Pass of Llanberis would have been an awesome sight for early travellers. There wasn’t a road until 1830, so traders and farmers would have had to take their horse-drawn sledges over the boulder-strewn and boggy ground you...
Read more
Been on this walk placeholder

Been on this walk?

Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.

Walking in Safety placeholder

Walking in Safety

Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.

Get an AA guide placeholder

Get an AA guide

Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.

About the area
Area image
Gwynedd
The county of Gwynedd is home to most of the Snowdonia National Park – including the wettest spot in Britain, an arête running up to Snowdon’s summit that receives an average annual rainfall of 4,473mm. With its mighty peaks, rivers and strong Welsh heritage (it has the highest proportion of Welsh-speakers in all of Wales), it’s always been an extremely popular place to visit and live.