- Traeth Mawr
The Traeth Mawr (Welsh for "big sands") is a
polder nearPorthmadog inGwynedd inWales . It was formerly the tidalestuary of theriver Glaslyn , and many travellers sank in itsquicksand s trying to cross it. Much of it is between high mountains.Pont Aberglaslyn is at its upper end.Between 1770 and 1800 about 1,500 acres (6 km²) of it were reclaimed piecemeal by various
landowner s, in portions between 50 and 100 acres (0.2 and 0.4 km²) in size.Some time after 1789,
William Madocks reclaimed an area of sand and builtTremadog on it. Madocks obtained anAct of Parliament (1 August 1807 - 47 George III Cap. 71) permitting him to complete the reclamation. Between 1808 and 1811 he constructed an embankment called "the Cob" from the island of Ynys Towyn (now part ofPorthmadog ) near theCaernarfonshire shore toBoston Lodge on theMerioneth shore in order to cut off the estuary from the sea; this gained 1500 acres (6 km²). Soon after, in1812 the embankment broke in a violent storm, but the breach was mended by the end of September 1814.The
Ffestiniog Railway has crossed the embankment since1836 when a carriageway was constructed at a lower level on the inland side to take the public road, which is now theA487 . The embankment is officially regarded as a bridge and a toll was payable by road vehicles until September 2003, when the Cob was bought by theWelsh Assembly Government . That tollgate was notorious for causingtraffic jam s at peak holiday travel times: it was not exceptional for the queue to back up all the way toMinffordd , one mile away. The road on the Cob was widened in 2002, and a separate path added for walkers and cyclists. This path now forms part ofLôn Las Cymru , the national cycle route.In July
2005 , work began on extending theWelsh Highland Railway to a loop named Traeth Mawr.At its seaward end, the Traeth Mawr joins the "Traeth Bach" ("little sands") - the estuary of the
River Dwyryd .
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