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People walking along the prom in Llandudno
Take a seaside stroll in Llandudno and then head up Great Orme for some butterfly spotting © travellinglight / Getty Images

Witness the blooming lovely start

St David’s Day, the annual celebration of Wales’ patron saint, falls on 1 March and tends to denote the start of spring. As if like clockwork, carpets of daffodils (the country’s national flower) emerge just in time for the special day and hang around for at least a month. For definite daffy sightings, head to Powis Castle and Gardens in Welshpool, the riverbanks in Bute Park in Cardiff or Bodnant Garden in Conwy.

Daffodils in Bute Park, Cardiff
It doesn't get more spring-like and Welsh-like than daffodils in Bute Park, Cardiff © Amy Pay / ϰϲʿ¼

Flower power continues into the season; after the floods of yellow flowers come blankets of bluebells. At , a large ancient woodland in Cardiff, they're thickly strewn and boldly coloured, often attracting great spotted woodpeckers to the trees above. in Crickhowell is known as ‘Bluebell Woods’, so you can be sure it’ll live up to its namesake in April and May. The blue trail around in Wrexham will also deliver what its name promises.

See wildlife emerge from the winter

It’s not just the flora that raise their heads in spring. Native animals awake from long periods of hibernation and others migrate here for the warmer half of the year. At in Llandudno, up to 20 different types of butterfly can be seen fluttering over the headland. As a country with a strong agricultural industry, farmyard newborns are a common sight on hillsides across Wales. Some farms and petting zoos offer lamb feeding sessions, such as in Llandeilo.

Puffins on a cliff edge on Skomer Island, Pembrokeshire
Puffins on the lookout for spring (and fish) on Skomer Island © Klaas Vledder / Shutterstock

One place that is truly inundated with breeding pairs and migratory animals is Skomer Island in Pembrokeshire, which is reachable by boat trip from St Davids between May and late July. Skomer Island typically has over 10,000 pairs of puffin and nearly 200,000 pairs of Manx shearwater in the spring, along with razorbills, guillemots and gannets. The surrounding waters are home to pods of dolphins, porpoises and grey seals, which boat tour operators help you to identify.

Power through rapids and over hills

For adventures of the more physical type, there are many options. The waters at the National White Water Centre in Bala are at their best in spring, so it’s the perfect time to go white-water rafting under the tree canopies. The rapids are fed from the Tryweryn River, a steep, fast-flowing Snowdonia river that’s controlled by a dam for guaranteed flow.

People in a boat going through some rapids
Get the adrenaline pumping running the rapids at the National White Water Centre © D.Pimborough / Shutterstock

The Gower Peninsula, an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, gets much busier when the sun comes out – mainly with keen walkers and people riding horses. Local route guides and pony trekking operators can show beginners the ropes and some of the breathtaking local scenery, from wide sandy beaches to craggy cliffs. If watersports take your fancy – maybe SUP, kayaking or canoeing – you can hire gear or have a lesson from a Visit Wales. With nearly 900 miles of coastline and hundreds of lakes, lagoons and rivers, the Welsh waterways are waiting to be enjoyed.

Cheer on the boys

Rugby is a huge deal in Wales. By spring, the Six Nations Championship is well under way. When it ends in late March, there’s still plenty of fire in the boys. One of the most exciting events for regional rugby is Judgement Day VII, which takes place on 27 April in 2019 at the Principality Stadium in Cardiff. The four rugby union teams (Cardiff Blues, Llanelli’s Scarlets, Newport Gwent Dragons and Swansea’s Ospreys) meet for a double-header fixture and a night of revelry in the capital city.

Cap it off with some culture

Book lovers can put two week-long events into their diaries. First is the Cardiff Children’s Literature Festival, running from 30 March to 7 April in 2019. While it’s aimed at children, the celebration of reading and imagination draws in lots of adults who want to be a part of the workshops and author talks in Cardiff Castle, Cardiff City Hall and Cardiff Central Library. In the so-called ‘Town of Books’, Hay-On-Wye, the annual Hay Festival runs from 23 May to 2 June 2019. Novelists, travel writers, children’s authors, comedians, journalists, screenwriters and winners of the Man Booker Prize, Pulitzer Prize and Nobel Prize are among the first batch of the line-up to be revealed, with nearly 600 others to be announced.

Man standing outside a book shop in Hay-On-Wye
Obey the sign and indulge your love of reading at the Hay Festival © Anadolu Agency / Contributor / Getty Images

Over the May bank holiday (26–27 May 2019), brings delicious produce to the quaint market town. As well as stalls selling farm-fresh meats, hunks of Welsh cheese, craft beers and delicatessen-style produce, there are live demos, street food stands and a wholly vegan area. On the same weekend is in Lawrenny, Pembrokeshire (24–27 May). The four-day festival combines different aspects of wellbeing – exercise, relaxation, food and thought – into a family-friendly event in a gorgeous rural setting. Both festivals are lovely ways to see out the season.

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