Riding Holidays in Wales: Drovers' Roads, Welsh Cobs and the Cambrian Mountains

Where to ride in Wales. Welsh Prince Trail, Cambrian Mountains, drovers' roads, native Welsh Cobs, and the operators worth booking. The Saddl guide.

Region
UK & Ireland
Type
Holiday
Level
Novice to Intermediate
Best months
Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct
Price tier
Mid-range

Wales is the closest thing the UK has to a wilderness trail-riding destination. The Cambrian Mountains, the Brecon Beacons (Bannau Brycheiniog) and the Black Mountains carry an unbroken network of bridleways, drovers' roads and old packhorse tracks across remote upland country, and almost all of it is rideable. For UK riders, Wales is a long weekend or a week-long holiday rather than a flight.

Where to ride

Mid Wales is the heartland. The hills around Builth Wells, Rhayader and the Elan Valley are big, empty and crossed by the old drovers' roads that once moved Welsh cattle to the markets of England. The Brecon Beacons, further south, give you bigger climbs and the famous ridges around Pen y Fan. Snowdonia in the north has more dramatic terrain but tighter access, with rides typically based out of valley centres and taking in the foothills rather than the high peaks. The Wye Valley on the English border is gentler, with riverbank trails and inn-to-inn options.

Who it suits

Wales suits riders who want serious hours in the saddle in genuinely remote country, on horses that know the ground. Most operators expect riders to be confident at walk, trot and canter in open country and able to manage steep descents and stream crossings. Beginners are catered for at centre-based operations, but the multi-day trails are intermediate and up.

The horses

Welsh Cobs (Section D) and Welsh Mountain Ponies dominate. They are bred for this country: short-coupled, surefooted, and forward-going on a long day. Ex-hunter cobs and cob-crosses make up most of the trail strings.

Operators worth booking

Freerein (mid Wales) runs the only self-guided trail riding holidays in the UK or USA. Riders are matched with a horse, briefed on the route, and sent out with maps to ride point-to-point between country inns. The Welsh Prince Trail (four days) and the Old Drovers Trail (two days) are the signature routes. Strong fit for confident independent riders.

Tregoyd Mountain Riders (Brecon Beacons) is centre-based and runs hacks across the Black Mountains, with B&B accommodation on site.

Heart of Wales Riding School and Cantref Riding Centre offer shorter trail and hack options closer to Brecon.

When to go

April to October is the practical season. May and June are usually the best balance of weather and ground conditions; July and August can be hot on the open hill but bookable on weekdays; September and October give you the best autumn light. Winter riding is possible in lower areas but the open uplands are weather-dependent.

Practicalities

Most operators accept riders up to around 95 kg (15 stone). Hard hats are mandatory. Allow GBP 800 to GBP 1,500 per person for a four-to-seven-night trail with B&B. Travel is by car or train to Mid Wales main line stations (Builth Wells, Llandrindod Wells), with operator pickups from there.

Related readingMan v Horse Marathon: the Welsh race where runners try to beat horses

Operators worth booking with

Saddl receives a commission when you book through some of these links. We only list operators we have researched and trust. The price you pay is the same.

Freerein

UK office

The standout. Self-guided trail riding holidays in mid Wales since 1989, with no equivalent in the UK or USA. The Welsh Prince Trail and Old Drovers Trail are the routes worth the journey.

Visit Freerein

Tregoyd Mountain Riders

UK office

The centre-based alternative for the Brecon Beacons. Strong fit for riders who want a single base with hacks rather than point-to-point.

Visit Tregoyd Mountain Riders

Cantref Riding Centre

UK office

Brecon Beacons family trekking option. Less ambitious than Tregoyd but accessible for beginners.

Visit Cantref Riding Centre

Equus Journeys

UK office

UK-based booking agent that handles Welsh trail packages alongside their international portfolio.

Visit Equus Journeys

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Do I need my own horse? No. All operators provide horses matched to your ability. You can take your own to a few centres but it is the exception, not the norm.

Is this all bridleway riding or is there road work? Almost entirely off-road. Drovers' roads, bridleways, forestry tracks and open hill. Short stretches of quiet lane connect sections.

What if it rains all week? Welsh weather can change fast. Operators ride in most conditions; full waterproofs are essential. In genuinely poor weather, programmes are flexed (shorter routes, lower ground).

Are the horses fit enough for a full week? Yes. Trail strings are conditioned for the work and rotated. You will not normally ride the same horse for the entire week on multi-day trails.

Can a non-rider come? Yes at most centre-based operations. Self-guided trails like Freerein's are not suitable for non-riding partners.

Saddl earns a commission when you book through some of the links on this page. We only recommend operators we have researched and trust. The price you pay is the same whether you book through Saddl or directly. Read our editorial standards.