The path drops down the side of the hill to deposit you at the beginning of the Warren holiday park which runs along the back of the beach as far as Castellmarch. As I reached the beach in front of the Warren, it was about 9.30am, but you would not have known that from the light. With heavy cloud cover it was more like 9.00pm. With the tide on the wain I was able to walk along the beach where the sand was firm and walkable. However, it was a very cold morning with a stiff breeze coming off the sea and I needed to have the hat and gloves on. Later on, at a break in the dunes at the back of the beach just in front of Castellmarch I was surprised to find cows on the beach, happily paddling at the water's edge.
Just before the point of the headland at Trwyn yr Wylfa, the path dips in to a gully with a footbridge over a wee burn that culminates at the cliff edge in a waterfall known as Pistyll Cim. As I understand it, the fall is only worth seeing if there is a good flow of water in the burn. As well, to actually access the view you need to leave the main footpath and go out on to the small headland to the east of the bridge. When I passed over the burn, despite recent rain, there was almost no water in it and I did not consider a detour worthwhile.
Tent up and equipment in, a quick run across the road to the shower room and an even quicker dinner, cooked on the porch of the tent and eaten inside and the day was done. Snuggled in my sleeping bag with my Kindle, I could hear the wind and the rain but was protected from the worst of it by the caravans on either side. It had been a day of highs and lows, another day where the poor weather had prevented me from seeing the best of what Wales and the Lleyn Peninsula have to offer but had had given me enough to want more.