When I posted my blog about the small chapel at
Bayvil back in August, Andrew Wilson-Dickson told me about a ruined chapel he
had discovered whilst taking a detour from the Pembrokeshire Coastal Path near
St Dogmaels, near Cardigan. The idea of the church suggested many new ideas that I
could use as part of the Creative Wales Award I’m currently working on, so
I set off to find the church.
I initially I started
walking the south along the coastal path from Poppit Sands, encountering some
alarming notices …
… and the usual fellow travellers …
As well as other abandoned and discarded artifacts
The chapel belonged to the community of Cippyn, which is so small that it isn’t even signposted. Eventually, after walking along a bridal path for half a mile or so, the roof of a building came in sight.
The chapel is surrounded by woodland and fields
Someone has recently left a little plastic bottle with flowers in a little niche in the wall
Some of its windows are broken and the entrance is overgrown
with brambles, but the building has not been vandalised:
Inside the original communion table is still in place
Someone has recently left a little plastic bottle with flowers in a little niche in the wall
It’s difficult to know how long the church has been
abandoned, but there was still a newspaper scattered around the floor dating
back thirty years:
I left armed with lots of information, ready to move on to the next stage ... watch this space!
More pictures of the deserted chapel near Cippyn
I left armed with lots of information, ready to move on to the next stage ... watch this space!
More pictures of the deserted chapel near Cippyn
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