Offa's Dyke Path - Outline
Offa's Dyke is an earthwork constructed in the 8th century, possibly as
a boundary, possibly as a defensive barrier, but whatever the reason for
its creation, it has been attributed to the Mercian King Offa.
The National Trail of the same name roughly follows the course of the
Dyke and runs for 180 miles from Chepstow in the south of Wales to
Prestatyn in the North. Many sections of the walk are a long way from
the Dyke, some of the path is actually on the Dyke and in some sections
the Dyke has disappeared completely.

Walk Profiles
These walk profiles give an indication of the climbs involved each day, with the highpoint of each day indicated. Click each of the thumbnails to see a larger version of the image.
Day 9 - Oswestry to Llangollen
Day 10 - Llangollen to Llandegla
Guide Books

Most
National Trails or other long distance paths have a commonly accepted
"right way" of walking them. The C2C is almost exclusively walked from
West to East (mainly because that's the way Wainwright described it),
the Pennine Way is normally walked South to North and so on. Offa's Dyke
however seems to be discussed just as often North to South as it does
South to North and the guidebooks are the same. You can therefore select
your direction based on the guidebook you have chosen or vice versa. I
had decided to walk South to North, so needed a guidebook that would
cover this direction.
My preferred book would have been the Trailblazer guide (written by
Keith Carter), as these are beautifully written guides (I now own about
6 different ones) with clear maps and loads of useful information on
accommodation and local services. Unfortunately their edition is a North
to South guide.
In the end I chose the National Trails Guide by Ernie & Kathy Kay, and
Mark Richards. You have to buy two of these, one for the northern
section and one for the southern, which seems a bit of a rip off. I
wasn't that impressed with them as guidebooks either and I decided not
to carry them with me for the walk - relying on my maps and GPS instead.
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