
If it was an offence to stalk wooden mermaid sculptures, we would have been locked up a long time ago.
We travelled eighty miles to the seaside village of St Dogmaels to catch a glimpse of her seaweed-coloured smile.
Like a junkie chasing a fix we just had to have one more wooden mermaid hit in late August to last us through the winter …
Snap, snap, arrggh.
The flowing hair, the contours, the graininess and greenness and those big green eyes looking out to sea.
Click here to see the Collection of Photos from the August 2008 pilgrimage and September 2007 tour of......

This wooden character caught our eye… always a good start.
It is a wooden sculpture of St Dogmael in St Dogmaels about a mile west of Cardigan.
The sculpture is by John Clarke and dates from 2002, commissioned to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II.
It is located near the lower end of St Dogmaels’s Abbey.
Watch your step. There is a duck pond adjacent to the sculpture!
St Dogmaels village has lots to offer the photographer/tourist. According to Dyfed Archaeological Trust it is “a very distinctive historic landscape character“.
Enjoy the Photos in the Gallery......

Cerizim Chapel in Cippyn, Pembrokeshire. A few miles from St Dogmaels. Here is a map showing the location of Cerizim on Streetmap.
The stonework on this chapel is not very uniform. It is quite colourful, mainly Autumnal colours.
chapels, Pembrokeshire, photos, St...