The National Trust is worried about the nation’s kids. Not enough muddy knees and rosy cheeks, it seems. So they came up with a brilliant campaign called ‘50 things to do before you’re 11¾’ to inspire children to get out into wild places and, well, go wild. Climb a tree, build a den, dam a stream, skim a stone, make mud pies – all these old-fashioned pleasures are on the list, together with a few modern twists like geocaching and bouldering. 

Every National Trust property in Wales is doing its bit, and there’s a list of things for children to tick off their achievements, along with some helpful tips and safety advice for parents.

We’ve picked ten things off the list for a brilliant family day out, and suggested places in Wales you might like to go and try them. Have fun!

Roll down a really big hill

Invading armies might have done it in a hail of arrows, but you can enjoy all the fun without the risk when you roll down the really big hill that supports Chirk Castle. Completed in 1310, Chirk is the last Welsh castle from the reign of Edward I that’s lived in today, and there are still archers and pike men on patrol.

Chirk Castle in Autumn

Chirk Castle & Gardens

Attraction
Chirk
Castell Dolbadarn,
Plas Newydd at Summer - National Trust Images(c)Pa

Plas Newydd House & Gardens

Attraction
Llanfairpwllgwyngyll
Castell Dolbadarn,

Catch a crab

The Menai Strait has some of Wales’ richest pickings for oysters, mussels, crab and lobster. Plas Newydd House & Gardens, the magnificent seat of the Marquess of Anglesey, has watched over these waters for centuries, but what lies beneath the waves is yours to discover with a net or crabbing line.

Country estate manor on the edge of the water
Country estate manor on the edge of the water

Plas Newydd, Anglesey

Take a look inside a tree

After a visit from the official tree recorder of the Tree Register of the British Isles (yes, this job really exists…) Powis Castle in Welshpool was pleased to discover that it has 12 ‘champion’ trees - the largest examples of their species in Wales. Which is why this is the ideal place to run free in the woods and explore some fabulous trees.

Aerial view of Powis Castle and the terraced gardens.

Powis Castle, Welshpool, Mid Wales

Powis Castle © National Trust Images Andrew Butler

Powis Castle and Garden

Attraction
Welshpool
dam and resevoir.
Rhossili Bay

Rhossili Bay Beach

Attraction
Swansea
Aerial view of a harbour, two beaches and pastel coloured houses.
Mwnt Beach

Mwnt Beach

Attraction
Cardigan
Aerial view of a harbour, two beaches and pastel coloured houses.

Find crazy creatures in a rock pool

Every rock pool is a little universe with its own mini ecosystem, refreshed twice a day by the tides – perfect for little explorers to go on adventures. The National Trust just happen to look after some of the most gorgeous bits of coast in Wales – and by extension, the world. Just take a look at RhossiliMwnt, Porthor, Porthdinllaen… they’re equally ravishing.

golfer near coast,
beautiful sandy beach on a sunny day,

Porthdinllaen, Llŷn Peninsula and Mwnt beach in Ceredigion

Climb a huge hill

If you're visiting Beddgelert in the heart of Eryri (Snowdonia), huge hills aren’t hard to find. However, if you're looking for an easier scramble, try heading up to the castle ruins of Dinas Emrys. It has the added bonus of a proper Welsh legend: underneath this hill, a red dragon and a white dragon shook the castle foundations while having an almighty scrap. The red dragon won… which is why it’s our national symbol, fluttering proudly on our flag.

Make a mud pie

The kitchen of Erddig once produced elegant dishes and fine fayre for the gentry upstairs, but it’s the gardens that now produce remarkable pies these days – mud pies that is, as kids can get their hands dirty and show their creative flair in the grounds of the atmospheric country house.

Erddig

Attraction
Wrexham
Castell Dolbadarn,

Camp outdoors

The first time you ever camp outdoors is always an unforgettable experience, but to camp out near the wildlife oasis that is Stackpole in Pembrokeshire, where the inky darkness of the night sky allows each star to shine with a fierce brightness, makes it an experience to cherish forever. Check out campsites in Pembrokeshire to find the perfect place to set up tent. 

sandy beach on a sunny day viewed from above.

Barafundle Bay, Near Stackpole Quay, West Wales

Find a geocache

Geocaching is a fabulous way to pique children’s interest in the outdoors – it’s basically hi-tech hide-and-seek – and there are caches hidden at practically every National Trust site. You can have a crack for free by borrowing a GPS device at Llanerchaeron, an elegant Georgian villa, set in the wooded Aeron valley, which has its own farm, walled gardens and lake.

Fly a kite

Enjoy the wide open spaces of the fabulous parkland at Tredegar House near Newport by flying a kite in the luscious 90 acres that had for five centuries been enjoyed exclusively by the Morgan coal dynasty.

red 17th century manor through open gates.
back view of girl and woman walking down a path with bushes in foreground and greenery in the background.
building and lake viewed through greenery.

Tredegar House, Newport, South Wales

Llanerchaeron

Llanerchaeron

Attraction
Aberaeron
dam and resevoir.

Tredegar House & Gardens

Attraction
Newport City
Landscape of the attractions at Cardiff Bay seen from the water.

Dinefwr

Attraction
Llandeilo
Aerial view of a harbour, two beaches and pastel coloured houses.

Go on a nature walk at night

Ever been out in the countryside at night with a powerful torch? There’s a whole community of critters out there which you seldom see by daylight: fox, badger, otter, hedgehogs, deer – they’re all most active at night. And then there are bats, of course –you’ll see several species at Dinefwr, where the rangers run regular bat walks in the summer.

interior of castle.

Castell Dinefwr, Carmarthenshire, West Wales

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