New Quay Ceredigion
New Quay is a small and charming harbour town on the Ceredigion coast of Wales, a curved bay of colourful terraced houses climbing above a working fishing harbour whose combination of architectural appeal, clear water, dolphin watching and literary association makes it one of the most attractive and most rewarding small coastal towns in Wales. The town claims a connection with Dylan Thomas, who lived in New Quay for a period in 1944 and 1945 and is widely believed to have based the fictional Llareggub of Under Milk Wood on the town and its characters, although Laugharne in Carmarthenshire makes a competing claim. The harbour is the heart of New Quay, its stone quay protecting a small fleet of fishing vessels and pleasure craft and the seafront restaurants and cafés providing the best local crab and lobster directly from the boats that catch them. The water in the bay is exceptionally clear and the sandy beach below the harbour provides sheltered swimming in conditions that attract families in considerable numbers during the summer months. New Quay's most celebrated wildlife asset is the bottlenose dolphin population of Cardigan Bay. A resident population of approximately 250 dolphins, the only genetically distinct coastal bottlenose population in Britain, uses the waters offshore throughout the year, and New Quay has become the principal base for dolphin watching tours in Wales. The Sea Watch Foundation has maintained a marine wildlife centre in the town for many years, and the combination of the bay's geography, the shallow inshore waters and the reliable dolphin presence makes New Quay the best location in Wales for observing these animals. The Welsh Wildlife Centre at Cilgerran, the red kite feeding station at Aberaeron and the coastal walking of the Ceredigion Heritage Coast all extend the range of natural and cultural experiences accessible from New Quay.