The Preseli Hills are situated in the north of Pembrokeshire and lie within the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park. As old as time they have always had a presence greater than their physical stature and they dominate the local landscape.
The scores of hill forts, stone circles, cairns and burial chambers are a clear indication of human habitation in this area from the earliest times and Mesolithic hunter-gatherers were certainly present in Pembrokeshire following the last ice age more than 9,000 years ago; people have been present in the county since.

An ageless track known as The Golden Road traverses the top of the Preseli Hills from West to East and was possibly the principal route to Ireland in ancient times; today it has found Favour with tourists.
The Preseli Hills are probably best known as the source of the Blue Stones used during the construction of Stonehenge.
