Wales
Wales offers a fantastic welcome to our groups. The Welsh are well-known for their hospitality and their ability to make all visitors feel welcome. Being so close to Liverpool and the English border, it is an excellent gateway to the UK.
Cardiff Cardiff is small enough to be friendly and big enough to entertain. Sport is at its heart, it was awarded the European City of Sport in 2009. Cardiff Bay gleams with restaurants and civic majesty. With Victorian-era castles and parks, it's a capital the Welsh can be proud of.
Sights to see in Cardiff: Cardiff Castle, Cardiff City Hall, Llandaff Cathedral, The Coal Exchange, Millennium Stadium, St. David's Hall and much more!
Aberystwyth Aberystwyth is the principal holiday resort and administrative centre of the west coast of Wales. The town is nestled between three hills and two beaches, and hosts some castle ruins, a pier and a harbour. The surrounding hills hold the visible remains of a iron age fort and once climbed offer stunning views of Cardigan Bay. On the seafront, the wide promenade protects the buildings from the revenges of the Irish Sea and offers space to sit, soak up the sun and view the surrounding hills and mountains which in winter are often covered in snow. On a clear day you may see the tallest mountain in Wales, Snowdon.
Sights to see in Aberystwyth: The Iron Age Fort, Aberystwyth Castle, Aberystwyth Cliff Railway, the Camera Obscura, Ceredigion, and much more!
For more information on Wales, visit the Welsh Tourist Board.
“Our entire group agreed that the quality of our soccer tour could not possibly have been any better! The accommodations were clean, convenient, and staffed by the friendliest people you could meet. The quality of coaching and the games were exactly as we had hoped. The fields were like nothing we had ever seen before – thank you Excel Sport Tours!”
--P. Pritchett, Texas Comets, Wales, England and Scotland
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