As the Brecon Beacons National Park is renamed Bannau Brycheiniog, our appreciation of nature carries more weight than a name, says Countryfile presenter Ellie Harrison

By Ellie Harrison

Published: Thursday, 08 June 2023 at 12:00 am


Drawing a circle with a stick in the sand around our tent to ward off predators was scant comfort, set against the clandestine operations of uniformed men in the distance across the water and the colossal monolith of concrete Kariba Dam directly above our heads.

Despite fresh paw prints the next morning, it was the sound of water trickling down the dam wall that made me relieved to be packing up next morning. As a teenager, backpacking in Zimbabwe gifted me with treasured memories: kayaking among crocodiles in Lake Kariba; slaloming away from territorial hippos along the Zambezi; and researching elephants for my dissertation in the northern villages. On return, my grandparents’ friends would refer to my trip to ‘Rhodesia’ and I would wince because of the colonial associations with that name. It was the name they had always known it by. Zimbabwe was the name I had always known it by. And these names seemingly evoke feeling.

The Brecon Beacons will, from its 66th birthday on 24 April 2023, be known as Bannau Brycheiniog. It is part of a drive to improve nature and the area’s culture and heritage, and is the second of Wales’ national parks to adopt a Welsh-only name, following Eryri (formerly Snowdonia) last year. The change of name has brought celebration, along with some uncertainty among those who ask whether it is a political move, or businesses who rely on the old name.

A beautiful score accompanies a short film with Michael Sheen that shares the possibility of a Bannau Brycheiniog that is cleaned up, richer in wildlife, darker at night and supportive of local people. A powerfully delivered end tells of “an old name for a new way to be, a name from our past to take us into the future”. I’m left with one certainty: that Michael Sheen is a far, far superior Countryfile presenter than I am.