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Burry Port sits on the edge of the Loughor Estuary, where the industrial grit of its copper-working past has gradually softened into a quieter, coastal pace of life. At its heart is the harbour - once a busy coal port, now a busy marina - which serves as the final stop for the local branch line and a gateway to the Millennium Coastal Path. To the west, the town gives way to the vast dunes of Pembrey Country Park, meaning you can walk from the town centre straight onto miles of open sand. It’s a practical place with a proper high street, famous locally as the spot where Amelia Earhart touched down after her transatlantic flight, but daily life here is more about the weather coming in off the Bristol Channel and the easy rail links back towards Llanelli and Swansea. It has a steady, unpretentious character, shaped by the tides and the surrounding Carmarthenshire hills.