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Llanfair CaereINION sits in a natural bowl where the River Banwy winds through the hills of Montgomeryshire, about eight miles west of Welshpool. It’s a quintessential mid-Wales market town, traditionally built around the elevated St Mary’s Church and a network of narrow streets lined with a mix of Georgian and Victorian architecture. Life here tends to revolve around a self-sufficient core; it retains a high school, a primary school, and a handful of essential shops and pubs that serve the surrounding farming community. Geographically, it acts as a gateway to the more rugged Cambrian Mountains, yet the road links along the A458 mean it isn’t as isolated as it first feels. Most people know it as the terminus for the narrow-gauge Welshpool & Llanfair Light Railway, which originally opened in 1903 to help local farmers get their goods to market. It is a sturdy, practical sort of place where the landscape dictates the pace of life, offering a quiet permanence that’s becoming harder to find elsewhere.