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    Parc Padarn Country Park

    5.0 (1 review)

    Parc Padarn Country Park Photos

    Recommended Reviews - Parc Padarn Country Park

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    18 years ago

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    GreenWood Forest Park - This was the photo i took before going on the roller coaster ride... and that karen.

    GreenWood Forest Park

    4.5(6 reviews)
    5.3 mi

    Greenwood forest park is a great place to go for fun but the only reason i'm rating this a 3 stars…read moreis because of these reasons 1. Queue lines are massive 2. Food is expensive 3. LOTS OF KARENS (not the name)

    GreenWood Forest Park is a rather unlikely find in the North Wales countryside. It's an eco-theme…read morepark which tries to show that you can have fun without using much power (other than that which you provide yourself). It's NOT a park that pushes the green message at you at every opportunity and this I like. It's that fact that it's understated that makes you think about it. Home to Europe's largest Green roller coaster this place is well worth a visit. The coaster itself works alomg similar principles to the mines, power is generated by people being carried down as the coaster is lifted back up to the start. The coaster then runs down and the next group of people can be taken. Other self-powered rides include a boat ride (where you paddle/pull yourself along with ropes) and a great toboggan run. The other major attraction is the bare-foot walk where you can get back to nature via a barefoot walk through various types of ground including sand, cobbles, mud, water and straw. Immense fun and strangely refreshing. Wash facilities are provided (cold!). Toilets are clean and there is a cafe offering good value basic meals. Wait times were not too bad. I liked the fact that this was a simple park and suited to children from toddlers to about 13 years old. I suspect the optimum age range is about 3-8 years. Unlike the traditional theme parkes queues are minimal (no more than a 2 minute wait for anything) despite our visit being on a May bank Holiday weekend in bright sunshine! Please note - do as the website suggests and if you are using a sat nav start to ignore it when you see the brown tourist signs - if you don't then you end up going through some very steep and narrow roads that are not suited to tourist traffic. It will take about 5 minutes more if you follow the tourist signs but you'll get there in one piece! Recommended.

    Otterspool Promenade - http://www.liverpool.gov.uk/Leisure_and_culture/Parks_and_recreation/Parks_and_gardens/Otterspool_Park/index.asp

    Otterspool Promenade

    4.7(6 reviews)
    51.7 mi

    When the Queensway Tunnel was dug beneath the river, the subsequent rubbish pulled from the ground…read morewas dumped and landscaped into what is now Otterspool Prom. Here you can do everything there is to possibly do on a riverside promenade; things such as walk, ride a bike, look at the water and...um...well that's about it. I suppose you could rollerblade if you wanted. If it's a warm day and you don't mind the style your hair will be sculpted into by the blustering gales, you can follow the prom and its interconnecting paths right up to the Pier Head. If you don't fancy that, try and unearth the ruins of the 1984 Garden Festival, which lies hidden by tree trunks and weeds. You don't know how overtly creepy something is until you accidentally stumble across a kid's overgrown swing park. I still have nightmares.

    What a spectacular view. Did you ever see such a coastline? Especially when the waves are choppy…read moreand the wind blustery. I absolutely love the promenade; walking along beside the river with the breathtaking view of the Welsh hills in the background is really relaxing, there's lots of cyclists and dog-walkers around and it's a lovely environment on a clear sunny day. The park which was renovated through the 'Pride in our Proms' project is Amazing. It's a mini world of Big Kid heaven... for me anyway I regressed about 10 years and was on the swings, seesaw and monkey bars, and when we'd totally worn ourselves out running around and taking cool scenic pictures of the sunset we went for a well earned pint from the Otterspool pub which is handily a hop skip and a cartwheel across the park. Go fly a kite, see the sights, play on the park and grab a pint!

    Photos
    Otterspool Promenade
    Otterspool Promenade
    Otterspool Promenade

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    Calderstones Park - from website

    Calderstones Park

    4.5(4 reviews)
    52.8 mi

    Calderstones is one of my favourite parks in Liverpool, mainly because of all of it's different…read more"sections". It's a fab place to walk around on a sunny day, one of my favourite places to chill out under the blossom trees. I went along to the tennis last week, which Calderstones has been home to since 2002. It was my first experience of professional tennis, and it was fab.. chillin' out in Caldy's with a cold diet coke, watching Martina Hingis. It's great for the city and I hope it continues to grow.

    Calderstones Park is cheating. The areas surrounding it are all so lush and verdant (at least in…read morethe summertime) that the park doesn't really get a chance to outshine anything else. Sometimes it can be difficult to tell where it actually starts. Walking past you tend to just be absorbed into it, like liquid into the kidney. Named after the Calderstones, six neolithic sandstones that sit beneath a glasshouse, the park gets full star ratings for the way it sublimely achieves a sense of infinity. Strolling beneath a canopy twittering with feathered things or past the lake splattered with goose crap, it feels like you'll never actually reach one of the park's boundaries. It's huge. Another historical landmark is the Allerton Oak, an ancient tree that is reputedly a millennium old. Its state of decrepitude is said to be the result of an 1864 explosion of the gunpowder ship Lotty Sleigh three miles away on the Mersey. The fact its peppered with fascinating nuggets of history and is larger than both of our houses put together means Calderstones Park is a great place to pretend to know where you're going.

    Snowdonia National Park Authority - Llanberis path

    Snowdonia National Park Authority

    4.6(5 reviews)
    13.4 mi

    Snowdonia is a beautiful are of North Wales concentrated around the mountains and lakes of the huge…read moreSnowdonia National Park.  The park's historic Snowdon Mountain Railway climbs to the summit of Wales's highest mountain, Mount Snowdon, offering views across the sea to Ireland and back along the North Wales coast. Popular tourist areas have breathtaking scenery, easy parking and brilliant dog walking spots. Tourist towns such as Betwys Y coed offer great cafe's and extensive well thought out mountain biking trails. I suggest hiring an electric mountain bike to make the most of the scenery in any weather. Driving around Snowdonia is great fun. Taking a long drive up any of the mountain passes is always great fun. For any car enthusiast driving the Evo triangle route can be very memorable. Dog walking around Llandudno in the North with the Great Orme, Pier and other popular tourists attractions is great. A trip through blaenau ffestiniog via the slate mines down onto the Black Rock Sands beach is always good. The beach is open to cars meaning you can drive onto the sand, just don't get stuck! Further down the Llŷn Peninsula Abersoch is worth a visit, especially during summer high season for a surprisingly high end mix of shops, cafes and pubs.

    Stunning scenery! Explored here quite a bit while I have been living in Wales. I have walked the…read moreRhinogs, Y Glyderau, somewhere near Tryfan, been on top of Snowdonia a few times. Some walks can be quite difficult. It can be more climbing than walking. The weather is always a big challenge! No huts like in Austria or elsewhere where you can sit and enjoy a nice drink or have a warm cup of tea (do not mention a meal) on the mountains. This is not typical here. Interesting wildlife (birds & flowers). The Rhydd Ddu path is enjoyable. Good website: http://www.eryri-npa.co.uk/

    Photos
    Snowdonia National Park Authority
    Snowdonia National Park Authority - Penmon Point

    Penmon Point

    Snowdonia National Park Authority - Autumn Forest

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    Autumn Forest

    Penrhos Coastal Park - Penrhos

    Penrhos Coastal Park

    4.0(2 reviews)
    23.0 mi

    You know right off when you have found a place that is just simply magical, a place that you feel…read moreyou belong. Penrhos Nature Reserve brings you peace of mind in an all encompassing world. The walks through the trees is so tranquil. To take in deep breaths of fresh sea air from the sea and Beddmanarch Bay. The wildlife is amazing. Red squirrels play on the high branches and if your lucky enough they will come down to eat the nuts left on the woodland floor. Badgers have their hidden sets in amongst the trees. Ducks float noisily on the three large ponds within the woods and gather up on the shore greedily after bread left by visitors. Woodpeckers let you know they are nesting, playing their tunes banging their beaks on the tree trunks. Wild birds sing their songs of freedom. Lie back close your eyes and enjoy. It's all free! Plenty of parking space a lovely historical toll house cafe. Many historical monuments lay inside waiting to be found. A wild meadow that is full of flowers that attracts hundreds of colourful butterflies all surrounded by the ocean and a spectacular white sandy beach. Penrhos Nature Reserve Holyhead should not be missed. It's truly heaven on Earth. This 200 acre Nature Reserve is all an Area of outstanding natural beauty and quite rightly so the views are unforgettable. BUT make your visit soon as tragically there is a development company Land & Lakes who want to fell most of the trees and build 500 Lodges on this Welsh coastline. The needless destruction of this nature reserve will be a very sad day indeed. We should be protecting green spaces for future generations not tearing them down. Visit and see the outstanding beauty in all seasons for yourself.

    Nice walk along coast and through woods ample parking with WC and burger van ideal for campervan…read morewhen height barrier isn't up

    Photos
    Penrhos Coastal Park - Penrhos

    Penrhos

    Penrhos Coastal Park - Penrhos part of the Stanley mansion in the woodlands.

    Penrhos part of the Stanley mansion in the woodlands.

    Penrhos Coastal Park - The magic of Penrhos Nature Reserve

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    The magic of Penrhos Nature Reserve

    Parc Padarn Country Park - parks - Updated May 2026

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