Guidebook for Gwynedd

Pauline
Guidebook for Gwynedd

Essentials

37 locals recommend
Tesco Superstore
South Road
37 locals recommend

Entertainment & Activities

Voted Best Family Attraction in North Wales for six years running, days out don’t get much better than this! GreenWood Forest Park is set in 27 magical acres, and it’s easy to see why it’s a full day out - discovering woodland adventure, awesome attractions and forest family fun.
31 locals recommend
Greenwood Forest Park station
31 locals recommend
Voted Best Family Attraction in North Wales for six years running, days out don’t get much better than this! GreenWood Forest Park is set in 27 magical acres, and it’s easy to see why it’s a full day out - discovering woodland adventure, awesome attractions and forest family fun.
Good for keeping smaller children amused on a rainy day
24 locals recommend
The Fun Centre
Bangor Street
24 locals recommend
Good for keeping smaller children amused on a rainy day
Unleash your inner-thrill seeker in an enormous underground net adventure! Jump and slide your way through the disused mine on the best playground ever!
250 locals recommend
Zip World Bounce Below
250 locals recommend
Unleash your inner-thrill seeker in an enormous underground net adventure! Jump and slide your way through the disused mine on the best playground ever!

Arts & Culture

Galeri Caernarfon, Doc Victoria, Caernarfon, Gwynedd, LL55 1SQ 01286 685 250 | post@galericaernarfon.com
44 locals recommend
Galeri Caernarfon
Caernarfon
44 locals recommend
Galeri Caernarfon, Doc Victoria, Caernarfon, Gwynedd, LL55 1SQ 01286 685 250 | post@galericaernarfon.com

Sightseeing

A brute of a fortress. Caernarfon Castle’s pumped-up appearance is unashamedly muscle-bound and intimidating. Picking a fight with this massive structure would have been a daunting prospect. By throwing his weight around in stone, King Edward I created what is surely one of the most impressive of Wales’s castles. Worthy of World Heritage status no less. Affectionately known locally as Ed's Shed
282 locals recommend
Caernarfon Castle
Castle Ditch
282 locals recommend
A brute of a fortress. Caernarfon Castle’s pumped-up appearance is unashamedly muscle-bound and intimidating. Picking a fight with this massive structure would have been a daunting prospect. By throwing his weight around in stone, King Edward I created what is surely one of the most impressive of Wales’s castles. Worthy of World Heritage status no less. Affectionately known locally as Ed's Shed
A short walk south of the village, following the buggy and wheelchair friendly footpath along the banks of the Glaslyn leads to Beddgelert's most famous historical feature; 'Gelert's Grave'. According to legend, the stone monument in the field marks the resting place of 'Gelert', the faithful hound of the medieval Welsh Prince Llewelyn the Great.
162 locals recommend
Beddgelert
162 locals recommend
A short walk south of the village, following the buggy and wheelchair friendly footpath along the banks of the Glaslyn leads to Beddgelert's most famous historical feature; 'Gelert's Grave'. According to legend, the stone monument in the field marks the resting place of 'Gelert', the faithful hound of the medieval Welsh Prince Llewelyn the Great.

Everything Else

Dinas is a safe family friendly beach
74 locals recommend
Dinas Dinlle
74 locals recommend
Dinas is a safe family friendly beach
Excellent day out
31 locals recommend
Greenwood Forest Park station
31 locals recommend
Excellent day out

Drinks & Nightlife

The Ty Coch Inn is arguably the best pub in Wales and OFFICIALLY in the top ten beach bars in the world... according to a recent survey It is situated in the village of Porthdinllaen near Morfa Nefyn, Gwynedd, on the north coast of the Lleyn peninsular. With views across the Irish Sea to The Rivals and a sandy beach on its doorstep what better way to while away the hours.
91 locals recommend
Tŷ Coch Inn
91 locals recommend
The Ty Coch Inn is arguably the best pub in Wales and OFFICIALLY in the top ten beach bars in the world... according to a recent survey It is situated in the village of Porthdinllaen near Morfa Nefyn, Gwynedd, on the north coast of the Lleyn peninsular. With views across the Irish Sea to The Rivals and a sandy beach on its doorstep what better way to while away the hours.