2nd Draft - Visit Wirral
Transcription
2nd Draft - Visit Wirral
Wirral Peninsula Your official visitor guide for 2012/2013 www.visitwirral.com Wirral Timeline Take the timeline, where history comes alive, and discover Wirral's vibrant past. 400 410 Romans leave Wirral 613 Arrival of Anglo-Saxons 1150 Hamon de Massey founds Birkenhead Priory 1100 1175-1350 Brimstage Hall built sometime between these dates 1330 Charter granted for ferry rights at Birkenhead 1829 Fort Perch Rock completed, followed next year by lighthouse 1800 2008 The new Floral Pavilion in New Brighton was opened Follow us on 1763 Leasowe Lighthouse, the oldest brick built lighthouse in Britain, is built 1847 Birkenhead Park opened and became the inspiration for Central Park, NY 1860 First tramway in Europe opened in Birkenhead 1973 The Wirral Way was formed along the route of the disused railway from Hooton to West Kirby 902 Arrival of Vikings 1900 2000 1888 First sod cut in building Port Sunlight Village 2006 The Open returns to The Royal Liverpool Golf Club after an absence of 39 years 2011 The Queen unveils a commemorative plaque at the Floral Pavilion; the flagship project in New Brighton’s long awaited regeneration www.visitwirral.com Contents Coast & Countryside 3 Birdwatching 11 Walk & Cycle 13 Food & Drink 19 Golf 25 Spas 31 Water Sports 33 Port Sunlight 35 New Brighton 37 Wirral Attractions 39 Suggested Itineraries 41 Events & Festivals 45 On Our Doorstep 47 Accommodation 49 Accommodation Listings 51 Eating Out Listings 53 Finding Your Way 57 Bidston Hill Windmill www.visitwirral.com Coast & Countryside Seven centuries ago the enterprising Benedictine monks built a ‘ferry cross the Mersey’ and so opened up the lonely headland for others who would come in the centuries ahead. What they found was a Wirral wonderland with coast and countryside among the finest in Britain. The spectacular hills, shores and cliffs, home to boisterous seabirds and a wealth of wild sights and sounds, are still part of the natural, awesome and free spectacular which greets every visitor. 3 Royden Park www.visitwirral.com T IME FOR A WALK on the wildside? Or just drive along quiet country roads and explore charming little villages. The 25 miles of coastline, with some of the cleanest bathing waters in Europe, encloses the award-winning Wirral Country Park, the peninsula’s top tourist attraction for more than three decades. Traces of the old railway that ran between West Kirby and Hooton still remain. Now called the Wirral Way, it is a 12-mile trail where birds nest in the thick hedgerows, badgers and foxes hunt in the quiet places, and the birds share the sky with a variety of butterflies in the summer. The trail traces the River Dee along the shores and cliffs, following the scent and feel of sea breezes, the everchanging lights of the estuary, looking out to the Welsh shores a few miles away, and the majestic mountains beyond. Wirral Country Park is one of several in Wirral to receive the coveted Green Flag Award. Nearby Thurstaston - the name has Viking connections - is set in 250 acres of parkland, woodland and heath, a site of Special Scientific Interest and a Local Nature Reserve. Thor’s Rock on the hill, a huge block of isolated sandstone, worn by the weather and the feet of generations of scramblers, is the source of a local romantic legend. Some believe Vikings held religious ceremonies here. 5 Royden Park alongside Thurstaston Common is another huge area of woodland with meadows enriched with flowers, meres lined with rhododendrons, a place for quiet and recreation. The steam train is popular with children. Arts and crafts fairs are held during bank holiday weekends. Hilbre Islands Local Nature Reserve, a mile off shore at the mouth of the Dee, is the Wirral Peninsula’s bestknown natural attraction, which was once important as a link for shipping between Holyhead and Liverpool. Now thousands of visitors cross to the islands for the rich and varied bird life. The three islands, cut off from the mainland by the tides, also bring that sense of isolation, a castaway feel, until the ebb tide exposes the beach again for the walk back to West Kirby and much deserved refreshments. USEFUL INFO: • Wirral Country Park and The Wirral Way Visitor Centre 0151 648 4371/ 0151 648 3884 • Royden Park and Thurstaston Common 0151 677 7594 • Hilbre Islands Local Nature Reserve 0151 648 4371 Do not cross to the islands unless you have checked crossing times (0151 648 4371) If you are visiting as a group please notify Wirral Country Park Visitor Centre at Thurstaston. 0151 648 4371/3884 COAST & COUNTRYSIDE FACTS: There are three Sites of Special Scientific Interest and three Sites of Biological Interest within Wirral Country Park. The park is also a gateway to the Dee Estuary which has multiple international designations including Wetland of International Importance (RAMSAR). WHY NOT: • Walk, cycle or ride the Wirral Way • Climb down the cliff steps to Thurstaston beach for a leisurely stroll • Climb Thors Rock Main Photo: Brimstage Inset: Wirral Way 6 www.visitwirral.com 7 USEFUL INFO: • North Wirral Coastal Park and Leasowe Lighthouse 0151 648 4371 Refreshments and toilets near lighthouse. • Vale Park Cafe 0151 638 2666 Another Green Flag winner, North Wirral Coastal Park is one of the largest parks on the peninsula, popular among naturalists for its diversity of habitats and proximity to three of the cleanest bathing beaches in Europe. Rare invertebrates can be found within the dunes. Leasowe Lighthouse, built in 1763, is another Wirral ‘first’; the oldest brick built lighthouse in Britain. New Brighton was once the playground for Liverpool folk, the seaside just across the Mersey. The days of whirligigs and kiss-me-quick hats have vanished into history and now it has a different future. A £60m redevelopment bringing a digital cinema, hotel, casino, ice cream parlour and the new Floral Pavilion Theatre and Conference Centre has revitalised the resort. Nearby, Vale Park with its bandstand, play area, rose garden and summer events, is a quiet haven for all the family. WHY NOT: • Climb to the top of Leasowe Lighthouse. Open first and third Sunday of every month (April-September) and the first Sunday of every month (October-March) 12-4pm. www.leasowelighthouse.co.uk • Wander around New Brighton and see the transformation for yourself. Vale Park is nearby, a nice walk along the promenade provides a wonderful view of the Liverpool Waterfront as your backdrop. • See a show at the Floral Pavilion and stay overnight at one of the quality hotels, guesthouses or self catering options to complete your experience. Main Photo: Leasowe Lighthouse Inset: Vale Park 8 Birkenhead Park is a fine example of what the Victorians did for us; the creation of municipal parks and green spaces for those living in the grime and smoke of industrial England. This was the first publicly-funded park in the world, a place of great trees, lakes and many listed buildings, now of national and international importance. It remains as popular now as when it opened in 1847, a Grade I Historic Park, restored to its former glory via an £11m facelift. Bidston Hill, surrounded by woodland and heath with its windmill on top, is a well-known landmark, so familiar it might almost be a symbol for Wirral itself. Nearby, the Tam O’Shanter Urban Farm gives children a chance to play and learn about farm animals in an urban environment. Eastham Country Park has been a popular place to visit for 150 years, since the site was a Victorian pleasure garden. It brings together parkland, woodland and sea, a place for cliff top walks, picnics, games and views across the River Mersey. The best way home is via the winding lanes to explore the lovely villages, quaint shops and churches where the 9 spires pop out from the trees. These are scenes straight from a well-loved picture book of the best of rural England. Brimstage has some of the oldest buildings in Merseyside, a hamlet built between the 12th and 14th centuries with a fortified tower at the centre. Why it was built is a mystery, as is the stone carving of the cat in the chapel - a model for Lewis Carroll’s Cheshire Cat according to local legend. Thornton Hough has an award-winning village green and blacksmiths, and an ‘old England’ rural village atmosphere. Both are satellite villages to Port Sunlight, which has more than 800 listed buildings and was created at the end of the 19th century for Lord Leverhulme’s factory workers. It is Britain’s best example of a purpose built ‘workers village.’ Visitors say that Port Sunlight is a fine legacy for others to enjoy. This too can be said of the monks who laid the foundations of Wirral seven centuries ago and opened up the wilderness, which now exists as a coast and countryside treasure; a hidden gem and one of the best in Britain. Main Photo: Birkenhead Park, Inset: Eastham Country Park Date for your Dia Septem ry: ber Birkenh Festival ead Park hosts of Trans the por enjoyab le day o t providing an ut fo www.bh eadtran r all ages. spor t.co m Award-winning Coast and Countryside WITH 25 MILES of dramatic coastline and over 1,500 hectares of countryside, it is little wonder that the Wirral Peninsula has a large selection of Green Flag Parks and Marine Conservation Society ‘Recommended Beaches’. Green Flag Parks: • Ashton Park • Bidston Hill • Birkenhead Park (also ‘Heritage Award’) • Brotherton Park and Dibbinsdale Local Nature Reserve • Coronation Gardens • Eastham Country Park • Hilbre Islands Local Nature Reserve • Royden Park • Thornton Hough Village Green • Vale Park • Wirral Country Park • The Arno, Oxton Beaches 2011: • Wallasey • Moreton • Meols For more information www.visitwirral.com www.goodbeachguide.co.uk USEFUL INFO: • Birkenhead Park Visitor Centre and Cappuccinos in the Park Café 0151 652 5197 • Bidston Hill and Tam O’Shanter Urban Farm. 0151 653 9332 • Eastham Country Park Visitor Centre 0151 327 1007 • Brimstage Hall & Craft Centre www.brimstagehall.com • Port Sunlight Museum 0151 644 6466 Refreshments and toilets at all. COAST & COUNTRYSIDE FACTS: • Eastham Country Park sits on the Mersey Estuary, designated as both a Special Protection Area (SPA) and a Ramsar Site in recognition of its conservation value, especially for birds, as well as the designation as a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI). • Brimstage and Thornton Hough both have links to Port Sunlight’s founder, Lord Leverhulme. WHY NOT: • See inside the windmill on the second Saturday of each month (April-September) 10am-12 noon. Call Tam O’Shanter Farm to check for any changes. • Browse around Brimstage Craft Centre and then do the 3-mile walk through quiet farmland to the picturesque village of Thornton Hough. www.visitwirral.com/ walkingguides 10 www.visitwirral.com Birdwatching The Dee Estuary, at the crossroads of bird migration, is considered of international importance and one of the ten most important estuaries in Europe for overwintering wildfowl. B IRDWATCHING IN WIRRAL is a treat at any time of year, whether it is following the birds’ great spectacular over the open beaches or enjoying the birds of the countryside in their natural habitat. But it is in winter that the peninsula really comes alive, offering visitors some of the best birdwatching opportunities in England. In summer, hedgerows buzz with the songs of nesting warblers. Blackcaps rub shoulders with Willow Warblers and Common Whitethroats, who are joined by their scarcer cousin, the Lesser Whitethroat. Here they will raise their young before heading south for winter. Buzzards soar above the heaths and Barn Owls patrol the meadows seeking food for their hungry chicks. Keen-eyed birdwatchers might find three species of woodpecker in the woodland, where Nuthatch also breed. Later in the year, the Dee and Mersey estuaries are a vital wintering ground for waders and wildfowl. The numbers are estimated in hundreds of thousands, so many that the Dee Estuary, at the crossroads of bird migration, is considered of international importance and one of the ten most 11 important estuaries in Europe for overwintering wildfowl. During winter, around ten per cent of the UK’s population of waders can be spotted around the estuary, including Oystercatchers, Pintail, Redshank, Dunlin and Knot. Huge flocks of the latter can also be seen over the mudflats of the Dee and north Wirral coast. This spectacle can attract one of several Peregrine Falcons that winter here. The Dee marshes are an incredible place for raptors. Short-eared Owls share roosts with Hen Harriers, while Merlin dash across the saltmarsh after Meadow Pipits. Hilbre Islands Local Nature Reserve is home to a growing number of wintering Brent Geese, joined by a small band of Purple Sandpipers and Snow Buntings, while on the sea you can see divers and grebes. It is no surprise that bird lovers visit Wirral’s coast and countryside throughout the year. With its great variety of visiting birds from Greenland, Iceland, Scandinavia and the Arctic, the show is free, spectacular and guaranteed for as long as there are birds in the skies. Main Photo: Curlew at sunset, Inset: Woodpecker at Arrowe Park USEFUL INFO: • RSPB - Dee Estuary Burton Mere Wetlands new Visitor Centre 0151 336 7681 • Wirral Council’s Coastal Rangers 0151 648 4371 For more information on sightings, events etc visit: www.deeestuary.co.uk BIRDWATCHING FACTS: The Mersey and Dee Estuaries are part of the East Atlantic Flyway which is the second most important bird migratory route in the world. WHY NOT: Book a Liverbird Bird Watching and Nature Discovery Cruise. Check www.merseyferries.co.uk for the dates of these very popular cruises. Further expertise is provided by the RSPB and National Museums Liverpool. 12 www.visitwirral.com Walk & Cycle Time for a walk on the wildside? Or a bike ride along the miles of stunning coastline? Wirral Peninsula is a paradise for those who crave fresh air and enjoy a sense of exploration. Use the following pages to get your ‘fresh air fix’ with step-by-step Walk & Cycle routes. Wirral Way West Kirby & Caldy Hill WALK T Parking: Pay and display car park next to Morrisons supermarket in Dee Lane or behind the railway station, in the Concourse car park. Buses and Trains: Buses stop outside West Kirby Railway Station which is the end of the Wirral line from Liverpool and Chester. Start & Finish 1 19 West Kirby Station Concourse Gra nge Rd Morrisons Entrance to Wirral Way South Parade Marine Lake West Kirby 2 Ashton Park 3R e Ro cto ad ry FP28 FP27 5 WIR RAL WAY 4 FP51 Sandy Lane 7 8 FP52 FP57 FP51 10 FP55 Cubbins Green 9 Rd Caldy Hill 17 n lum Co Macdona Drive 18 Beacon for Mariners 6 Firebeaters sign 11 FP54 12 Kin gs D r. Fleck Lane 16 BR25 13 BR23A B5140 15 14 Cal Caldy dy Road A5 40 © Crown copyright and database rights 2011. Ordnance Survey 100019803. Cross sands to Hilbre Islands (low tide only) Or ry Ro sdale ad HIS IS A VARIED WALK from West Kirby taking in the Wirral Way, Ashton Park, spectacular views from Caldy Hill and the path around West Kirby Marine Lake. Start: Outside West Kirby Railway Station. Allow 2-5 hours. Distance: Just over 4 miles. 14 WALK 1 If you are starting from the car park next 11 Pass through a gap to Morrisons, tur n right in an old sandstone and up Dee Lane and wall and past three seats West Kirby Railway Sta by some pine trees. tion will be in front of 12 Pass through a gap you. Facing the railway in another wall, station, tur n right along through a gate off the hill Grange Road. On your rig and walk straight ht, just opposite ahead into Kings Drive Orrysdale Road you wil and along the grass l see the entrance to the verge. Wirral Way next to the Wirral Country Park 13 After about 150 metres noticeboard. The Wirral Way follows the line of at the side of ‘Pine Ridge’, take the public brid the old railway route to Hoo leway locally known ton. Built in 1866, the as Fleck Lane on the rig railway was closed for mos ht and down the hill. At t traf fic by the mid Caldy Road, take care due 1960s and developed in the to lack of visibility. early 1970s as Wirral Turn right and walk alo Country Park. ng past the old hospital on 2 Head down the Wirra the right, into Caldy Vil lage. Caldy Village is l Way and after a few mentioned in the Domesda minutes you will see Ash y Book as ‘Calders’. There ton Park. The are two old former farmstea children’s playground is d buildings which date on your right. Fork from 1683 and 1702. In 183 right by the playground , then left and go over 2 the village was bought by a Manchester bus the green painted bridge inessman, R. W. Barton. which crosses the He Wirral Way. rebuilt and renovated most of the property and built the Church and Manor. 3 Once over the bridge Opposite the Church there are three paths, after Croft Drive fork left take the middle one throug down the bridleway to h an avenue of young the road below. trees. Go out of the park gates and straight 14 Turn right. ahead up Rectory Road. 15 Walk along the roa 4 At the cor ner, tur n d to the entrance to left onto the public Wirral Country Park on footpath over the old sto your right. ne stile. 16 Follow the path unt 5 At the top of that pat il you reach the small h, locally known as bridge on the left that tak Echo Lane, cross the roa es you over a ditch and d and go up the steps to onto Cubbins Green wit Caldy Hill and the Marine h delightful views rs Column. The old acr millstone at the base of the oss The Dee Estuary and column, a relic from the West Kirby Marine Lake. Walk along the clif old mill which once stood f edge path past the here. bench and picnic area. 6 Turn right and follow the public footpath. 17 At the end of Cubbin There are numerous sma s Green you will come ll tracks leading off the to Macdona Drive. Here main path on Caldy Hill, you have a choice, at ignore them and low tide you can take to continue straight on. Aft the beach and head er 300 metres, pass a towards West Kirby Sai set of old gate posts and ling Club, or head down then a seat on your left, Macdona Drive and at San continue straight on. dy Lane tur n left to the promenade. 7 After 50 metres the pat h goes over a small rock, take the right fork 18 At the promenade, you . have two options. 1. Take the path around 8 Pass the fenced white the Marine Lake or 2. house on your right Walk along South Parade and continue straight on. keeping the Marine Lake on the left. At the 9 Pass the yellow fire hyd north end of the lake rant (no.4) on your return to the bottom of left, continue straight on, Dee Lane by Morrisons then up over the brow . If you started by train or of the hill. There are som bus head back up Dee e great views from here. Lane to West Kirby Rai 10 At the ‘firebeaters lway Station and the ’ sign, bear left on the bus stops. path and after 150 metres the path leads to the 19 Morrisons do have an top of a rocky outcrop wh excellent café open ere there is a seat. during their normal ope ning times. 15 Seacombe Ferry & New Brighton CYCLE S TARTING AND FINISHING at the Seacombe ferry terminal, this cycle ride takes you around the historic coastline of Seacombe and New Brighton with views of the famous Liverpool sky-line and across Liverpool Bay. Most of the route is off road, however the latter parts rely on some roads (that can be busy at times) to get back to Seacombe Ferry. Less experienced riders may prefer to avoid these by sticking to a linear coastal route, either to New Brighton or to Wallasey golf course, then turning around and following the route back again. King’s Parade 6 7 KIOSK 5 Marine Lake Golf Course North Wirral Coastal Park Gun Site Picnic Area Leaso we Ro ad Fort Perch Rock 4 8 r wate Bays oad R New Brighton Green leas R oad Green Lane Rock Lighthouse 9 Promenad e 15 16 Central Park ane Love L 17 18 d ar sc d Li Roa ane Mill L Church Street 19 River Mersey Egremont Tesco Liscard 14 Cliff Rd Station Road Bidston Moss Nature Reserve 13 e Mossden Road Breck Road 54 A5 11 12 s sland Mos rive D 10 M53 Local Nature Reserve 3 Site of the old Ferry to Liverpool Wallasey Town Hall Seacombe Seacombe Promenade Golf Course 2 Seacombe Ferry Terminal (Mersey Ferries) Spaceport Bus Station 1 Start & Finish © Crown copyright and database rights 2011. Ordnance Survey 100019803. Vale Park Wallasey 16 Start: Seacombe Ferry Ter minal, Victoria Place, Seacombe 1 From the car park of the Terminal, head towards the promenade and take the cut through on your left. Continue stra ight ahead, following the coastline out towards New Brighton along the Promenade. To your righ t is the River Mersey with views across to Liverp ool. You may even get a glimpse of the famous Me rsey Ferry that operates daily between Sea combe, Woodside and Liverpool. 2 After approx. 800m (0.5 miles) you will pass Wallasey Town Hall on you r left that is easily identified by the grand step s up to its entrance. Continue straight along the promenade for approx. 370m (0.2 miles) to the mini roundabout where you should head to the right and continue to follow the promenade. 3 The cycle route continu es along the promenade towards New Brighton for approx. 1.7km (1.0 mile) where you will pass Vale Park. 4 Continue along the promenade for a further 900m (0.6 miles) where you will reach New Brighton and Fort Perch Rock. There is plenty to do and see in New Bright on. 5 For those of you wis hing to do the shorter ride, you simply tur n aro und and head back the way you came. 17 Distance: 10.8 miles (co mplete route). 4.7 miles (Seacombe - New Bright on - Seacombe). 6 If you wish to continu e the ride follow the NCN 56 signs along Marine Promenade, past the marine lake and back ont o the Promenade that runs parallel to Kings Par ade. After approx. 970m (0.61 miles) you will pass the Pierrot roundabout on your left. Continue alon g the marked cycle path to the end of the Promen ade (approx. 1500m, 0.93 miles) and follow it off to the left in order to pick up the coastal path. 7 Follow the NCN 56 signs along the coastal path for 1200m (0.7miles) to the edge of the golf course and make a left tur n where the route drops down onto the sea wall leve l again. Follow the route up past the Gun Site picnic area and onto Green Lane where you sho uld, again, tur n left, bringing you out onto Bay swater Road. 8 Follow NCN 56 sign s, tur ning into Greenleas Road and follow for about 550m (0.3 miles) where you wil l reach the junction with Leasowe Road. 9 At the traffic lights go straight across onto Cross Lane and head stra ight down onto the Bidston Moss Nature Res erve. Follow the tarmac path which will shortly lead to a drop down to the bridge. 10 After crossing the brid ge. You will see B&Q ahead of you, follow the pat h around to the left, and make a left tur n up on to an iron-gated bridge that crosses the railway trac k. CYCLE way track, you have 11 After crossing the rail n towards Mosslands dow , the option of going left es, or you can go tinu con te rou the re School whe the Bidston Moss of side er oth straight on into the cyc can le around the Nature Reserve where you road’ style tracks ‘off the take or circular track that go over the top. towards Mosslands 12 Having cycled down you out on Mosslands g brin l School the route wil make a right tur n to join Drive where you should stbourne Road and take We t pas it low the road. Fol Road. ene ssd your next left onto Mo steep climb up to a te qui is d Roa ene ssd 13 Mo re you should whe d Roa ck Bre the junction with be extremely can d Roa make a right tur n. Breck to take extra er emb rem so es tim busy at certain es. care during these tim continue along and 14 Once on Breck Road, Road, a little bit of a f Clif o ont take the next left n where you should climb but it soon drops dow Road. tion Sta o ont t righ t take the firs you will find d Roa tion 15 At the end of Sta again can be ch whi e, Lan l Mil at f yoursel You will be going extremely busy at times. n and a pelican crossing ctio jun this oss acr t igh stra you would like to use If ry. essa nec if is available, t your cycle on Station oun the crossing please dism ssing, which you will see Road and walk to the cro on your left. oss Mill Lane onto 16 Continue straight acr immediate left onto an ing tak , Rostherne Avenue und to the right. aro it Ruskin Avenue, following before making a nue Ave d woo Lyn into This leads e. left tur n onto Love Lan e and the junction 17 At the top of Love Lan l see Park Primary wil you d, Roa k with Woodstoc straight over the e tinu School ahead of you. Con and continue to es, tim y bus at e car road, taking entry, and make the h oug thr e the end of Love Lan Park. a right tur n into Central n the football pitch 18 Follow the path betwee around to the left. and and the bowling ground path it will bring you the ow foll to e tinu If you con NCN 56. Follow to ted pos to an exit that is sign across the toucan the sign out of the park and eet. Str rch Chu crossing onto Street go straight over 19 At the end of Church k down onto the at the traffic lights and bac k towards Seacombe. bac t righ promenade, tur ning wil you l be back at After 1,170m (0.7 miles) g. ldin bui inal the ferry term 18 www.visitwirral.com Food & Drink From a Michelin star restaurant and award-winning tearooms in quaint villages, to outstanding producers and farmshops in the countryside, those involved in growing, preparing and selling food, demonstrate a pride and passion to produce some of the very best food and drink in the UK. 19 Lawns at Thornton Hall Hotel & Spa 1 2 3 1. Fraiche - featured in the Which Good Food Guide Top 30 Restaurants, Fraiche has also been named one of the top 50 in the Sunday Times Top 100 Restaurants in the UK, gaining a new entry at 46, and has received the accolade of a BBC Olive Magazine Alternative Restaurant Award. 2. Church Farm Organics - Winner of the 'Best Fruit or Vegetable' for its asparagus at the North West Fine Food Awards. 3. Gorge'Us Coffee Shop - Winner of Best Cake in the Fine Foods North West Awards (2010) for its delicious Victoria Sponge. Also, winner of the Fine Food NW Gold Heart Award (2011) for its delectable Raspberry & Almond Tart. 4. Claremont Farm Kitchen - Hosts many awardwinning chefs including Claire Lara, winner of Masterchef: The Professionals 2010. 4 USEFUL INFO: Contact information for all the venues mentioned in this section, plus many more, can be found on pages 53 - 56. T HE AMOUNT OF QUALITY restaurants in Wirral is nothing short of spectacular. With Michelin starred Restaurant Fraiche in Oxton Village, the nationally celebrated Da Piero in Irby, Lawns at Thornton Hall Hotel, Peninsula Dining Room in New Brighton, and Wirral Chef of the Year winner, Dominic Popsil at Gem, the standard of Wirral’s restaurants cannot be doubted. Add to this illustrious mix Claire Lara, Professional Masterchef 2010, at Royal Hilbre and it is easy to see why Wirral is becoming seen more and more as a ‘foodie’ destination. If you’re looking for something a little more informal, Wirral can offer a wide range of casual dining options. Whether it is breakfast to set you up for the day or a light meal while meeting friends, you will find what you’re looking for. The Wro Lounge and Wro Bar, twice winner of ‘Best Bar in Merseyside’, are situated opposite each other in the pretty seaside town of West Kirby. Here you will find beautifully designed surroundings and the perfect place for a breakfast feast, a lunch time stop, dinner in the evening or just drinks Date for with an al you T h e award-w r Diar y: fresco option inning W Farmer thrown in for s Marke irral held on t is the sec good measure. ond Saturda of y www.wir every month ralfarme rsmarke t.co.uk FOOD AND DRINK FACTS: Which Good Food Guide 2011 • Michelin-star restaurant, Fraiche in Oxton, was declared as having the best wine list of any UK restaurant. • Italian restaurant, Da Piero in Irby, was recognised for the 2nd year on the run. • Peninsula Dining Room in New Brighton was named as ‘Reader’s Favourite’. Other Awards: • Lawns at Thornton Hall Hotel has recently been awarded it’s 3rd AA Food Rosette. WHY NOT: • If dining al fresco, and wonderful views are what you have in mind, take a trip out to Sheldrakes in Lower Heswall. You will not be disappointed. www.sheldrakesrestaurant.co.uk • Sample Peerless real ales on a regular tour of the brewery with a homemade hotpot thrown in for good measure (last Friday and Saturday of the month). www.peerlessbrewing.co.uk • Fancy a traditional shave along with your real ale pint? Head down to Gallagher’s Bar and Barbers which supplies both services in a traditional venue near Woodside terminal. www.gallagherspuband barbers.com 22 www.visitwirral.com The Hillbark Grill provides an elegant setting in the magnificent Grade II listed Hillbark Hotel and offers a casual yet memorable dining experience. Alternatively, try the family friendly, (Marco Pierre White) Frankie’s at the Holiday Inn Express, Hoylake. Finish off an afternoon at the award-winning Lady Lever Art Gallery in the picturesque Port Sunlight Village with a trip to the Lady Lever Café and choose from a range of sandwiches, hot dishes and tempting cakes. Don’t forget that if it is liquid refreshment you’re after, you will find a range of bars, from chic surroundings for pre-dinner drinks, relaxing café-bars, to live music and entertainment. For a cocktail with personal bartending flare head to Vanilla Lounge or Glassfire, set in the seaside town of Hoylake. However, if you’re out for the day and have built up an appetite enjoying Wirral’s lovely coast and countryside, then afternoon tea may be just the thing to see you through to evening and Wirral is the ideal place for delicious treats. The featured tea rooms and cafés all serve great home cooked light meals, sumptuous desserts and cakes; perfect for indulging yourself. Relax and enjoy great food in a great location; whether it be a quiet village, beautiful gardens or beside the sea. Treat yourself to the award-winning light and fluffy Victoria Sponge at Gorge’Us Coffee Shop in Bebington, or 23 at sister shop More Gorge’Us in Spital, or perhaps head to Roses Tea Rooms in the picturesque Ness Gardens; winner of the 2011 Taste of Cheshire award amongst others. Roses’ lavender scones with ginger and gooseberry jam are a must. If afternoon tea isn’t your thing, perhaps happening upon a local pub serving fantastic home-cooked meals and locally brewed beer could prove to be more enticing. Wirral is a beautiful place to visit; there are miles of inviting walks and cycle routes to follow along the coast and through the countryside. Complementing the spectacular scenery are great gastro pubs with a friendly welcome, warm atmosphere and fantastic food and drink. Whether you are looking for a quick snack whilst on a walk, an informal meal with friends or a welcoming pub to take the kids - Wirral has somewhere to suit your needs. The Anchor Inn, in pretty Irby village, offers tasty, top-notch food and a range of real ales in cosy, stylish surroundings. The Wheatsheaf Inn, set in the quiet rural village of Raby, offers cosy comfort. It has the distinction of being Wirral’s oldest pub, is home to an award-winning chef, and is rightly proud of its delicious, hearty food and fine ales. It is the quality of the fresh local produce, used so much in Wirral’s eateries, that has contributed greatly Main Photo: The Wheatsheaf Inn, Inset (left to right): Sheldrake’s, Claremont Farm, Peninsula Dining Room to its current high standing in foodie circles. Wirral’s geography and micro climate means that the fresh food produced is of the highest possible quality, which is reflected in the growing number of awards that it is accumulating. The region is especially known for the excellent asparagus and watercress grown here. Local farmers and producers have taken their passion and commitment for fantastic fresh food, and created innovative ways for everyone to experience delicious produce. Enjoy an afternoon out at Church Farm Organics in Thurstaston with all the family (winner of Wirral’s ‘Family Friendly Business’ tourism award for two years running), or spend the day learning how to cook at Claremont Farm Kitchen with The Vegi-Table or other courses run by top, local chefs. Claremont Farm also plays host to the Wirral Food and Drink Festival, which draws thousands of visitors every year over the August Bank Holiday. Wirral’s markets sell a wide range of quality produce; both locals and visitors enjoy Birkenhead Market and the Wirral Farmers’ Market time and time again. Also boosting the drinks industry in Wirral are micro-breweries such as Brimstage Brewery and Peerless Brewery who produce a range of popular beers sold throughout the region. Come soon to discover, or indeed rediscover, Wirral’s wonderful Food and Drink offer. You won’t be disappointed. 24 www.visitwirral.com Golf Wirral Peninsula and Golf fit as easily as links and championships. The world famous seaside golf course, Royal Liverpool in Hoylake, is one of fourteen impressive courses in the peninsula. The borough has the honour of hosting the RICOH Women’s British Open for the very first time and, as the only women's Major outside the USA, it provides an invaluable opportunity to showcase the very best of Wirral Golf to the international media. With Caldy Golf Club having the pleasure of hosting the Final Qualifying Stage of the competition; The Open Championship making a welcome return to Royal Liverpool in 2014; Wallasey Golf Club being the home of the Stableford system, and our very own Wirral Golf Classic Wirral is the perfect place for an affordable, quality golf break. 4 25 Wallasey Golf Club www.visitwirral.com 27 T HE REGION, with The Open Championship course of Royal Liverpool at its heart, includes golf courses of such status, challenge and fame it has become known not only around the country, but internationally as well. The inland courses in Wirral provide memorable days out. Bromborough, for example, is such a fine golf challenge it was recently chosen to host the Amateur Championship. Brackenwood and Arrowe Park, like other municipals, are places where so many hit their first golf balls. They are always remembered with great affection by those who move elsewhere and graduate in the game. But the great challenge is to be found on the Wirral coast, including Caldy, Heswall and Wallasey, which collectively host the international golf championship, the Wirral Golf Classic, an event for hundreds of top amateurs. Royal Liverpool hosts the final. Wallasey is famous as the home of Stableford. Here Frank Barney Gorton Stableford, ex-Boer War surgeon, aware of the frustrations of high handicap players after a disastrous time in a medal competition, devised the points system of scoring. Few have left such a valuable legacy. As Henry Longhurst, the distinguished golf writer and historian, put it: “I doubt whether any single man did more to increase the pleasure of the more humble club golfer.” Main Photo: The Stableford Trophy, Inset: Heswall Golf Club USEFUL INFO: • Bidston 0151 638 3412 • Bromborough 0151 334 2155 • Caldy 0151 625 5660 • Eastham Lodge 0151 327 3003 • Heswall 0151 342 2193 • Leasowe 0151 677 5852 • Prenton 0151 609 3426 • Royal Liverpool 0151 632 3101 • Wallasey 0151 691 1024 • Wirral Ladies 0151 652 1255 MUNICIPAL GOLF COURSES: • Arrowe Park 0151 677 1527 • Brackenwood 0151 608 3093 • Hoylake 0151 632 2956 • Warren 0151 639 5730 Date The Wo s for your Dia men’s B ritish Op r y: en in 20 The Bo 12 ys Champio Amateur nship in and the 2013 eagerly awaited re T he O p en in 20 turn of 14. 28 www.visitwirral.com Enjoy one of the greatest links courses in the north and perhaps pause a moment to remember ‘Stablie’ as he was affectionately known. The second hole, a daunting par-four into the wind, particularly for the high handicap player, has a plaque marking the hole where ‘Stablie’ thought of the system. Each year the Frank Stableford Open Amateur Memorial Trophy, a 36-hole scratch tournament, is played in his memory. 29 Heswall, with its splendid views across the River Dee, has also hosted many county championships, county matches and other top events. Caldy too, with its atmosphere of cliffs, links and parkland has also been the scene of many major events and a qualifying course for the Women’s Open in 2012. Royal Liverpool is one of the finest Open venues in England and those who walk these fairways will follow in the steps of some of the greatest names in golf, experience a sense of golf ’s colourful history and perhaps think of the cheering crowds and great golf deeds. John Ball (1862-1940), winner of the Amateur eight times was a local boy and Harold Hilton (1869-1942) from neighbouring West Kirby won four times. In 1902, practicing for The Open, Alec ‘Sandy’ Herd was invited to try out a new golf ball. He liked it and used it in the Championship. Thus, the rubbercored ball came in and the ‘gutty’ went to the golf museum. At Hoylake in 1930, the American Bobby Jones played The Open in a year Main Photo: Royal Liverpool Golf Club, Inset: Wallasey Golf Club, Right: Caldy Golf Club of a remarkable double surely never to be repeated, winning The Open and the Amateur on both sides of the Atlantic. Hoylake, remodelled to present a major challenge to the greatest golfers in the world in the 21st century, is indeed a huge golf test, particularly when the wind blows. “Hoylake, blown upon by mighty winds, breeder of mighty champions” as the distinguished golf writer Bernard Darwin wrote. But the club amateur will also feel at home. Hoylake hosted the first Amateur in 1885 and the first ‘Home International’ between England and Scotland in 1902. In 1921, the first international between Great Britain and the United States, the challenge now known as the Walker Cup, was held here. At Hoylake, and indeed along the Wirral coast, the golf experience is unforgettable. It presents a superb test of golf with memorable links, challenging shore, sea and winds, and majestic sunsets. When the skies darken, the welcoming lights of the clubhouse beckon, at the end of the day. GOLF FACTS: • The Coastal courses of the Wirral Peninsula are at the southern end of probably the finest stretch of golf territory in England. • Under the guidance of course architect Donald Steel, the course at Royal Liverpool has been lengthened and tweaked to present a magnificent, 21st century challenge to the new breed of power player. Its greens are traditionally in outstanding condition which led to the oft-quoted remark: ‘The man who cannot putt at Hoylake cannot putt.’ • Founded in 1891, Wallasey has been described as ‘The Diamond in the Dunes’, not only for its superb location overlooking the Irish Sea, but also for a challenging course with a special place in golf history. WHY NOT: Come and play the Wirral Golf Classic - a 72 hole Stableford competition for amateur golfers, played on some of Wirral’s best golf courses. www.wirralgolfclassic.co.uk 30 www.visitwirral.com Spas Immerse yourself in the pleasures of the spa, easing away the stresses of everyday life, with a luxurious choice of treatments and a chance to relax. G REAT BREAKS should also include time for relaxation, and maybe even a taste of self-indulgent luxury in a busy world. A visit to one of Wirral’s top spas, within its best hotels, will provide the ultimate experience. The award-winning spa at Thornton Hall Hotel offers a relaxing and memorable break for visitors, in stylish surroundings. Immerse yourself in the pleasures of the spa, easing away the stresses of everyday life, with a luxurious choice of treatments. For a more intense treatment, experience the Lodge Clinical Spa. A few laps of the stunning, heated indoor pool presents the perfect way to conclude your treat. The Royal Hilbre Boutique Hotel & Spa, opening in Spring 2012, has an indoor pool area with steam and sauna rooms and a hamman just a moment away. The Spa is situated in its own dedicated wing of the hotel and here you can indulge yourself and feel all your stresses melt away with the best treatments and finest products. The Hoylake hotel is perfectly placed for the sports enthusiast too. 31 Hillbark Hotel, in the lush surroundings of Royden Park, offers a special experience in a rural setting. Its Solia Spa offers holistic and clinical treatments in a genuine oasis of calm and relaxation within an award-winning boutique hotel. At the heart of Port Sunlight, Indulgence at The Leverhulme Hotel, is an Art Deco inspired development due to open in late 2012. It will offer a mix of treatments and a chance to relax in the heated indoor pool, hot tubs, whirlpool spas, saunas and steam room, to create a very special experience. Main Photo: Thornton Hall Hotel & Spa, Inset: Indulgence at The Leverhulme Hotel USEFUL INFO: • Thornton Hall Hotel & Spa 0151 336 3938 • Royal Hilbre Boutique Hotel & Spa 07581 263837 • Hillbark Hotel 0151 625 2400 • Leverhulme Hotel & Spa 0151 644 6655 SPA FACTS: • Thornton Hall has a prestigious Good Spa Award for providing the Finest Fabulush Facial in the UK. Products are mainly ESPA. • Royal Hilbre uses the environmentally friendly products of Germaine de Capuccini. • Sister hotels Hillbark and Leverhulme products come from top ranges Terrake, Keraskin and Skin Ceuticals. WHY NOT: • Thornton Hall Hotel - Wander around picturesque Thornton Hough, an ‘old England’ rural village. • Royal Hilbre Boutique Hotel & Spa - Take a short walk down to Hoylake promenade and along to the classic seaside town of West Kirby with its marine lake and great views over to Hilbre Islands. • Hillbark Hotel - Explore Royden Park, wander around its walled garden and climb up to Thurstaston Common for yet more stunning views. • Leverhulme Hotel - Situated in Port Sunlight Village, the Art Gallery and Museum are ‘must do’s’. 32 www.visitwirral.com Water Sports The Wirral Peninsula is gaining a growing reputation as one of the best places in the North West for a wide range of coastal activities. S URROUNDED BY rivers and sea, with some of the cleanest beaches in Western Europe and easy-to-reach shores, the Wirral Peninsula is gaining a growing reputation as one of the best places in the North West for a wide range of coastal activities. Water sports are high on the list. In addition, Wirral hosted the world kite buggy endurance record on the Hoylake sands, which are also rated as one of the best places in the country for sand yachting and kite buggying. The European Sand Yachting Championships were held here in 2011 and provided quite a spectacle. The beaches of West Kirby and Wallasey are popular with wind and kite surfers and, with offshore winds beating against the incoming waves, make Leasowe Bay increasingly popular with surfers. Wirral’s six sailing clubs host race meetings and regattas, including the British Open Team Racing Trophy event at West Kirby’s Marine Lake, one of the best of its kind in the North West; offering flat water, high winds, and providing a safe, salt-water 33 lake for both beginners and the more experienced sailors. The lake is also the base for the Wirral Sailing School, which provides lessons in sailing, windsurfing and kayaking. The more sheltered Mersey Estuary provides opportunities for inland sailing and boasts the second oldest sailing club in the country, the Royal Mersey Yacht Club. Just around the coast, personal watercraft - jet skis - launch from the Mersey Narrows at New Brighton where a second marine lake has been restored to its former glory as part of the Marine Point project, which will also boast a new lakeside pontoon. The area has hosted international powerboat races which are sure to return to Wirral as it develops its reputation as the water sports capital of the North West. Date for yo ur Diary May : Come a nd see British O the annual pen Tea Racing m Trophy e vent www.wk sc.net USEFUL INFO: • Wirral Sailing Centre 0151 625 2510 • Wirral Sand Yachting Club 07988 413662 www.wsyc.org.uk • Dee Sailing Club 0151 648 2300 • Hoylake Sailing Club 0151 632 2616 • Royal Mersey Yacht Club 0151 645 3204 • Wallasey Yacht Club 0151 639 1427 • West Cheshire Sailing Club 0151 639 6473 • West Kirby Sailing Club 0151 625 5579 For more info on water sports such as windsurfing, surfing, sand yachting, land boarding and kite surfing, call Wirral Council’s Coastal Rangers on 0151 648 4371 WHY NOT: • Contact the West Kirby Sailing Centre about taking a one or two hour boat trip around Hilbre Islands and along the Dee Estuary, providing the perfect opportunity to view wildlife such as the local seal colony 0151 625 3292 • Take a diving or fishing trip on a 33ft catamaran with Discovery Charters to explore more of what the waters around Wirral can offer 07884 238262 Main Photo: Sailing at West Kirby Inset: Sand Yatching at Hoylake 34 www.visitwirral.com Port Sunlight A leisurely walk around the picture postcard village reveals a variety of buildings which add up to some of the most exciting village architecture of 19th century England. P ORT SUNLIGHT is more than a Wirral village. It is an enchanting, delightful day out and a unique cultural experience. A leisurely walk around the picture postcard village reveals a variety of buildings which add up to some of the most exciting village architecture of 19th century England. Each block of houses is the result of the hard work of a different architect, with over 30 used in total. The village was founded on the four principles of industry, art, education and charity. It was the vision and creation of ‘Soap King’, William Hesketh Lever, to provide a special place for workers at his local soap factory. Not surprisingly for a place of such beauty and charm, it has remained virtually unchanged since that time with more than 800 Grade II listed buildings set in superb gardens. The Port Sunlight Museum and Garden Village provides a fascinating 35 film show, life size models and village memorabilia - a special insight into what it was like to live and work at Port Sunlight during the late 1800s and early 1900s. Whilst here, pop upstairs to savour the hand-baked cakes in ‘Tea at Port Sunlight Museum’. Every visit must include the Lady Lever Art Gallery, world famous for its collections of furniture, ceramics and great works of art, including preRaphaelite masterpieces by Millais, Rossetti and Burne-Jones and dramatic landscapes by Turner and Constable. The Lady Lever also boasts a popular café, a stylish gift shop from which you can purchase that special souvenir of your visit or gifts and new activity rooms which provide a space where children can dress up, create a puppet show…and just generally be children. In a busy world it is a place to be thankful for - a haven of tranquility, not only for the workers of years gone by, but for us all in years to come. Main Photo: By ‘The Dell’, Inset: Lady Lever Art Gallery USEFUL INFO: • Port Sunlight Museum and Garden Village 0151 644 6466 • Lady Lever Art Gallery 0151 478 4136 PORT SUNLIGHT FACTS: Port Sunlight’s ‘Viniola’ soap was used in all the first class cabins and public rooms on the doomed Titanic and is still sold in the museum shop today. WHY NOT: • Savour a performance at The Gladstone Theatre, originally built in 1891 as the dining and recreation hall for male workers at the Lever Brothers Soap Factory. For details of their programme, contact 0151 643 8757 or visit www.gladstonetheatre.org.uk • Take part in a guided, walking tour of the village in season through Port Sunlight Museum or collect the village trail from the museum and do your own, self-guided trail. www.portsunlightvillage.com Date for yo ur Diary July : Por t Su nlig www.po ht Village Festi r tsunligh v tvillage.c al om 36 www.visitwirral.com New Brighton The great centrepiece is Marine Point, a £60 million development comprising a casino, hotel and digital cinema as well as retail and leisure outlets. T HE DAYS WHEN New Brighton was packed with fun seekers, a bustling place of kiss-me-quick hats, fish and chips and candy-floss, a famous tower even bigger than Blackpool’s and Europe’s biggest open air swimming pool, are long gone. But the old and well-loved playground of Merseyside is indeed facing a bright future. The great centrepiece is Marine Point, a £60 million development comprising a casino, hotel, digital cinema - The Light, as well as retail and leisure outlets. The popular and historic Floral Pavilion Theatre is now a stunning, dual-use conference and theatre venue having undergone a £12 million redevelopment. Those who recall the old New Brighton will still find familiar sights. Fort Perch Rock was built as a coastal defence battery to protect the Port of Liverpool during the Napoleonic period. It is open throughout the year and features an Aviation and Archaeology Museum and a permanent exhibition about the German bomber raids over Merseyside during World War II. 37 Alongside is New Brighton Lighthouse, originally the Perch Rock Lighthouse, no longer in use, its functions overtaken by modern navigational technology. The Lighthouse is family maintained, the result of interest and concern that such treasures from past times must be preserved and used. Both Rock and Lighthouse are famous, well loved symbols on the New Brighton shore. So, there are the reminders of past times, but the modern fun-times are back. New Brighton offers a huge range of attractions including the Riverside Bowl and Laser Quest, crazy golf in the Victoria Gardens and much more. The Wilkie Leisure Group’s New Palace and Adventureland provides a great day out for the family, with hot and cold food, and a great range of entertainment (outdoors and indoors) so the rain will never ruin your day. Visitors can use an interactive map to visit the different parts of the centre. New Brighton is the quintessential seaside town, providing just the right mixture of old and new to suit all ages and tastes. Main Photo: New Brighton Marine Lake, Inset: Lighthouse USEFUL INFO: • The Light Cinema 0151 214 1370 • Floral Pavilion Theatre 0151 666 0000 • Fort Perch Rock 0797 628 2120 • Riverside Bowl and Laser Quest 0151 639 1238 • New Palace and Adventureland 0151 639 6041 • New Brighton Heritage & Information Centre 0151 639 3555 NEW BRIGHTON FACTS: • Stewart Granger, Susan Hayward and Mae West were among the many Hollywood film stars to visit New Brighton. • The Tower Ballroom was one of the largest and most ornate ballrooms in the world, and was one of ‘The Beatles’ favourite venues, performing there an amazing 27 times. 38 www.visitwirral.com Wirral Attractions Located at Seacombe ferry terminal is Spaceport, a fascinating journey through space and a great attraction for children. T HE ‘FERRY CROSS THE MERSEY’ is famous in song and in reality too. A 50-minute ferry cruise is a magical way to see the world-famous waterfront and skyline. Whilst on board, a commentary tells the history of the ferry and river. Located at Seacombe ferry terminal is Spaceport, a fascinating journey through space and a great attraction for children. Nearby, at Woodside ferry terminal, is the U-boat Story. Recovered from the seabed in 1993, this World War II German submarine is now an exhibition showing the inside of the U-boat, the life of the sailor and accounts of their recollections. A conning tower has been newly added recreating a key feature which had been lost. From Woodside, you can continue your journey into the past by taking a trip on a tram dating from as early as 1901, up to the Wirral Transport Museum. Housed within is one of the largest and most varied collections of transport in the North West. Enjoy match day at Tranmere Rovers FC, Wirral’s very own professional football team, established 39 Main Photo: Spaceport in 1912, or treat yourself to some retail therapy in the nearby Grange and Pyramids Shopping Centre. The Williamson Art Gallery and Museum has one of the finest art collections in the North West, featuring paintings, porcelain and an emphasis on Cammell Laird shipbuilders. Founded in 1190 and home of the Benedictine monks, Birkenhead Priory is the oldest building on Merseyside and a capsule of much of the town’s history. The Wilfred Owen Story and Gallery is the first designated cultural memorial to the poet anywhere in the North West and well worth a visit. For fans of the outdoors, Ness Gardens is a must. The collection of trees, flowers and shrubs is a garden lover’s delight. Extend the ‘Ness’ experience by taking afternoon tea in the award-winning Roses Tearooms. Or choose a picnic for the garden. For family enjoyment and a unique shopping experience, visit Brimstage Hall Courtyard where amongst the many shops you will find Voirrey Crafts, a specialised independent needlework and craft centre. USEFUL INFO: • Mersey Ferries/U-boat Story 0151 330 1000 • Spaceport 0151 330 1566 • Tranmere Rovers FC www.tranmererovers.co.uk • Williamson Art Gallery 0151 652 4177 • Wirral Tramway and Wirral Transport Museum Call for operating/opening hours 0151 647 2128 • Wirral Archives Services 0151 606 2929 • The Wilfred Owen Story and Gallery 07539 371925 • Birkenhead Priory 0151 652 4177 • Ness Gardens 0151 353 0123 • Voirrey Crafts 0151 342 3514 ATTRACTIONS FACTS: Award winning - The U-boat Story won the Liverpool City Region, best ’Small Visitor Attraction’ 2011. WHY NOT: • Take a trip on the Manchester Ship Canal Cruise with Mersey Ferries. The cruise sails from both Wirral ferry terminals or pick it up in Manchester and do the stopover option of visiting the U-boat Story 0151 330 1444. • Visit many of these attractions on Birkenhead’s Heritage Tour, mostly situated around Woodside, apart from The Wilfred Owen Story, which is just the other side of Hamilton Square in Argyle Street. www.visitwirral.com/ wonderfulbirkenhead 40 www.visitwirral.com Suggested Itineraries Get a flavour of this beautiful peninsula by joining us on these three, specially prepared itineraries. Taking in two of Britain’s most famous rivers, the Dee and the Mersey, and uncovering some of the less well known, rural highlights away from the coast, there will be much to delight and savour along the way. These itineraries will take you on a true journey of discovery. USEFUL INFO: • West Kirby Sailing School (Marine Lake) 0151 625 3292 • Hilbre Islands/ Wirral Country Park 0151 648 4371 / 3884 • Royden Park & Thurstaston Common 0151 677 7594 Itinerary 1 The West Coast (River Dee) The pretty seaside town of West Kirby with its wide, sandy beaches, huge marine lake, making the town a water sports mecca, and the beautiful Hilbre Islands, is a magnet for visitors, at any time of year. Walk along the promenade and stop for a while to enjoy the wonderful views over to Wales or watch some of the water sports, all the while breathing in the salty sea breezes. If you are here when there is a low tide, take a walk out to Hilbre Islands where, if you are lucky, you may even spot seals. It is a lovely location and one where you are certain to feel that you are truly communing with nature. There are plenty of places in the town to be ’fed and watered’ and some eclectic shopping if this is more to your taste. West Kirby also marks the start of the 12 mile Wirral Way, the ‘backbone’ of Wirral Country Park. This was the old Hooton to West Kirby railway line that closed in 1963 and today, is a very popular multi-use leisure facility. The path provides some wonderful views over the Dee Estuary to Wales. Wirral Country Park was the first designated country park in Britain and offers a visitor centre, stunning cliffs, with steps leading down to Thurstaston beach, and more hidden areas such as The Dungeon, a sandstone gorge with woodland. The country park offers a fantastic day out and the opportunity to cycle, walk or picnic in some stunning countryside with exceptional views. If you still have some spare time, nearby Royden Park and Thurstaston Common, with the fantastic, elevated views over to Wales and the ancient Thors Rock, are well worth a visit. Main Photo: Thurstaston Common, Above: West Kirby Marine Lake, Inset: Wirral Country Park 42 www.visitwirral.com Itinerary 2 The Leverhulme Connection Starting off in Port Sunlight Village, you will experience something that is a true delight. Built at the end of the 19th century, this garden village was originally created as a home for workers at the nearby Lever factory and is one of Britain’s most unique model villages. Port Sunlight is the work of over 30 architects, and the variety of design and the beauty of the buildings are unique in the area. Wander around the village and see for yourself. Pay a visit to the Museum to see a short film about the village and Lord Leverhulme, its founder. At the museum pick up a self-guided trail of the village, take refreshments in the tearoom upstairs or pick up a bar of Sunlight Soap in the gift shop as a souvenir. Just a few moments away is the Lady Lever Art Gallery. Opened in 1922, and founded by the first Lord Leverhulme, the Lady Lever has a magnificent collection of paintings, British sculpture, Wedgwood, Chinese porcelain and 18th century furniture. The collections are among the best in the country. A short drive away is Thornton Hough, another Leverhulme village, on USEFUL INFO: • Port Sunlight Museum 0151 644 6466 • Lady Lever Art Gallery 0151 478 4136 / 4178 • Brimstage Hall & Craft Courtyard 0151 348 4141 which he started work in 1889. Set in lush pastures and fine woodland, Thornton Hough is a picture perfect example of village life. This historical part of Wirral is full of beauty and charm, where you can take in country walks, discover the cottages and fine buildings in the village itself, or simply relax in a tea shop or at the village pub. The village green is the hub of village life, and is surrounded by two churches, the village blacksmith and a mixture of redbrick and half timbered mock Tudor houses, a setting which typifies the archetypal ‘old England’ rural village atmosphere. Within just a few minutes drive, and down country lanes surrounded by fields, is the third Leverhulme family village of Brimstage. Visit Brimstage Hall and Craft Courtyard where you’ll encounter a variety of interesting shops to find that special purchase as well as several places to take refreshments. In neighbouring Gregory’s Farm there is an annual Maize Maze, July to September, which is very popular and provides fun for all the family, whatever your age. USEFUL INFO: • Mersey Ferries & U-boat Story 0151 330 1000 • Birkenhead Priory 0151 652 4177 • Birkenhead Park 0151 652 5197 • Eastham Country Park 0151 327 1007 Itinerary 3 The East Coast (River Mersey) This journey starts from Woodside, one of the two terminals in Wirral from where you can take a trip on the famous Mersey Ferry. Here you will find the U-boat Story, a World War II submarine which has been crosssectioned and has its story told through a highly interactive and exciting exhibition. Here you’ll find a quality café with outdoor terrrace and stunning views. Birkenhead offers a range of attractions that make up the popular Birkenhead Heritage Trail, the nearest to Woodside being Hamilton Square which has the distinction of being second only to Trafalgar Square in London for having the most Grade 1 listed buildings in one place in England outside of London and is definitely worth a stop. Birkenhead Priory is close by and another key site. Built in 1150, it is the oldest standing building on Merseyside and encapsulates so much of the town’s history within a small, enclosed site. Nearby, Birkenhead Park is a slight detour but worth the effort, Left: Thornton Hough, Above: Birkenhead Priory especially following the £11m restoration which has returned the park to its former glory. Continuing on down the A41 eventually leads to the historic Eastham Village and Eastham Country Park. The village is a conservation area boasting Grade II listed buildings, including St Mary’s, built in 1152AD. Meandering though the twists and turns of this medieval village is a delight and full of interest. Nearby, Eastham Country Park is also steeped in history as well as being an area of great natural beauty. With large areas of woodland, accessible riverside cliffs, affording superb views across the Mersey and occasional glimpses of the Manchester Ship Canal Cruise, and a visitor centre, a stop here will not disappoint. Remnants of its past such as the bear pit, boating lake and fountains also makes the park of historic interest, as does Eastham Ferry pub, built in 1846, and providing the perfect opportunity for refreshments. Eastham Country Park is a treasure just waiting to be explored. 44 www.visitwirral.com Events & Festivals The International Guitar Festival of Great Britain is an event firmly pencilled in the diaries of guitar lovers, with concerts taking place at various venues across Wirral. W IRRAL’S SUMMER events programme will get off to a high-flying start with the arrival of the Wirral Kite Festival. The festival, located at New Brighton, is a great opportunity to see the art performed by experts from around the world. Admission and parking is free. Wirral Historic Vehicle Rally brings together a collection of more than 100 vintage and classic cars, a trip down memory lane for car enthusiasts. The cavalcade of cars finish their journey through Wirral at Port Sunlight Village Festival. The free family extravaganza, which welcomes more than 15,000 people at the height of the summer, has live entertainment, children's performers, stalls, a fairground and lots more. The Wirral Food and Drink Festival is a key highlight of the year, a celebration of home-grown produce. The festival brings together the best producers in the region and also includes specialist cookery demonstrations by celebrity TV chefs and lots of other entertainment to enjoy. 45 Stalls, fairground and family entertainment are features of the Hoylake RNLI Open Day with the Red Arrows often providing the main attraction. Admission is free. The Wirral Golf Classic sees amateurs compete on some of the best links courses in the region, with the final staged at the stunning Open course of Royal Liverpool. Taking place during November, The International Guitar Festival of Great Britain is an event firmly pencilled in the diaries of guitar lovers. With concerts taking place at various venues across Wirral, it is an annual celebration of guitar music. The year concludes, with the Christmas Food Fayre in the picturesque Port Sunlight Village in December. Date for yo u r Dia Coming So ry: on Column by Anthony M cCall at East F loat, Wirral Wa te www.artsc ouncil.org.u rs k/ourwork/artis ts-taking-le north-west ad- Download the Events leaflet at www.visitwirral.com/whats-on USEFUL INFO: • Wirral Kite Festival 0151 691 8269 • Wirral Historic Vehicle Rally 0151 666 3188 • Port Sunlight Village Festival 0151 644 6466 • Wirral Food and Drink Festival 07877 921276 • Hoylake RNLI Open Day 0151 666 3188 • Wirral Golf Classic 0151 625 9994 • International Guitar Festival 0151 666 0000 • Christmas Food Fayre 0151 644 6466 WHY NOT: Before the main events season truly kicks off, the Secret Gardens of Oxton takes place in May. Come and discover these beautiful, private gardens in the picturesque surroundings of Oxton Village Conservation Area. www.oxtonsociety.org.uk EVENTS & FESTIVALS FACTS: Wirral has an eclectic array of events and festivals. Many are organised by our key attractions. From Easter Egg hunts and outdoor theatre at Ness Gardens, to the Maize Maze at Brimstage in the summer, the Church Farm Scareshow in Autumn and the Floral Pavilion pantomime at the year’s end, Wirral is never short of ways in which to entertain you. Main Photo: Wirral Kite Festival 46 www.visitwirral.com On Our Doorstep Liverpool has a truly fascinating past and a legacy of breathtaking architecture. The city has more museums, galleries and theatres than any outside of London, plus a range of award-winning attractions. W IRRAL IS IDEALLY placed to visit two of Britain’s most famous cities, each attracting visitors from around the world. Liverpool has a truly fascinating past and a legacy of breathtaking architecture. The city has more museums, galleries and theatres than any outside of London, plus a range of award-winning attractions. Learn about ‘The Fab Four’ at The Beatles Story or take a Ferry ‘cross the Mersey and enjoy the World Heritage Site waterfront. Take a city bus tour, explore the splendid parks or soak in the atmosphere of not one, but two great cathedrals, for an unforgettable experience. The ultra-modern Liverpool One, is one of the UK’s finest shopping experiences. Across the road is the Albert Dock, boasting Merseyside Maritime Museum and the Tate with its major works of international artists. Nearby at the Pier Head, the new Museum of Liverpool is a fantastic experience and perfect for families. Chester has roots that go back to Roman times. Tourists of all ages from 47 around the world are captivated by the old city streets, the grand Georgian houses, quaint shops and antique dealers. But there is also a modern feel about the city, with its traffic free centre and shops selling top brands. Visit the cathedral, dress in style for the races, laze on the river banks or enjoy a day at Chester Zoo. The two-mile walk around the Roman city walls provides unrivalled views of the city’s heritage, including the unique raised arcades known as ‘The Rows’ and the iconic Eastgate Clock. Southport is famous for its golden sands, great golf links and its pier, the second longest in the UK. Shop along stylish Lord Street, a mile long boulevard of boutiques, designer names and high street brands, or enjoy one of the many annual festivals and events. Elsewhere in the Liverpool City Region, trace the footsteps of the medieval Augustinian canons at Norton Priory Museums and Gardens, visit Knowsley Safari Park, one of the UK’s premier animal attractions, or the award-winning World of Glass in St Helens. USEFUL INFO: • Liverpool 0151 233 2008 www.visitliverpool.com • Chester 0845 647 7868 www.visitchester.com www.visitcheshire.com • Sefton (Southport) 01704 533333 www.visitsouthport.com • Halton (Runcorn/Widnes) 0151 907 8303 www.visithalton.com • Knowsley 0151 443 2270 www.visitknowsley.com • St Helens 01744 676789 www.visitsthelens.com Main Photo: Albert Dock, Liverpool Top Inset: Chester Races Below Inset: Southport Pier 48 www.visitwirral.com Accommodation Whether you want the luxury of a top-class hotel or the intimacy of a cosy guest house, Wirral has a wide range of accommodation to suit all tastes. W HETHER YOU want the luxury of a top-class hotel or the intimacy of a cosy guest house, Wirral has a wide range of accommodation to suit all tastes. In the heart of Wirral, Hillbark provides high quality accommodation within a Grade II listed building. Originally built for a soap king, it was amazingly moved brick by brick to its present site in 1928. Thornton Hall Hotel and Spa has spa facilities that rival anywhere in the UK. Both hotels have a four-star rating. Mere Brook House, a carefully restored Edwardian country house on the edge of the picturesque village of Thornton Hough, provides a five-star bed and breakfast service. The delightful gardens are the perfect place to relax. The five star Caldy Warren Cottage in West Kirby has breathtaking views across the Dee estuary, and is a short walk from the stunning Wirral Country Park. Herons Well, a detached barn conversion in West Kirby, is among Wirral’s most attractive self-catering cottages and has a five-star rating. Mersey View at East Float Dock consists of three serviced self-catering apartments within a grade II listed building. Offering views of the waterfront, they have been awarded five-star and four-star ratings. The five-star listed Thatched Pavilion is a former cricket pavillion situated in the beautiful grounds of Thornton Manor, Lord Leverhulme’s former home. The accommodation listings on the following pages, gives a range of budget options from traditional inns, to comfortable caravan sites. Whatever you are looking for, Wirral has it. Date for your Diary: 2014 nship The Open Golf Champio l. oo erp Liv yal returns to Ro n atio od mm co ac for rly Book ea tay tos ere www.visitwirral.com/wh 49 Main Photo: Mere Brook, Inset: Herons Well ACCOMMODATION FACTS: Award-winning Accommodation: • Hillbark, Mere Brook House, Herons Well and Mersey View all have the coveted ‘Gold’ Award in the VisitBritain Quality Assessment Scheme. Properties achieving ‘Gold’ have exceptional levels of quality, comfort and cleanliness in bedrooms and bathrooms, and outstanding levels of customer care and food. • Herons Well won best selfcatering in the Liverpool City Region for two consecutive years in 2010 and 2011. WHY NOT: • Walk and cycle in Wirral using one of the four Walks & Cycle trail leaflets or the new Circular Trail and reward your exertions with a stay in one of our hotels that has spa facilities and boast quality and affordable dining too. • Stay in Wirral for one of the many exciting events now on offer. Mere Brook House, Thornton Hall Hotel and Thornton Manor are all very handy for the foodie delights of the Wirral Food & Drink Festival. Caldy Warren Cottage and Herons Well are conveniently placed for Royal Liverpool and The British Open Team Racing Trophy at West Kirby, whilst Mersey View’s location is perfect for the Port Sunlight Village Festival, Secret Gardens of Oxton and the Birkenhead Park Festival of Transport. 50 Accommodation Listings HOTELS RATED ★★★★ Hillbark Hotel, Royden Park, Frankby, CH48 1NP. Rooms: 19. Gold. Tel: 0151 625 2400 www.hillbarkhotel.co.uk Leverhulme Hotel & Spa, Port Sunlight Village, CH62 5EZ. Rooms: 15. Silver. Tel: 0151 644 6655 www.leverhulmehotel.co.uk Macdonald Craxton Wood, Parkgate Road, Ledsham, CH66 9PB. Rooms: 72. Tel: 0151 347 4000 www.macdonaldhotels.co.uk/ craxtonwood Thornton Hall Hotel and Spa, Neston Road, Thornton Hough, CH63 1JF. Rooms: 63. Tel: 0151 336 3938 www.thorntonhallhotel.com RATED ★★★ Brook Meadow, Heath Lane, Childer Thornton, CH66 7NS. Rooms: 25. Tel: 0151 339 9350 www.oxfordhotelsandinns.com Grove House Hotel, Grove Road, Wallasey, CH45 3HF. Rooms: 14. Tel: 0151 639 3947 www.thegrovehouse.co.uk 51 Leasowe Castle, Leasowe Road, Moreton, CH46 3RF. Rooms: 46. Tel: 0151 606 9191 www.leasowecastle.com The Riverhill, 19 Talbot Road, Oxton, CH43 2HJ. Rooms: 15. Tel: 0151 653 3773 www.theriverhill.co.uk RATED ★ Central Hotel, Clifton Crescent, Birkenhead, CH41 2QH. Rooms: 29. Tel: 0151 647 6347 www.centralhotelbirkenhead.co.uk AWAITING GRADING: Holiday Inn Express, The Kings Gap, Hoylake, CH47 1HE. Rooms: 56. Tel: 0151 632 2073 www.hiexpresshoylake.com Royal Hilbre Boutique Hotel & Spa, 8 Meols Drive, Hoylake, CH47 4AQ. Rooms: 8. Tel: 07581 263837 www.royalhilbrehotelspa.co.uk Wirral Lodge, 114 Birkenhead Road, Meols, CH47 0LE. Rooms: 14. Tel: 0151 632 0800 www.wirrallodge.co.uk BUDGET HOTELS Holiday Inn Cheshire Oaks, Waterways, Lower Mersey Street, Ellesmere Port, CH65 2AL. Rooms: 83. Tel: 0151 356 8111 www.hiellesmereport.com Premier Inn Bromborough, High Street, Bromborough, CH62 7EZ. Rooms: 32. Tel: 0151 334 2917 www.premierinn.com Inglewood Manor, Badgers Rake Lane, Ledsham, CH66 8PF. Rooms: 30. Tel: 0151 339 5105 www.inglewoodmanor.co.uk Premier Inn Childer Thornton, New Chester Road, Childer Thornton, CH66 1QW. Rooms: 31. Tel: 0151 339 8101 www.premierinn.com Premier Inn Greasby, Greasby Road, Greasby, CH49 2PP. Rooms: 30. Tel: 0151 677 5901 www.premierinn.com Premier Inn Heswall, Chester Road, Gayton, CH60 3SD. Rooms: 37. Tel: 0151 342 1982 www.premierinn.com Premier Inn Two Mills, Parkgate Road, Two Mills, CH66 9PD. Rooms: 31. Tel: 0151 339 2399 www.premierinn.com The Village Hotel, Pool Lane, Bromborough Pool, CH62 4UE. Rooms: 117. Tel: 0151 643 1616 www.village-hotels.co.uk/wirral Travelodge Bromborough, Pool Lane, Bromborough, CH62 4UE. Rooms: 60. Tel: 0871 984 6439 www.travelodge.co.uk Travelodge Eastham, 1408 New Chester Road, Eastham, CH62 9AQ. Rooms: 30. Tel: 0871 984 6184 www.travelodge.co.uk Travelodge Wallasey New Brighton, Marine Point, King’s Parade, Wallasey, CH45 2PB. Rooms: 66. Tel: 0871 984 6476 www.travelodge.co.uk SERVICED APARTMENTS RATED ★★★★★ & ★★★★ Mersey View, East Float Quay 1 - 5 star East Float Quay 2 - 4 star East Float Quay 3 - 4 star Dock Rd, Birkenhead, CH41 1DP. Sleeps up to 6 people. Gold. Tel: 07941 562879 www.merseyview.com For more information on accommodation visit www.visitwirral.com www.visitwirral.com SELF-CATERING RATED ★★★★★ Herons Well, Three Lanes End Farm, West Kirby, CH48 1PT. Maximum of 6 guests. Gold. Tel: 0151 625 1401/07858 354389 www.heronswell.co.uk RATED ★★★★ AAA North Villa Apartments, 31-32 North Parade, Hoylake, CH47 3AJ. 7 apartments, catering for parties of varying sizes. Tel: 0151 632 3982 www.northvilla.com Abbey House, 108 Meols Drive, West Kirby, CH48 5DA. Maximum of 4 guests. Tel: 0151 632 0914 www.abbeyhousewestkirby.co.uk Captains View, 1 Egremont Promenade, Wallasey, CH44 8BG. Sleeps up to 5 people. Tel: 0151 638 5057/07803 084197 http://freespace.virgin.net/ marilyn.pantoni/ Port Sunlight Holiday Cottages, 21 & 22 King Georges Drive, Port Sunlight, CH62 5DX. Two cottages - 1 more suited to larger parties than the other. Tel: 0151 644 4805 www.portsunlighhtvillage.com. Redcap, 2 Redcap Close, Wallasey, CH45 3QH. Maximum of 5 guests. Tel: 0151 513 0709 www.wirralcoastproperties.co.uk/ redcap.php. Thornton Manor The Thatched Pavilion, Thornton Manor, Thornton Hough, CH63 1JB. Sleeps up to 4 people Tel: 0151 353 1155 www.thorntonmanor.co.uk RATED ★★★ Barnacre Farm Cottages, Saughall Massie, CH46 8TQ. Sleeps 5/7 and 4/6. Tel: 07753 807611 www.barnacrewirral.com Mill Cottage, 1392b New Chester Rd, Eastham, CH62 4RB. Sleeps 4. Tel: 0151 334 1193 www.visitwirral.com/where-tostay/mill-cottage GUEST ACCOM RATED ★★★★★ Mere Brook House, Thornton Hough, CH63 0LU. Rooms: 4. Gold. Tel: 07713 189949 www.merebrookhouse.co.uk 42 Caldy Road, West Kirby, CH48 2HQ. Rooms: 3. Tel: 0151 625 8740 www.warrencott.demon.co.uk RATED ★★★★ At Peel Hey Country Guest House Frankby, CH48 1PP. Rooms: 9. Silver. Tel: 0151 677 9077 www.peelhey.co.uk Pendragon House, 1 Bertram Drive, Hoylake, CH47 0LG. Rooms: 5. Silver. Tel: 0151 632 5344 www.pendragonhouseuk.com 21 Park House, 21 Park Road, West Kirby, CH48 4DN. Rooms: 8. Tel: 07974 264694/ 0151 625 4665 www.21parkhouse.com RATED ★★★ Albion House, 41 Albion Street, New Brighton, CH45 9LE. Rooms: 10 Tel: 0151 639 7144 www.albionhouse.org.uk Dunsandles Guest House, 115 Rowson Street, New Brighton, CH45 2LZ. Rooms: 6. Tel: 0151 639 8754 www.dunsandles.com Sherwood Guest House, 55 Wellington Road, New Brighton, CH45 2ND. Rooms: 5. Tel: 0151 639 5198 www.sherwoodguesthouse.com Shrewsbury Lodge, 31 Shrewsbury Road, Oxton, CH43 2JB. Rooms: 15. Tel: 0151 652 4029 www.shrewsbury-hotel.com The Queen's Royal, Marine Promenade, Wallasey, CH45 2JT. Rooms: 12. Tel: 0151 691 0101 www.thequeensroyal.co.uk Villa Venezia, 14-16 Prenton Road West, Birkenhead, CH42 9PN. Rooms: 7. Tel: 0151 608 9212 www.veneziapizzeria.co.uk INN RATED ★★★★ The Dibbinsdale, Dibbinsdale Road, CH63 0HQ. Rooms: 13. Tel: 0151 334 9818 www.dibbinsdale-inn.co.uk HOLIDAY PARK RATED ★★★ Park Lane Holiday Homes and Country Club, Park Lane, Meols, CH47 8XX. 10-25 homes for hire. Tel: 0151 632 3331 www.parklaneholidayhomes.co.uk 52 Eating Out Listings CARAVAN SITE RATED ★★★★ Wirral Country Park Caravan Club Site, Station Road, Thurstaston, CH61 0HN. Caravan Club members only. Tel: 0151 648 5228 www.caravanclub.co.uk CARAVAN CLUB CERTIFIED LOCATION Arrowe Brook Farm Caravan Site, Arrowe Brook Lane, Greasby, CH49 3NZ. 5 caravan pitches. Tel: 0151 677 1615 Church Farm Caravan Site, Church Lane, Thurstaston, CH61 0HW. 10 caravan pitches. Tel: 0151 648 7838 www.churchfarm.org.uk Grange Farm, Little Storeton, Bebington, CH63 6HR. 5 caravan pitches. Tel: 0151 608 2007 Star ratings symbolise the level of service, range of facilities and quality of guest care that you can expect. Accommodation is required to meet progressively higher standards as they move up the scale from 1 to 5 Stars. Please note that quality standards, and therefore star ratings, differ between hotels and guest accommodation, and it is advisable to check suitability and accessibility with the operator before making a booking. RESTAURANTS Ambuja Indian Brasserie, 513 Pensby Road, Thingwall, CH61 7UQ. Tel: 0151 648 5949 www.ambuja.co.uk Anchor Inn, Thurstaston Road, Irby, CH61 0HA. Tel: 0151 648 1698 www.theanchorinnirby.co.uk Capitol, 24 Argyle Street, Hamilton Square, Birkenhead, CH41 6AE. Tel: 0151 647 9212 www.capitol-restaurant.com Da Piero, 5 Mill Hill Road, Irby, CH61 4UB. Tel: 0151 648 7373 www.dapiero.co.uk Fraiche, 11 Rosemount, Oxton Village, CH43 5SG. Tel: 0151 652 2914 www.restaurantfraiche.com Garretts, 2c Bromborough Road, Bebington, CH63 7RE. Tel: 0151 645 7199 www.garrettsrestaurant.com Gem Restaurant, 1 Milner Road, Heswall, CH60 5RT. Tel: 0151 342 4811 Golden Orchid, 46 Market Street, Hoylake, CH47 2AF. Tel: 0151 632 6097 www.visitwirral.com/foodanddrink Gusto, 146-148 Telegraph Road, Heswall, CH60 0AH. Tel: 0151 348 4538 www.gustorestaurants.uk.com Julian’s, 20 Birkenhead Road, Hoylake, CH47 3BW. Tel: 0151 632 6241 www.visitwirral.com/foodanddrink Karma, 9 Banks Road, West Kirby, CH48 9DY. Tel: 0151 625 5999 www.visitwirral.com/foodanddrink 53 Kuki’s, 119-121 Banks Road, West Kirby, CH48 0RB. Tel: 0151 625 3100 www.kukis.co.uk Lawns at Thornton Hall Hotel & Spa, Neston Road, Thornton Hough, CH63 1JF. Tel: 0151 336 3938 www.lawnsrestaurant.co.uk Lino’s, 122-122a Market Street, Hoylake, CH47 3BH. Tel: 0151 632 1408 www.linosrestaurant.co.uk Nova Restaurant, 68 Pensby Road, Heswall, CH60 7RE. Tel: 0151 342 9959 www.novarestaurant.co.uk Peninsula Dining Room, 3 Grosvenor Road, New Brighton, CH45 2LW. Tel: 0151 639 8338 www.peninsula-dining-room.co.uk Portcullis at Leasowe Castle Hotel, Leasowe Road, Moreton, CH46 3RF. Tel: 0151 606 9191 www.leasowecastle.com Portrait House, 6 The Quadrant, Hoylake, CH47 2EE. Tel: 0151 632 4444 www.theportraithouse.co.uk Richard Fox @ The Leverhulme Hotel, Port Sunlight Village, CH62 5EZ. Tel: 0151 644 6655 www.leverhulmehotel.co.uk Scog’s, 34-36 Banks Road, West Kirby, CH48 0RD. Tel: 0151 625 7579 www.scog’s.co.uk Sheldrakes, Banks Road, Lower Heswall, CH60 9JS. Tel: 0151 342 1556 www.sheldrakesrestaurant.co.uk www.gustorestaurants.uk.com www.visitwirral.com Siam Thai, 101 Arrowe Road, Greasby, CH49 1RY. Tel: 0151 677 5719 www.siamgreasby.com Stewart Warner @ Hillbark, Hillbark Hotel, Royden Park, Frankby, CH48 1NP. Tel: 0151 625 2400 www.hillbarkhotel.co.uk GASTRO PUBS Irby Mill, Mill Lane, Greasby, CH49 3NT. Tel: 0151 604 0194 www.irbymill.co.uk Ring o’ bells, 40 Village Road, West Kirby, CH48 7HE. Tel: 0151 929 6750 www.gkpubs.co.uk The Bay Tree Restaurant at The Riverhill Hotel, Talbot Road, Oxton, CH43 2HJ. Tel: 0151 653 3773 www.theriverhill.co.uk The Cottage Loaf, 338 Telegraph Road, Thurstaston, CH61 0HJ. Tel: 0151 648 2837 www.cottage-loaf-pub-wirral.co.uk The Manor, 91 Greasby Road, Greasby Village, CH49 3NF. Tel: 0151 677 7034 www.themanorwirral.com The Devon Doorway, 2 Telegraph Road, Heswall, CH60 2SA. Tel: 0151 348 4462 www.thedevondoorway.co.uk The Oak Tree Restaurant at The Grove House Hotel, Grove Road, Wallasey, CH45 3HF. Tel: 0151 639 3947 www.thegrovehouse.co.uk The Olive Grove, 104-106 Telegraph Road, Heswall, CH60 0AQ. Tel: 0151 342 9100 www.olive-grove.co.uk The Shrewsbury Lodge, 31 Shrewsbury Road, Oxton, CH43 2JB. Tel: 0151 652 4029 www.shrewsbury-hotel.com Woodcotes @ The Woodcote House Hotel, Hooton Road, Hooton, CH66 1QU. Tel: 0151 327 1542 www.woodcotehouse.co.uk 3 Banks Road, 3 Banks Road, West Kirby, CH48 4HD. Tel: 0151 625 7200 www.visitwirral.com/foodanddrink 107 Dining Room, 107 Telegraph Road, Heswall, CH60 0AF. Tel: 0151 342 3420 www.107diningroom.co.uk The Fox & Hounds, 107 Barnston Road, Barnston Village, CH61 1BW. Tel: 0151 648 7685 www.the-fox-hounds.co.uk The Seven Stars, Church Road, Thornton Hough, CH63 1JW. Tel: 0151 336 4574 www.sevenstarswirral.co.uk The Wheatsheaf Inn, Rabymere Road, Raby, CH63 4JH. Tel: 0151 336 3416 www.wheatsheaf-cowshed CASUAL DINING Ellie’s Bar & Bistro, 126 Greasby Road, Greasby, CH49 3NQ. Tel: 0151 678 0104 www.elliesbistro.co.uk Lady Lever Café, Lady Lever Art Gallery, Port Sunlight Village, CH62 5EQ. Tel: 0151 478 4136 www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk Le Petit Bistro, 2a Bromborough Road, Bebington, CH63 7RE. Tel: 0151 645 7199 www.le-petit-bistro.com The Hillbark Grill, Hillbark Hotel, Royden Park, Frankby, CH48 1NP. Tel: 0151 625 2400 www.hillbarkhotel.co.uk The Olive Tree Bistro, 78 Victoria Road, New Brighton, CH45 2JF. Tel: 0151 638 1810 www.theolivetreebistro.co.uk The Wro Lounge, 2 Grange Road, West Kirby, CH48 4HA. Tel: 0151 625 2010 thewro-lounge.co.uk QUALITY TREATS Aubergine, Blenheim Building, Crescentwalk, West Kirby, CH48 4DA. Tel: 0151 625 2662 www.theaubergine.co/ Avanti, 250 Telegraph Road, Heswall, CH60 7SG. Tel: 0151 342 9703 www.avanticaffe.co.uk Cappuccinos In The Park, Visitor’s Centre, Birkenhead Park, CH41 4HD. Tel: 0151 652 3337 www.twitter.com/@Realcappuccinos Chantilly Tea Rooms, The Quadrant, Hoylake, CH47 2EE. Tel: 0151 632 0821 Gorge’Us, 7 Church Road, Bebington, CH63 7PG. Tel: 0151 644 8133 www.gorge-us.co.uk Home, Woodside Ferry Terminal, Birkenhead, CH41 6DU. You will also find Home cafes within Oxton village (Christchurch Road) and at Prenton Park Recreation Centre. Tel: 0151 330 1475 www.homeedr.co.uk Lattetude Café, 8a Dee Lane, West Kirby, CH48 0QA. Tel: 0151 625 3986 www.lattetude.moonfruit.com For more information on eating out visit www.visitwirral.com 54 Eating Out Listings Roses Tea Rooms, Ness Botanic Gardens, Neston Road, Neston, CH64 4AY. Tel: 0151 353 0123 www.rosestearooms.co.uk Sweet Pea, 2a Acacia Grove, West Kirby, CH48 4DD. Tel: 07769 812951 Join them on www.facebook.com The Countrymouse Restaurant, Brimstage Courtyard, Brimstage, CH63 6JA. Tel: 0151 342 5382 www.brimstagehall.com Toast, 33 Grange Road, West Kirby, CH48 4DZ. Tel: 0151 625 7207 Join them on www.facebook.com Züger’s Tea Rooms, 150 Allport Road, Bromborough, CH62 6BB. Tel: 0151 334 1904 www.zugerstearooms.co.uk 7th Heaven, 124 Victoria Road, New Brighton, CH45 9LD. Tel: 0151 638 1316 FRESH IDEAS AI Roberts Butchers, 7 The Crescent, West Kirby, CH48 4HL. Tel: 0151 625 6368 www.airoberts.co.uk Birkenhead Market, Claughton Road, Birkenhead, CH41 2YH. Tel: 0151 666 3194/5 www.birkenheadmarket.co.uk Brimstage Brewery, Brimstage. Tel: 0151 342 1181 info@brimstagebrewery.com Church Farm Organics, Church Lane, Thurstaston, CH61 0HW. Tel: 0151 648 7838 www.churchfarm.org.uk 55 Claremont Farm, Old Clatterbridge Road, Bebington, CH63 4JB. Tel: 0151 346 1796 www.claremontfarm.co.uk Edge & Sons, 61 New Chester Road, New Ferry, CH62 1AB. www.traditionalmeat.com Muff ’s Butchers, 5 Allport Lane, Bromborough, CH62 7HH. Tel: 0151 334 2002 www.muffsonline.co.uk Peerless Brewery, 8 Pool Street, Birkenhead, CH41 3NL. Tel: 0151 647 7688 www.peerlessbrewing.co.uk PS & EM Johnson & Son Farmers, Oldfield Farm, Heswall, CH60 6SG. Tel: 0151 342 1399 www.oldfieldfarmheswall.co.uk The Vegi-table, Old Clatterbridge Road, Bebington, CH63 4JB. Tel: 07974 968830/07732 791496 www.vegi-table.co.uk Ward’s Fish, CP27, Birkenhead Market, Claughton Road, Birkenhead, CH41 2YW. Tel: 0151 666 1842 www.wardsfish.co.uk DRINKS Glassfire, 6-9 Albert Road, Hoylake, CH47 2AB. Tel: 0151 632 0011 join glassfire on www.facebook.com Koi, 38 Banks Road, West Kirby, CH48 0RD. Tel: 0151 625 5444 koibar@hotmail.co.uk La Bodega, 2 Market Street, Hoylake, CH47 2AE. Tel: 0151 632 5230 www.la-bodega.co.uk Mojo’s, 3 Dee Lane, West Kirby, CH48 0QA. Tel: 07784 559271 join mojo’s on www.facebook.com Oxton Bar & Terrace, 2 Claughton Firs, Oxton Village, CH43 5TQ. Tel: 0151 651 2535 www.oxtonbar.co.uk Slinky’s, 84 Banks Road, West Kirby, CH48 0RE. Tel: 0151 625 6711 join slinky’s on www.facebook.com Terrace ‘C’, 186 Telegraph Road, Heswall, CH60 0AJ. Tel: 0151 342 0920 www.terracec.co.uk Red Door, Grange Road, West Kirby, CH48 4DY. Tel: 0151 929 6380 www.reddoor.uk.com The Wro Bar, 2 Grange Road, West Kirby, CH48 4HA. Tel: 0151 625 2010 thewro-lounge.co.uk Wirral Farmers’ Market, New Ferry Village Hall, Grove Street, CH62 5AX. Tel: 0151 643 1393 www.wirralfarmersmarket.co.uk Tides, Unit 3, Market Street, Hoylake, CH47 2AE. Tel: 0151 632 6974 www.visitwirral.com/foodanddrink Wirral Watercress, Tel: 07779 019348 www.wirral Watercress.co.uk Vanilla Lounge, 6 Market Street, Hoylake, CH47 2AE. Tel: 0151 633 2390 www.vanillalounge.webeden.co.uk For more information on eating out visit www.visitwirral.com www.visitwirral.com This guide has been produced with the kind support of the following Wirral Tourism Business Network members. Barnacre Farm Cottages www.barnacrewirral.com Birkenhead Market www.birkenheadmarket.co.uk Bromborough Golf Club www.bromboroughgolfclub.org.uk Caldy Golf Club www.caldygolfclub.co.uk Church Farm www.churchfarm.org.uk Claremont Farm www.claremontfarm.co.uk Gorge’Us www.gorge-us.co.uk Heron’s Well www.heronswell.co.uk Heswall Golf Club www.heswallgolfclub.com Hillbark Hotel www.hillbarkhotel.co.uk Inglewood Manor Hotel www.inglewoodmanor.co.uk Leasowe Castle Hotel www.leasowecastle.com Leverhulme Hotel & Spa www.leverhulmehotel.co.uk Mere Brook House www.merebrookhouse.co.uk Ness Botanic Gardens www.nessgardens.org.uk North Villa Apartments www.northvilla.com 21 Park House www.21parkhouse.com Peninsula Dining Room www.peninsula-dining-room.co.uk Port Sunlight Village Trust www.portsunlightvillage.com Royal Hilbre Hotel & Spa www.royalhilbrehotelspa.co.uk Royal Liverpool Golf Club www.royal-liverpool-golf.com Sheldrakes Restaurant www.sheldrakesrestaurant.co.uk The Dibbinsdale Inn www.dibbinsdale-inn.co.uk The Grove House Hotel www.thegrovehouse.co.uk Riverhill Hotel www.theriverhill.co.uk The Wro Bar, Lounge and Loft www.thewro-lounge.co.uk Thornton Hall Hotel www.thorntonhallhotel.com Tranmere Rovers Football Club www.tranmererovers.co.uk Village Hotel & Leisure Club www.village-hotels.co.uk/wirral Wallasey Golf Club www.wallaseygolfclub.com West Kirby Sailing Club www.wksc.net Front cover photo: © Christopher Conway. Photos on page 12 (inset) and page 38 (main photo) © Guy Huntington 2011. Taken from ‘Reflections of Wirral’ by Guy Huntington and Kenneth Burnley. 56 Finding your way around IRISH SEA / LIVERPOOL BAY W IRRAL IS EASILY accessible by road, rail, sea and air. Manchester International Airport and Liverpool John Lennon Airport are 45 minutes by road. The M53 motorway which runs through Wirral connects to the M56 and M6. Two Mersey Tunnels link Wirral to Liverpool and Europe’s oldest ferry continues the ‘Ferry cross the Mersey’ service from Woodside and Seacombe. A local rail network connects the peninsula to the national rail network via Liverpool Lime Street Station. Wirral also boasts a comprehensive local bus network for you to explore the region. Leasowe Lighthouse Moreton Meols Manor Road Hoylake Municipal Golf Course Greasby Useful Numbers: • Tourist Information 0151 666 3188 • Traveline Merseytravel 0871 200 2233 • National Rail Services 0845 748 4950 • Liverpool John Lennon Airport 0870 750 8484 • Manchester Airport 0161 489 3000 • Stena Line 0870 600 4321 • Isle of Man Ferries 0870 552 3523 Whilst every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy in this publication, Wirral Council cannot accept responsibility for any errors, inaccuracies or omissions. The businesses and organisations listed are not an exhaustive list, and are intended to be indicative only. W irr - Wal C irr oun al try W P ay ar k Wirral Circular Trail Ferry Service Walking route only Country Park Cycling route only Residential area Motorway Park Roads Visitor Centre Rail route Suggested Viewpoint Recommended Birdwatching spot Hospital / A&E Train Station 57 Mersey Tunnel Y Wallasey Grove Wirral Transport Museum Wallasey Village Leasowe Golf Club U-boat Story Pier Head Ferry Conway Terminal Park Hamilton Woodside Square Ferry Terminal The Wilfred Owen Story Birkenhead Priory Birkenhead Central Bidston Moss Bidston Leasowe Birkenhead North Birkenhead Park Green Lane Birkenhead Park Upton Wirral Ladies Golf Club See inset map Oxton Rock Ferry Arrowe Country Park Prenton Golf Club Arrowe Park Golf Club Bebington Thingwall Storeton Barnston Pensby Brackenwood Golf Course Spital Heswall Dales Heswall Brimstage Hall & Craft Courtyard Bromborough Rake Bromborough Bromborough Golf Club Eastham Rake WIRRAL Parkgate Neston CHESHIRE WEST & CHESTER rk Wirral Country Pa Hooton - Wirral Way Eastham Lodge Golf Club © Crown copyright and database rights 2011. Ordnance Survey 100019803. Seacombe Ferry Terminal Warren Park Golf Links 2012 Wirral Year of Coast and Countryside Major events at the Royal Liverpool Golf Club, Hoylake: 2012 RICOH Women’s British Open 2013 Boys Amateur Championship 2014 The Open Championship For further details please visitwirral.com 88FEB11GB
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