Great Orme Country Park
Great Orme Signatures

Great Orme Country Park

Limestone headland, wildlife, walking routes and a visitor centre. It is the kind of place you can do gently — or go all in with longer coastal paths and stunning views.

From The Rosedene Walk / 5-8 min
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Limestone headland, wildlife, walking routes and a visitor centre. It is the kind of place you can do gently — or go all in with longer coastal paths and stunning views.


The Great Orme is the headland that defines Llandudno -- a vast limestone promontory rising 207 metres (679 feet) above the sea, two miles long and a mile wide, with the town tucked in its shelter on the eastern side. It is ancient, dramatic, and remarkably wild given how close it sits to a Victorian seaside resort.

The geology alone is extraordinary. The limestone was formed around 350 million years ago from dead sea organisms, and the rock beneath the Orme has been shaped by ice ages, copper mining going back 4,000 years, and the slow work of wind and weather on the cliffs. Much of the headland is designated a Special Area of Conservation, a Site of Special Scientific Interest, and a Heritage Coast -- three of the most significant environmental designations in the UK, all on the same headland.

The wildlife is the thing most visitors remember. The Orme is home to a herd of Kashmiri goats -- around 150 of them -- descended from a breeding pair originally gifted to Queen Victoria. They have roamed wild on the headland for well over a century and are a genuinely spectacular sight, particularly on the higher cliff edges. The Orme also supports over 100 species of resident and migrant birds including peregrine falcons, ravens, little owls, guillemots, kittiwakes and razorbills on the sea cliffs. Several species of rare butterfly are found here too, including the silver-studded blue, which exists nowhere else in Wales.

At the summit there is a visitor centre, cafe, bar, gift shop, children's play area and mini golf, open Easter to October. The four-mile Marine Drive toll road circles the headland at sea level and is one of the finest coastal drives in North Wales. You can reach the top by tramway, cable car, on foot, or by car -- each approach has something to recommend it.

Why Go
  • Highly rated by our guests
  • Easy to reach from The Rosedene
  • Suitable for all guests
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Make a Day of It

Nearby attractions

Great Orme Tramway
Walk / 3-25 min

Great Orme Tramway

A beautifully nostalgic ride in restored tramcars as you climb from Victoria Station up the Orme, passing through winding roads towards open sky views — pure Llandudno heritage in motion.

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Llandudno Cable Car
Walk / 8-12 min

Llandudno Cable Car

Glide from Happy Valley to the summit for wide, airy panoramas across the bay, estuary and Irish Sea — a memorable, camera-friendly experience that feels special without being strenuous.

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Great Orme Copper Mines
Walk / 15-25 min

Great Orme Copper Mines

A truly distinctive attraction: ancient tunnels and evidence of prehistoric mining that make the Orme feel deeper than just a viewpoint. History you can walk into — literally.

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Llandudno Snowsports Centre
Walk / 12-18 min

Llandudno Snowsports Centre

Dry-slope skiing and snowboarding in an unexpectedly dramatic setting. A fun do-something-different option for families and energetic couples when you want activity without a long drive.

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The Rosedene, Llandudno

Great Orme Country Park is Walk / 5-8 min from our front door.

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