Leeds is truly a city that has the best of both worlds.
For those wanting to explore the heritage of our city through museums, galleries and our impressive arcades, there's endless ways to spend the weekends wandering the streets of the city centre - and don't forget to look up at the incredible architecture above.
But if you're looking for a little more greenery, you really haven't got to travel far either. A simple bus ride from the city centre or one stop on the train can take you to one of Britain's most impressive ruins, one of Europe's biggest city parks and wooded walks leading from the suburbs right into the countryside.
So who says you can't have it all?
There's plenty to see, learn, eat and play here in Leeds - and with something for all the family to get involved in, our city truly does make the ideal long weekend break, no matter what it is you're after.
Here's three of our favourite long walks and combos that you can find just minutes from the centre of Leeds, along with everything you need to know about making your way back into the city for a cosy hotel stay.
Meanwood
Just three miles from the city centre is a little suburb with a lot to offer. Having recently hailed reviews from the likes of The Guardian for its thriving independent foodie scene, Meanwood makes the perfect day trip for a long walk and hearty meal.
Walk: Meanwood Valley Trail
Images: The Hoot Leeds
Sometimes known as the city's 'green artery', the Meanwood Valley Trail is a perfect example of the countryside feeling you can get just a few miles from the city centre. The full seven mile walk spans from Meanwood up to Golden Acre Park with a pit stop through Adel Woods but it's an easy one to pick and choose parts of the trail if you don't fancy the whole thing.
For the little ones: Meanwood Park
Image: The Hoot Leeds
For sports lovers there's table tennis tables, a bowling green, picnic benches and a full tennis court at Meanwood Park. The greenery is a hotspot for young families looking for a playground, footie enthusiasts wanting a small green area to have a kick about as well as dog walkers needing space for off-lead zoomies - there's space for everyone to roll out a picnic blanket or go for a walkabout here.
Food and drink: Pizza Loco
Image: The Hoot Leeds
Image: Pizza Loco
All this bowling, tennis racket hitting and playing around is bound to work up an appetite and Meanwood Tavern offers the ideal pitstop before heading back into the city centre. Resident kitchen Pizza Loco has a seriously exciting choice of pizzas, sarnies and kids menu to choose from,
Choose from traditional Marinara pizzas or spicy 'nduja meaty options, or taste test some of the wild unique flavours on the menu like the Pat Butcher pizza, served with Scottish wild venison and green peppercorn salami, taleggio, fior di latte, pickled blackberry drizzle, ricotta salata shavings.
For the little ones: Pizza Loco knows that kids can be fussy, so the Margherita pizzas are served with any two toppings of your choice, along with a Cawston press juice box for £6. Plus, you can add a scoop of vanilla ice cream for dessert for an extra two quid
Kirkstall
Just one stop on the train from Leeds, you'll follow the River Aire along the tracks to find one of the city's oldest architectural sites, a museum that truly acts as a time machine and plenty of pubs and beauty spots in Kirkstall.
Walk: Kirkstall Abbey
Images: The Hoot Leeds
Founded over 800 years ago, Kirkstall Abbey is certainly one of Britain's most beautiful ruins that's well worth a trip to the city for. The former monetary welcomes X visitors each year and takes you on a journey through what would have been the library, parlour, dormitories, refectory, lodgings and the infirmary all those years ago. The area itself also has spacious parklands overlooking the River Aire, ideal for an evening stroll as the sun goes down.
For the little ones: Kirkstall Abbey House
Images: The Hoot Leeds
Just over the road from Kirkstall Abbey is the chance to step back in time and explore Victorian Leeds. The idea here is that you can walk down the streets, immersed in the sights and smells of the 19th century and learn all about generations gone by through play. Pop your head into the shops or see how Victorian school children learned with chalkboards - you'll certainly leave with plenty of new fun facts about the city's past.
Food and drink: Kirkstall Bridge Inn
Images: Kirkstall Bridge Inn via Instagram
Just off Abbey Road, you'll find independent pub Kirkstall Bridge Inn. Priding themselves on having a proper community feel about the place, you can grab a pint and while away the afternoon next to the River Aire in the beer garden, pint in hand during the summer months and in the winter, warm in the tipi next to the fireplace with a roast dinner that certainly doesn't scrimp on the gravy.
Roundhay and Oakwood
You really only need to take a step into Roundhay to spot the greenery - it's hard to believe that there's 700 acres of parkland hidden within this suburb, but between the seemingly unlimited places to grab a bite to eat, you'll be heading here time and time again to try out different day trip combinations.
Walk: Roundhay Park
Images: Unsplash
Leeds is actually home to one of Europe's largest city parks - and with gardens inspired by Monet and Alhambra, an amphitheatre, a golf course, sports pitches and a small skateboard park all to its name - there's local and visitors flocking to the 700-acre parkland every single year.
For an easy summertime stroll, find yourself on the path of the lakes (there's two to choose from: one is maintained as a wildlife area whilst the larger Waterloo lake can be used for fishing) or climb through the woods and try to spot the lost summer house.
Combining seriously cool wildlife with learning is a task that Tropical World has found the best of both worlds with. Just over the road from Roundhay Park, you can hang out with meerkats and Emerald Tree Snakes, Owl Butterflies and world’s smallest monkeys for an afternoon that teaches important world knowledge, as well as hitting on key points for Key Stages 1 and 2 Geography and English.
Okay so this isn't a pub, but with seriously exciting choice of natural wine on tap, sarnies and seemingly unlimited cheese and charcuterie to choose from, we're heading to newly-opened The Cheesy Living Co. in Oakwood every single time.
There’s two floors to explore and the new store has everything you could possibly want and need from your local ‘modern kind of deli’ to take home after a long walk, or to make up the perfect posh picnic. Think huge cheese fridge, natural wines and seasonal beer on tap, small plates and walls stacked with sauces and tins to take home and use on your own dishes, as well as an eat-in menu that combines local produce with seasonal flavours - and a copious amount of cheese, of course.
Hotels
After a big day out, it's important to have somewhere cosy to rest your head - and Leeds is full of quiet spots that are often far more than a place to just recharge and relax.
The Art Hostel
Images: The Hoot Leeds
There's only one place in the city that's quite as immersive as this. The Leeds Arts Hostel was completely designed by artists, and every single room has a story to tell. From counting sheep to plastic pollution and everything in between, there's space for the whole family inside the private dorm rooms here and enough within the four walls to keep the kids occupied all evening long too.
Set just back from the main road in the heart of the city, the Leeds Marriott Hotel has pretty much everything you could ever need from a hotel room. There's executive suites, family rooms, a health club and even an onsite Gino D'Accampo restaurant that lets you order food from the newly opened restaurant right up to your room.
The Queens
Image: Wikipedia
An iconic Leeds hotel with bags of history to explore within the four walls. Whether you're looking for dog-friendly accommodation (yes, you can bring your pup here) or a luxury hotel with fine dining options complete with a string quartet, The Queens has been known and loved across the city and beyond for years for good reason.
Looking for the best bagels in Leeds? Look no further.
In honour of National Bagel Day, we've chosen five of our favourite cafes, shops and bodegas to get our hands on a delicious bagel.
Thought of as an iconic New York food, the big apple has done wonders for the reputation of this chewy, boiled breakfast snack - and it's even come over to Leeds, where there are plenty of bakers turning their hand to the humble bagel.
Whether you like yours slathered in cream cheese and loaded with smoked salmon, or kept simple with a lick of butter, keep reading to discover some of our top picks for the best bagels in Leeds.
Slow Rise Bakery
2a Sunnybank Ave, Horsforth, LS18 4LZ
Images: The Hoot Leeds
In the bagel game since 2014, where they learnt their trade assisting Berlin's formidable Fine Bagels, Slow Rise knows what they're doing when it comes to boiling bagels. Whilst they already supply wholesale to quite a few different places in Leeds, you can also find their famous bagels at their own cafe in Horsforth.
Served freshly toasted and stuffed with your choice of hummus, turkey, salt beef, pastrami; or salmon, or simply slathered in the likes of butter, cream cheese, or avocado, there are over twenty different ways to enjoy a bagel here. These are some of the best bagels in Leeds, no doubt about it.
Streetlane Bakery
Caretakers House, 399 Street Ln, Moortown, LS17 6HQ
Images: The Hoot Leeds
This community bakehouse seemingly does it all, bagels included. These can be bought individually or in packs of six and are made fresh daily to a classic Jewish recipe, with flavours including plain, onion and poppy seed. Filling choices are quite limited if you're eating in, with options including Nutella and smoked salmon.
Fika North
94 Otley Rd, Headingley, LS6 4BA
Images: The Hoot Leeds
Situated in the leafy suburb of Far Headingley, this speciality coffee shop also knows a thing or two about bagels. Served from 9 am - 3 pm daily, there are nine different options to choose from including nduja and avocado, rose harissa chickpeas with pink pickles and pea shoots, peanut butter and banana.
Alfonso's Deli
Grand Arcade, LS1 6PG
Images: The Hoot Leeds
If you've got a hankering for a proper New York-style breakfast bagel, then the Grand Arcade is where you should be heading.
Relatively new to Leeds, Alfonso's breakfast bagels are the perfect hangover cure - loaded with hash browns, perfectly cooked eggs and dripping in melted cheese.
The Cheesy Living Co.
Oakwood and Pudsey
Images: The Hoot Leeds
You already know by now that everything that Jake and team at Cheesy Living Co. does is absolutley stellar, and their bagels are no exception.
Baked and boiled at their own bakery in town, they're then filled with whatever your heart desires and served with a coffee of your choice for just a tenner.
Suburb guide: Ten things to do in Headingley at the weekend
Clementine Hall
From completing the infamous Otley Run to sipping on a glass of natural wine, there's so much to do in the vibrant neighbourhood of Headingley.
Sandwiched between the two largest universities in Leeds, Headingley is known nationally as the playground of the young professionals, and internationally as the place in the North to watch the cricket.
Just minutes away on the bus from Leeds City Centre, Headingley is a great place to visit on the weekend with plenty of brilliant independents to support from coffee shops to restaurants.
So, here's ten things to do in Headingley over the weekend...
Watch a game at Headingley Stadium
St Michael's Lane, Headingley
Home of Yorkshire Country Cricket Club and Leeds Rhinos, Headingley stadium is the main reason that this little suburb is known worldwide. In the winter, Leeds Rhinos season will keep you entertained, whilst the summer usually sees international test matches on the pitch.
This is the ultimate crowd-pleasing event for anyone interested in sports, and for those that aren’t- there’s plenty of food, drink and activity options within walking distance instead.
Drink a glass of wine at Bottle Chop
14 Weetwood Lane
Images: The Hoot Leeds
Maybe our favourite wine bar in the whole of Leeds, Bottle Chop is a pastel pink paradise serving up a huge selection of natural wine, craft beer and irresistible deli bits.
Stop by for a couple glasses and dive into a charcuterie board alongside it, it's the perfect afternoon activity if you ask us.
If you're looking for some authentic Japanese cuisine in an elegant yet casual setting, then get yourself to TADA.
It's a fantastic independent restaurant serving up fresh sushi and the most comforting bowls of ramen ever. The staff are always lovely and happy to guide you with what to order on their extensive menu.
Watch a film at Hyde Park Picture House
Brudenell Road
Images: The Hoot Leeds
Now this is a proper bit of Leeds history. The Hyde Park Picture House is a Grade II listed building that dates all the way back to 1914 and is known for being the last gas-lit cinema in the whole of the UK.
They are community focused and are determined on providing an inclusive space for everyone to learn and discover. Showing a selection of bigger as well as indie films, it's a great spot for cinema lovers to stop by and immerse themselves into a flick.
Shop vinyls at Vinyl Whistle
12 Otley Road
Image: The Hoot Leeds
If you're into vinyls, then Vinyl Whistle is the spot for you. Not only do they stock plenty of records for you to browse, but they also host open decks and gigs for you to get involved with.
Oh and they serve great beer and banging coffee too, what more could you want?
Tuck into traditional Mexican food at Lupe's Cantina
204 Cardigan Road
Images: The Hoot Leeds
Lupe's Cantina is one of those 'if you know, you know' sort of spots and now thanks to us, you do know.
It's a family-run restaurant that's been feeding the people of Leeds for a decade, using traditional recipes passed down from head chef Rudy's family. Here you'll not only find your classic tacos, margaritas and guacamole but it's the standout dishes like the mussels in a creamy chipotle white wine sauce that'll have you going back time and time again.
If you haven't heard of Get Baked, then you've most likely been living under a rock. Famed nationwide for their mammoth Bertha cake, their original shop is right here in Headingley and you'd be silly not to take advantage of this indeed.
If you can't stomach a whole slice of Bertha, then they've got slices of pie, stacks of cookies and so much more for you to satisfy your sweet tooth.
Get your caffeine fix at one of the many coffee shops
Images: The Hoot Leeds
Okay we might be cheating with this one, but there's so many great coffee shops in Headingley that we couldn't just choose one.
From the experimental brews at Caffeine Addict to a cosy catchup at Loaf followed by a bagel and brew at Fika North, you're really spoilt for choice if you're looking for that morning pick me up. Trust us, just take a stroll through town and you'll find a cracking coffee in no time.
Enjoy a Sunday roast at The Swine Bistro
77A Otley Road
Images: The Hoot Leeds
As the weather takes a turn for the worst a roast dinner is the only right way to spend a Sunday, and you'll find a fantastic one at The Swine Bistro.
This beautiful restaurant is loved by Leeds locals and it's not hard to see why, run by chef couple Jo and Stu Myers who are basically legends at this point for providing the city with fantastic seasonal food at an affordable price point. And I mean...look at that Yorkshire pud.
Complete the Otley Run
Image: The Hoot Leeds
Yep, it wouldn't be a Headingley guide without the Otley Run now would it.
It is a true rite of passage to any students who find themselves in Leeds during their studies and a firm favourite for societies and clubs from the various student unions across the city.
Starting at Woodies, the route takes you through fourteen boozers from Far Headingley, into Headingley itself, then towards Hyde Park before heading right into the centre of town – if you get that far.
Officially the route hosts the first eight pubs in Far Headingley and Headingley: Woodies, The Three Horseshoes, New Inn, Headingley Taps, Manahatta, The Box, Skyrack, The Original Oak before runners move onto Hyde Park pubs like The Hyde Park pub, The Library, Pack Horse, The Eldon and The Fenton before arriving at the final pub: The Dry Dock in the city.