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Book Stranraer hotel rooms securely online through our hotel accommodation guides. Some of the Stranraer hotels and guesthouses have been awarded ratings, therefore you can be assured of the quality of Stranraer accommodation has to offer, you will also be treated to the warmest of welcomes, and true Stranraer hospitality - a standard in all our Stranraer hotels accommodation
establishments. Enjoy all this, and real value for money awaits you in Stranraer.
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Mick and Gayle Holmes guarantee you a warm welcome on your arrival at Cross Haven. It is a beautiful Victorian villa recently refurbished by us to a high standard. Formally a convent, it retains many original and unusual features. We have double and twin en-suite rooms on both the ground and first floors and the house is surrounded by a private and peaceful garden. The house is perfectly situated for access to Stranraer and the surrounding area, including local ferry services to Ireland. A good range of restaurants and pubs are within easy walking distance, as are all the local amenities of the town. We are also situated directly opposite the Ryan Leisure Centre and swimming pool.
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Room Rates
Single - £35.00 per Room Double - £50.00 per Room Twin - £50.00 per Room |
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Cross Haven Guest House
Lewis Street
Stranraer Dumfries and Galloway DG9 7AL
Tel: 01776 700598 |
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 Stranraer is a town in the south of Scotland in the west of the region of Dumfries and Galloway and was formerly in the county of Wigtownshire.
It lies on the shores of Loch Ryan on the northern side of the isthmus joining the Rhins of Galloway to the mainland. The name comes from the Scottish Gaelic "An t-Sròn Reamhar" meaning literally "The Fat Nose", but which more poetically might be rendered as "the broad headland".
It is one of the administrative centres of the region, but best known as a ferry port connecting Scotland with Belfast and Larne in Northern Ireland. In 2003 Stena Line announced plans to transfer its operations to a new port at Old House Point, north of Cairnryan. Later Stena and P&O announced an agreement to share Cairnryan port. The move north is part of an effort to shorten the journey time of the Stena HSS service (High-speed Sea Service) and increase sailings from four to five per day. The HSS, a high-speed catamaran, is obliged to slow considerably when in Loch Ryan and Belfast Lough due to the large wake which it produces at higher speeds. The sailing time from Cairnryan to Stranraer is approximately ten minutes, thus twenty minutes could be saved per sailing. |
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