468 A TOUR ROUND NORTH WALES. 



" y Cader is nine hundred and fifty yards 

 " higher than the green near Dolgelle ; 

 " Aranvowddwy, feven hundred and forty 

 " above Llyn Tegid ; and the Arrenig 

 " only twenty yards fhort of the Aran ; 

 " that the fall from the lake to Dolgelle 

 " green, is one hundred and eighty yards j 

 " fo that the real difference of height be- 

 " tween Cader and the Aran, is only 

 " thirty yards." 



In order to vary my walk as much as 

 poffible, I took a different way down, by 

 going more eaftward, and descending along 

 that part of the mountain, called Mynydd 

 Moel. The path in this direction was 

 fufficiently floping all the way, to permit a 

 perfon to ride quite up to the fummit. A 

 gentleman mounted on a little Welm po- 

 ney, had done it but a few days before I 

 was there. 



About half a mile from E. Jones's cot- 

 tage, at the bottom of a hill, on the right 



of 



