The United Kingdom 77 
1. Barmouth* The beautiful cliff known as '*Dinas- 
o-leu," overlooking the estuary at Barmouth. It is four 
and a half acres in extent. 
2. Barras Head. Fifteen acres of cliff land at 
Tintagel, looking on to the magnificent pile of rocks on 
which stand the ruins of King Arthur's Castle. 
3. Toy's Hill. Heathland on a Kentish hill-side, 
overlooking the Weald. 
4. Ide Hill near Toy's Hill. Fifteen acres of wooded 
hill-side. 
5. Wicken Fen. Strips of land, together containing 
about four acres. Wicken Fen is almost the last remnant 
of primeval fenland in East Anglia. 
6. Derwentwater. Nearly io8 acres of the western 
shore of Derwentwater are already protected. Negotia- 
tions are in progress for the acquisition of additional land 
of great charm. An option is also held of buying land at 
the south end of the lake. A waterside walk round the 
lake is also contemplated. 
7. Kymin. Nine acres on the summit of the Kymin 
Hill at Monmouth, which commands magnificent views 
of the valley of the Wye and the Monnow. 
8. Rockbeare. Twenty-one acres on the top of Rock- 
beare Hill, Devonshire, covered by trees and heather. 
9. Hindhead. Seven hundred and fifty acres of 
Common land on the summit of Hindhead, Surrey. The 
preservation of a neighbouring tract of land, including 
I *j\ acres of woodland, is also contemplated. Very recently, 
the Trust has obtained a valuable tract of heathland and 
a beautiful hillside, together occupying about 65 acres. 
10. Newtown Common. Near Newbury. 
11. Ullswater. Gowbarrow Fell and Aira Force, 
750 acres in all, bordering on the lake. 
12. Burwell Fen. Thirty acres of Fenland. 
13. The Grey Wethers. Two plots of land, together 
about twenty acres, in Piggle Dene and Lockeridge Dene, 
near Marlborough, on which are large and characteristic 
examples of the Sarsen stones known as the Grey 
Wethers. 
