Located on the Isle of Anglesey in Beaumaris, this seven-hundred-year-old castle is incredibly preserved for its age, especially given the fact that it was never really completed. By the year 1330, a total of £15,000 had been spent on making it, a huge sum for the period, but the castle was still incomplete and left the way it was.
Chepstow Castle
This castle is the oldest surviving post-Roman stone fortification in Britain, built during the reign of William I the Conqueror (1066-1087). Chepstow Castle is open to the public, and since 1984 has been in the care of CADW, the government body for protecting and conserving the heritage of Wales. There are special events often held in the castle and visitors are able to walk along the battlements and into the towers.
Conwy Lake
This is the source of the River Conwy, which flows north into Conwy Bay. It is an amazingly peaceful area with no near towns. The lands around the lake are farmlands open to the general public by power of the right of public access to the wilderness.