It is only about 5 kilometers from our hotel to Hill Top, but because it is basically a narrow mountain road, it often needs to be very careful to meet the opposite vehicle, and sometimes it is necessary to park on the side and let the other side pass first, so the speed is not fast. When we arrived, the dedicated parking lot of the former residence was full, and then drove a short distance forward, there was a platform up the mountain, there were already two cars parked, so we also parked there. Ms. Potter has been living in the scenic lake area, and later she bought the entire Peak Farm with royalties, so this is both the birthplace of Peter Rabbit and the former residence of the author Ms. Potter, who spent most of her life creating fairy tales here. Very quiet and beautiful town! Go to the ticket office to buy tickets first, there is already a queue. To be honest, there aren't many people in line, but the two grandmothers at the ticket office are too slow to move, and because the former residence and ticket office are not in the same place, they give each visitor a map and explain how to get there. I admired the patience of my grandmother, but we were in a line of a dozen people, and we were in a row for nearly an hour, and Hill Top was a 17th-century farmhouse, and the furniture and pottery inside are now the same. Many of the illustrations in the book are based on the hut and its garden, and now each scene that has appeared in the book has a book for visitors to see against the scenes in reality. The garden was full of flowers, still very beautiful, as if turning around to see Peter Rabbit drilled out of the grass.