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Dolmen de Planas (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Images (click to view fullsize)

<b>Dolmen de Planas</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de Planas</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de Planas</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de Planas</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de Planas</b>Posted by Moth

Menhir de Serre de la Gleisa (Standing Stone / Menhir) — Fieldnotes

Access: Not sure, I only looked at it from the road as I had an ambitious itinerary. (Too ambitious as it turned out, in more ways than one.) Looks a little bit of an uphill tromp to me, for 'just' a menhir.

Visited Saturday 8 September 2007
Looks like a nice big (for the area, at least) menhir, but unfortunately I couldn't afford the time for a closer look. So I whipped out the big lens - which means it's a longer walk from the road than it might look in the photos....

Menhir de Serre de la Gleisa (Standing Stone / Menhir) — Images

<b>Menhir de Serre de la Gleisa</b>Posted by Moth<b>Menhir de Serre de la Gleisa</b>Posted by Moth

Cromlech de Lacam de Rogues 1 (Cromlech (France and Brittany)) — Fieldnotes

Access: Nightmare to find anything on this plain which seems to be covered with sites at various sites of wreckedness. Just across the dirt road from Ciste de Lacam. Luckily this one is fairly near the main track - still difficult to spot!

Visited Saturday 8 September 2007
I knew this was ruined, but all I found was just a few likely looking stones in a vague line. They were the most likely candidates I saw, but absolutely no guarantees that these are the remains of the monument!

Cromlech de Lacam de Rogues 1 (Cromlech (France and Brittany)) — Images

<b>Cromlech de Lacam de Rogues 1</b>Posted by Moth

Ciste de Lacam (Cairn(s)) — Fieldnotes

Approximate coordinates only

Access: Nightmare to find anything on this plain which seems to be covered with sites at various sites of wreckedness. Dirt road, so you'll probably need to not care too much about your car, especially if you want to leave the 'main' track!

Luckily this one is very near said main track - still difficult to spot! It's also surprisingly easy to lose your sense of direction & mine's usually pretty good.

Visited Saturday 8 September 2007
Not exactly spectacular, but traces of a little cairn with a very nice cist left in the middle. This was to be one of the few things I'd find out here in the barren wilderness!

Ciste de Lacam (Cairn(s)) — Images

<b>Ciste de Lacam</b>Posted by Moth<b>Ciste de Lacam</b>Posted by Moth<b>Ciste de Lacam</b>Posted by Moth

Menhir de la Trivalle (Standing Stone / Menhir) — Images

<b>Menhir de la Trivalle</b>Posted by Moth<b>Menhir de la Trivalle</b>Posted by Moth<b>Menhir de la Trivalle</b>Posted by Moth<b>Menhir de la Trivalle</b>Posted by Moth

Grotte des Fées (Rock Cut Tomb) — Images

<b>Grotte des Fées</b>Posted by Moth

Dolmen de Coutignargues (Allee-Couverte) — Images

<b>Dolmen de Coutignargues</b>Posted by Moth

Grotte de Bounias (Rock Cut Tomb) — Images

<b>Grotte de Bounias</b>Posted by Moth<b>Grotte de Bounias</b>Posted by Moth

Hypogee de Arnaud Castelets (Rock Cut Tomb) — Images

<b>Hypogee de Arnaud Castelets</b>Posted by Moth<b>Hypogee de Arnaud Castelets</b>Posted by Moth<b>Hypogee de Arnaud Castelets</b>Posted by Moth<b>Hypogee de Arnaud Castelets</b>Posted by Moth<b>Hypogee de Arnaud Castelets</b>Posted by Moth

Dolmen de l'Olivier (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Images

<b>Dolmen de l'Olivier</b>Posted by Moth

Dolmen de l'Olivier (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Fieldnotes

Approximate coordinates only

Access: Not easy, unless you're at least reasonably fit. Close-ish to Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 4 & 6 a good few hundred metres along the same path. (You will also pass various less definite but suspicious bits of possible wrecked sites.)

Visited Monday 3 September 2007
I've taken the name of this monument from http://www.t4t35.fr

In Dolmens et Menhirs en Languedoc et Roussillon Bruno Marc refers to 'le grand dolmen de l'Olivier', which from http://www.t4t35.fr seems to be a little further along the same path, but I must have stopped just short of it before giving up for the day & turning back. (Gah!)

Bare remains of the chamber uprights & cairn only here, possibly with a fallen capstone at the front of the chamber according to some sources. As far as I can tell, Le Grand Dolmen de l'Olivier which I didn't find seems to be similar, but larger and with more of its cairn. It also has an additional small (later?) cist in what remains of its chamber.

Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 4 (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Images

<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 4</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 4</b>Posted by Moth

Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 4 (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Fieldnotes

Approximate coordinates only. Also, there seems to be confusion in my sources on the numbering of the Claie-de-Driolle tombs. This seems to be 4 in Bruno Marc's books, but I've seen it referred to as 5 elsewhere. (Incidentally, there seem to be gaps in the numbering sequence everywhere I've looked!)

Access: Not easy, unless you're at least reasonably fit. Very close to Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 3 along the same path.

Visited Monday 3 September 2007
Right next to Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 6 (depending whose numbering you use!) The 2 sites together are gorgeous, though of the 2 this is slightly the 'poor relation'!

Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 6 (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Images

<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 6</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 6</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 6</b>Posted by Moth

Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 6 (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Fieldnotes

Approximate coordinates only. Also, there seems to be confusion in my sources on the numbering of the Claie-de-Driolle tombs. This seems to be 6 in Bruno Marc's books, but I've seen it referred to as 4 elsewhere. (Incidentally, there seem to be gaps in the numbering sequence everywhere I've looked!)

Access: Not easy, unless you're at least reasonably fit. Very close to Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 3 along the same path.

Visited Monday 3 September 2007
Right next to Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 4 (depending whose numbering you use!) The 2 sites together are gorgeous. Similar to the other main monuments on this walk, but then again they're (mostly) little beauties!

Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 3 (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Images

<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 3</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 3</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 3</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 3</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 3</b>Posted by Moth

Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 3 (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Fieldnotes

Approximate coordinates only

Access: Not easy, unless you're at least reasonably fit. Very close to Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 2 along the same path.

Visited Monday 3 September 2007
My favourite of the monuments we saw on this walk. Another beautiful dolmen in its cairn but with noteably more open views.

Le grand dolmen de la Bergerie-de-Panissiere (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Fieldnotes

Approximate coordinates only

Access: Not easy, unless you're at least reasonably fit. Maybe 1km or slightly more from the nearest parking place which is impossible to describe but to the SW! The path starts off quite steep as a wide-ish gravel track, which becomes a track through the woods. It continues to have steep bits & also slightly rocky bits. May also be muddy in wet weather.

Visited Monday 3 September 2007
Beautiful! Seemingly fairly complete but restored in its rocky cairn. Well worth the walk (which I enjoyed - but I like walking!)

Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 2 (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Fieldnotes

Approximate coordinates only

Access: Not easy, unless you're at least reasonably fit. Maybe 500m from Dolmen de la Bergerie-de-Panissière along the same path, which has steep bits & slightly rocky bits. May also be muddy in wet weather.

Visited Monday 3 September 2007
I liked this a lot. The pictures say it all really. Beautiful dolmen in its (perhaps somewhat denuded) cairn.

Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 2 (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Images

<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 2</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 2</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 2</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 2</b>Posted by Moth<b>Dolmen de la Claie-de-Driolle 2</b>Posted by Moth

Le grand dolmen de la Bergerie-de-Panissiere (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Images

<b>Le grand dolmen de la Bergerie-de-Panissiere</b>Posted by Moth
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www.heritageaction.org - ordinary people caring for extraordinary places

MORE THAN YOU COULD EVER WANT TO KNOW ABOUT MOTH

How?
Though I'd been interested in both for a long while, I finally got into stones & Cope relatively late in life and at around the same time (mid 90s). I guess my girlfriend at the time has to take the blame. She bought me 'Peggy Suicide' and she used to get those nice megalithic postcards from Mr Julian.

Why?
At first, looking at stones seemed just like a good excuse for stomping around in beautiful countryside. Little did I know how much more it would become. And that they're not always in beautiful countryside....

Where?
At the time I was living in Tufnell Park in London so started off with a lot of southern stones 'n' bumps, particularly on holidays to Devon, the Lands End peninsula and the west country in general. Since then, holidays became increasingly megalithacentric, and are now mainly wildlifecentric (tho often with some stones thrown in)!

A couple of years later I moved back to Leeds where I lived for much of my adult life (I'm originally from Kent) prompting numerous visits to stones 'n' bumps in places like Derbyshire, Cumbria, N Wales and of course Yorkshire. I now live near Oxford (see 'Life?').

I've seen stones all over the UK & further afield, including (but not limited to) bits of France, the Netherlands, Denmark, Menorca, Sardinia & even Jordan.

Strangely enough however, my most visited and probably favourite 'stony areas' are Aberdeenshire and Perthshire, though I've been to quite a few all over Scotland. This is again thanks to a (different) ex-girlfriend who comes from Montrose and is the mother of my glorious son Callan, who at the time of updating is now 21....

As you may have guessed, Callan is named after Callanish - at the time of his birth this was a long intended but unmade pilgrimage for me. Happily I've now been twice & hope to go again for the next 're-gleam'.

Life?
Currently living just to the north-west of Oxford with the gorgeous Jane (we got married in October 2004). Seafer (Jane's dangerous 'n' stripey cat) is no more and for the last 8 years we've been in the custody of Officer Dibble and Skipper (also cats). Jane's also responsible for increasing my love of travel & the expansion of my love of wildlife!

I'm an editor really, but now have a nice easy admin job 4-days a week working for a tiny IT training company who do expensive niche training for IT professionals.

Fun?
In a varying order

Travel
Wildlife & bird photography and watching
Stones, walking, and the countryside, obviously
Various music, especially heavy rock and funk
Real ale & real ale pubs (though as Jane can't drink for medical reasons we don't often go to pubs)
Single malts
Bourbon (of the whisky persuasion - not the biccies)
Red wine
Cheese
Roast tatties and chips (not usually together)
Chocolate
A lot of other food that never had a face
F1
Talking bollocks
Sarcasm
Laughing
Having a good moan, especially about the Tories

Vital statistics?
Height 5'8"
Chest N/K (medium t-shirt size)
Waist 32-34" depending how fat I happen to be at the time
Inside leg 32"
Aged 60 but we don't talk about that
Hair Long mostly grey (used to be brown)

love

Moth
updated 2 September 2022

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