
Looking north, here comes the rain!
Looking north, here comes the rain!
Looking south towards Cairnoullie.
Looking towards the Mill Of Brux Cairn.
From the top of the hill.
This stone can be seen from the cairn at the Mill Of Brux. Therefore follow the road in a south easterly direction until Easter Sinnahard farm. I walked to the top of hill to the west of the farm, to avoid scaring cattle, then turned north. Walk the length of the field with stone being in the middle of the next one. It stands all by itself but is spied on by at least four quite close cairns.
Once again, thanks to Rhiannon and her fantastic folklore!
Visited 19/10/09.
The RCHAMS database says “A large block of whinstone 2.59m in circumference; believed locally to mark the spot of a battle. There is one single cup mark in the centre on the W side.” but then goes on to discount the cup mark as a natural feature of ‘nil antiquity’. There is a photo of the stone here:
rcahms.gov.uk/pls/portal/newcanmore.newcandig_p_coll_details?p_arcnumlink=681538
I imagine this folklore also refers to the stone: “At Sinnahard, Towie, there is a standing-stone near which a pot of gold is said to be buried. On one of my visits a good many years ago, the farmer announced that he had no faith in the tale: the only gold he hoped to gain from the place was that of the golden grain then ripening for the harvest.” (from Ritchie, J., Folklore of Aberdeenshire Stone Circles, in Proc. Soc. Ant. of Scotland, LX, 1926, pp304-313. )