
The massive conglomerate boulder which fronts the Northside of the cairn. With a signed copy of “Deadlight” by Archie Roy for purposes of scale.
The massive conglomerate boulder which fronts the Northside of the cairn. With a signed copy of “Deadlight” by Archie Roy for purposes of scale.
Partial chamber centre left.
The ripped-oot cairn sits high above the the Sannox-Lochranza Road.
The fine view from the Giant’s Graves today.
NMA’s “Green and Grey” sleeve.
A white horse in a field and a white horse on a hill. It was quite a trippy sight. Photo June 1992.
From “Corte Beschryvinghe van Engheland, Schotland, ende Irland”.
Early depiction of Stonehenge.
Stone of (just) portable size found at side of small stream on West side of Kerrera (20 Oct 2016). Approx 1 Mile North West of Gylen Castle.
A sky-wide rainbow spans the blue above Diarmaid’s Pillar.
This veined stone is snug on the top of the Gualachulain cairn.
The lovely cairn at Gualachulain. Autumn sunset sweeps its last rays round the far side of the loch.
Looking down the sweet dusky calm of an autumnal Loch Etive from the top of the cairn.
Rather lovely location for a rather lovely cairn. All the stones are white.
The very upstanding cairn Mynydd Carnguwch from Tre’r Ceiri.
Mynydd Carnguwch from the grafitti enhanced crag on Tre’r Ceiri.
This wee entrance looked out towards Caernafon. Very dinky. So much stone though.. every view had so much stone... massively quarried mountains with sculpted profiles, scree covered rocky mountain sides and the massive stone walls of Tre’r Ceiri. Heavy man. Very heavy.
More stone than just about anywhere else I’ve ever been to.
The Cochno Stone 17 September 2016. More of Ludovic Mann’s paintwork still visible.
The Cochno Stone 17 September 2016.
The Cochno Stone 17 September 2016.
The Cochno Stone 17 September 2016. The Ludovic Mann paintwork (yellow stripes and black background) is still visible at the bottom of the pic.
The Cochno Stone 17 September 2016.
The Cochno Stone 17 September 2016.
Quite lovely. The paint is still wet on the Bus Stop walls. That’s what the note says.
Monolith in cleared forestry 100 yards South of Allt Nan Tighean.
Creagdhu peers across the Firth of Clyde towards Girvan.
The turf consolidates the pits, boulders and slabs in the long wake of the 1929-30 excavation.
I suppose this is one of the seven cists excavated in 1929-30. No kinda consolidation afterwards by the looks of things.
The Cairn sits atop a gravelly, sandy, grassy knoll above the right bank of the River Tweed. On the left side of the picket fence, river erosion has removed the rest of the cairn.
The sleeve for those one-time Nyah Fearties, AKA Dub Skelper AKA Mr Luggs and now the fully fledged Junkman’s Choir draws heavy influence from the local landscape at Ballochmyle Gorge. Original photography by Kenny Longmuir and Davy Wiseman.
In a bay near Gatehouse of Fleet.
In a bay near Gatehouse of Fleet.
From Parc Glasfryn (Summer).
From Parc Glasfryn (Spring).