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Showing posts from March, 2019

Taransay - a break from Skye

Taransay Why did the ocean floor blush? Because it saw the sea-weed. As I got bogged down into details of the further Skye stones and try get things into some sort of comprehensible readable, (or even useful) order, I thought I'd take a break from scouring for obscure references and tidbits of information on those stones, and write about some others on my list. Taransay is the largest uninhabited island in Scotland, which makes you think it'd be pretty big, but no - a whopping 5.7sq miles in area. Home to the Celts since at least 300 AD, later invaded by Vikings, and then later a farming island, it was abandoned in 1941 for a short while, by 1961 there was one family living there who moved out in 1974. An 1841 census had 120~ people living on the island - so it's always been pretty quiet! Other than a brief stint in 2000 when the UK tv channel 4 filmed "Castaway" there there has been no real human habitation to speak of since - beside the odd tour...

The Isle of Skye Part 2 - Corrections and a Castle Stone?

Isle of Skye Part 2  A village in Aberdeenshire, and what I hope to try avoid getting. I've been lulled into a false sense of security by Scottish (or Gaelic? or a mix?) of variation in spelling. Ultach is sometimes written as Ultaich, Dultum ( a place on Skye,) is sometimes Duntuilm. The source I referred to in my last post that translated Clach Mhor Mhic Criommain for me (written by a man who was born on Skye I might add), listed it at Boraraig, the home of the pipping college. Wikipedia lists the village of Boreraig as being the one that was cleared during the Highland Clearances in 1850, and was situated on the southern end of Skye. Wikipedia also lists the Gaelic spelling of this place as Boraraig. Still following? The article on a piping website that provided me with the photo of the stone, writes about the piping college being across the loch from the castle - Dunvegan Castle that is, the hereditary home of the MacLeods. I was re-reading things last ni...

The Isle of Skye Part 1

The Isle of Skye Part 1 Skye seemed a good a place as any to start - and looked like it would be an amazing place to go visit aside! Peter Martin's book was to cover five stones here, which also makes it tempting due to the amount - hopefully trying to locate five would provide more potential for success than one or two. Below is a screenshot from the contents page of his book, for the stones of the Islands:  As any stone lifter would tell you, Clach is Gaelic of stone, and whatever comes after it is the name of the stone, or sometimes the style of how it was lifted if it was a lifting stone - clach-neart are "putting" stones, stones that were "putt" or thrown over something - however this is debtable due to language uses and it's possible that clach-neart could also have been a generic term for a stone of strength. However one thing that makes finding information on these stones difficult, is that a control-f for stone or clach on any...

Introduction

Stones in a Haystack Because Emily was fed up of all my tabs   Ever since I lifted my first Scottish Lifting Stone in 2017 I've been totally hooked. I spend far too much time thinking of stones, lying in bed thinking of which I'd like to lift next, or how I could have tackled a stone better. Far too much time spent reading the stories of these stones, voraciously consuming the history of these lumps of granite (or other stone!) and adding them to my list of places to visit. Recently I came across the unfinished "Twixt the Stone and Turf" ( available to read here ), by the late Peter Martin - the authority on Scottish Stones. The first half is all that is currently available to read and is well worth a read if this is your thing or you just want to know more about why us crazies go standing around in muddy Scottish fields to pick up chunks of rock. The second half was to be about specific stones, their history and where to find them - Chapter 8 has be...