sneaky snipping

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Hey wolfy, I've meant to ask you this before, (and it may seem like a bit of an obvious or even daft question!) but how much chopping away of vegetation/moss/ivy and stuff do you have to do to find all that rockart? I mean, if it's covered with vegetation, how do you know it's there? Do you put it back after you've recorded it to protect it?

I was at the http://www.themodernantiquarian.com/site/4554/churchill_three_stones.html with Spaceship Mark, Mrs Spaceship and Moth on Sunday and I pulled some of ivy off 'em just so they could get a bit of exposure - they looked like just a clump of overgrown stuff. It would be a shame for them to get forgotten.
J
x

Strange question Jane, i thought you knew me by now..i am sure you have asked me this before?..

i would only remove turf only after asking permission from the farmer, most cases its farms and farmers i deal with, due to the location of the carvings. The turf is removed, the panel recorded, photographs taken, turf replaced. The turf usually grows back very quickly. I have had one location where the owner himself with the aid of a chainsaw etc helped me clear the area around the carvings. The area still has tree cover, but the panel itself is exposed, for one reason, the owner wanted to leave it that way so that he could wander out of his house of an evening and admire the carvings.

i would like to think that no one would remove turf, weeds or whatever without asking first, then replacing the turf etc.

hope that answers your question Jane?

maybe you could email me.

Brian

Jane wrote:
I was at the http://www.themodernantiquarian.com/site/4554/churchill_three_stones.html with Spaceship Mark, Mrs Spaceship and Moth on Sunday and I pulled some of ivy off 'em just so they could get a bit of exposure - they looked like just a clump of overgrown stuff.
I wish I'd got you and Moth there the other week. They're so overgrown I wasn't sure I'd got the right ones. There seemed to be a few more above soil level, but totally obscured by the vegetation. They're much bushier in the summer than on the winter photos. (surprise, surprise...)

I confess to some pulling back of tendrils too, though in deference to potentially disgruntled landowners, I tried to replace them afterwards. Honest Guv.