Arthur’s Seat forum 1 room
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The slidey stone does'nt look very 'megalithic' Branwen, too many sharp corners by the look of it.
There are two stones I can think of on this site, one is the 'London Stone' that is of disputed antiquity that looks like its got a prehistory, though it slap bang in the middle of London; the other is the Wishing Chair at Whitby which stands near my daughter's shop and I think is a stone used for getting on your horse and not a wishing chair.
Single funny shaped stones are fascinating, thinking of the Glastonbury stone now in the abbey which is a rounded saddle type fertility stone, you have to sit on it to get pregnant which is the latest folklore!....

http://www.themodernantiquarian.com/site/635/london_stone.html

I thought the jagged edges might have been from moving the stone, as a lot of them have been broken and moved over a long period of time. Or maybe be some aspect of volcanic rock. I did say I was no expert on the stones themselves... LOL.

The folklore about the witchstone at Ratho says something similar about fertility (the one with the cupmarks that was destroyed) Who was the first person that said "if you slide down that you will get pregnant" I wonder? And was it smooth when they started, or did it just get that way over time and was rough to begin with? Ouch. Wouldn't have wanted to be the first one to try it, anyhow...

The large "witch" stone boulder overlooking Dunsapie hasn't brought up any folklore online so far either, probably a trip to the national archive and the resources on their computers for me. Or else its a modern name.

Someone has emailed me a sketch they had saved from Canmore/RCHAMS of the Edinburgh stone now, it is similar to the Ratho stone but more like a cromlech that has collapsed. I guess the picture is in copyright maybe. The whole thing was blown up in victorian times it seems.

"A similar practice (to the one at the witch stone in Ratho) took place a few miles away in the kings Park, Edinburgh, which was the site of a large recumbent stone along which barren women slid in the hope that it would help them to conceive a child."

Few other interesting witch stones on the TMA site to keep me happy till I can get to the national archives and their resources, anyway.