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I got back to camp this last week and there wasn't much damage, just a couple of guys off and a single peg pulled out. Next morning, however, there was a T-shaped cut in the store tent - I must have slept through the bang-bang charade after lugging a 90lb pack seven miles, and up a height, in the heat. A deep but not dreamless sleep. The keepers have been replacing gateposts and the Mad Max vehicle was trailered out on Friday morning.

I cut away the turf covering three stones of the Longpot Head stone circle and found a fourth but, by then, the cloud of midges was just too much. I'll look for more stones here - they've been buried by peat accumulation to one side of the wall that runs through the middle of the circle, and the peat has eroded - presumably by overburning the heather - on the other, exposing the stones completely. I'm hoping that the newly exposed stones will show on GoogleEarth et al. in a year or so. Their images have just been updated and I'm pretty sure I'm on there - setting off to the well with a yellow bucket, in late April 2005. David's Cairns show up well too.

Nature News: I was surprised to hear the call of a Black grouse, early one morning. I thought they'd been missing for about a decade. The unusual thing was that it was replying to the distant drone of a helicopter (probably the Redesdale Camp air taxi). I caught sight of it later that evening - from a distance. I've since found that thirty were captively reared and released to the south of here. That would explain its 'brand new' appearance. The Red grouse are starting to call again, after raising young, and the shooters are itching to start blasting them away.

No word from Tynedale Planning yet - I'll write an account for PE this week, if the forecast rain appears. The Microsoft aerial images, via FlashEarth, have also been updated and show the new road, so must be from early May this year ...

(Manager blames 'poor material').

A quiet week - small slit in flysheet hem when I got back, easily patched, blue murder if a gust of wind had caught it. Keepers strimming the grass beside the butts, all over the valley. The sound of a distant two-stroke through the days. I say that if you want to see how Stonehenge was built then watch a drystone waller. But there's very few of them left now. I've been building a passing hole in my wall - but how much should I, rhetorically, charge for it? The same as for the rest of the wall!

Little megalithic activity. In the rain the R4 news had a report on the local Rock Art database. I spent many hours last summer making a map of the ten most accessible carved stones in the valley - then more hours communicating with the then project coordinator. There's perhaps thirty known carved stones here and the nitwit surveyor(s) found just one of them, which they classed as 'natural cupmarks'. Most of these stones are very eroded and pretty dull, it's true - there's nothing spectacular been found yet. One of the cupmarked rocks - Tot's Wogglestone - is, unusually, limestone and little eroded. That single rock, alone, makes this valley worth visiting.

A volunteer with a GPS box would be welcome to record its position accurately. Fortunately it's on land owned by a sympathetic farmer and is under Right To Roam agreement. Broadly it's at NY 6608 5032. Still no word from Tynedale Planning. What a bunch of coconuts! I've written to the Asst. County Arch. asking whether he'll view the Longpot Head stone circle - but I'm not holding my breath !!!