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Sorry just could'nt resist this one....

Is father Christmas* coming to Stonehenge - maybe not, but this article in the Telegraph did just go slightly over the top; look at that glorious photo of Stonehenge in its 'tranquil' setting and wonder whats happened to the roads..

"Just beyond the hustle of the Home Counties, Wiltshire is one of the most tranquil – and least populated – parts of the country, where patience is not just a virtue but a way of life. There are few better places to get away from it all without having to take a compass and survival kit."

http://tinyurl.com/yc2cygx

* There's a lot of reindeer antlers about in prehistory....

You certainly can't beat a bit of Wiltshire. !
last sundays walk around the polisher, devils den, monster stone etc was one of my most enjoyable ever, the only noise to be heard was the voices of myself, Peteg, Paulus, Mikki, and TJJ.
There was a momentary break in the tranquillity when a gyrocopter passed over but besides that the loudest thing out there cept our thoughts was the noise of the crows.
Saturday was a horrible day but sunday surprised us all, the sunset walking back down the ridgeway was awe inspiring, the fact i'd only slept for 3 hours, had a blinding headache and couldn't face any food during the 8-ish mile walk due to the previous nights merriment was hardly even noticed.
Might be an idea to take a small survival kit if out alone though, the downs sport some well hidden ankle snapping holes.
I love the peaks but Wiltshire offers something entirely different, a beautiful place, i just can't resist the call to head back down there given the slightest opportunity.

Cheers for that one, Moss!

I've been enjoying whizzing around in this one a wee bit this morning!*

http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/programmes/stonehenge/flash/panorama.swf

* But don't tell me boss! :D

G x

moss wrote:
Sorry just could'nt resist this one....

Is father Christmas* coming to Stonehenge - maybe not, but this article in the Telegraph did just go slightly over the top; look at that glorious photo of Stonehenge in its 'tranquil' setting and wonder whats happened to the roads..

"Just beyond the hustle of the Home Counties, Wiltshire is one of the most tranquil – and least populated – parts of the country, where patience is not just a virtue but a way of life. There are few better places to get away from it all without having to take a compass and survival kit."

http://tinyurl.com/yc2cygx

* There's a lot of reindeer antlers about in prehistory....

Hmm! An idealised image of Stonehenge indeed, if only it could be experienced like that. Here is another image you may like which is hanging in the Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum - it looks like a Japanese silkscreen painting ... of Stonehenge by moonlight. Hard to photograph because of the reflection on the glass.
Stonehenge Image
Megadread was spot-on about a small survival kit and compass. Just going by Sunday's walk across Fyfield Down, what he gallantly didn't mention was that on the way back I caught my foot in a clump of grass and tripped - I was unhurt, equilibrium quickly restored but it may have been a different story.

"Just beyond the hustle of the Home Counties, Wiltshire is one of the most tranquil – and least populated – parts of the country, where patience is not just a virtue but a way of life. There are few better places to get away from it all without having to take a compass and survival kit."
Nice one Moss.

Running along similar lines to that is Kathryn Hughes who, writing in the Guardian (8 August 2009) on the reissue of Geoffrey Grigson's 1960s guide to touring the countryside* says -

"You won't find any sloppy lyricism here, no hey-nonny-noing. Instead, Grigson takes a tough approach to the evidence, refusing to be drawn into romantic fantasies of old Englishness when there is another, more serviceable narrative to hand.

"The clearest instance of this astringency comes in the entry on dolmens which, as Grigson's daughter Sophie explains in her foreword, were something of a bête noire with her father. From the early 17th century, the idea had grown that these giant stone table structures - of which Stonehenge is the supreme example - were grand altars on which druids had thrillingly made human sacrifices. Geoffrey Grigson took pithy pleasure in explaining to his readers that "'druidical' remains do not exist" (note the sarcastic quotation marks which hint at his contempt for anyone who has fallen too heavily for the cod-Celtic version of British history). Instead, those striking structures which look so much like a giant's domestic furniture belong to the neolithic period, and thus pre-date the iron-age druids by several centuries. Anyone hoping for an excuse to dress up for a "druidical" reconstruction, complete with robes and mistletoe (another of Grigson's pet hates), would have to look elsewhere for encouragement."**

* The Shell Country Alphabet: From Apple Trees to Stone Circles, How to Understand the British Countryside. ISBN: 9781846142123

** http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/aug/08/shell-country-alphabet-geoffrey-grigson

NB Apologies for the home link but a bit more about Grigson, John Aubrey and Nikolaus Pevsner (at Clyffe Pypard) can be found here - http://aveburymatters.blogspot.com/

For anyone on Facebook this site will keep you updated on news items relating to Wiltshire - especially Stonehenge.

VISIT WILTSHIRE - Facebook Site

I have to thank Michael Bott for this one:

http://standingstones.tv/2009/11/23/nesshenge-the-liverpool-botanic-gardens-experimental-henge/

Excellent! People who have got off their arses and actually done something practical! Good on them.

G x