Images

Image of Allt an Duin (Skelpick) (Broch) by LesHamilton

Allt an Duin sits atop this steep hill, at an altitude of some 85 metres.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Allt an Duin (Skelpick) (Broch) by LesHamilton

Foundation level blocks, the first sign of the broch as I approached from the southeast.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Allt an Duin (Skelpick) (Broch) by LesHamilton

The entrance passage still shows through the tumble of blocks on the west of Allt an Duin.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Allt an Duin (Skelpick) (Broch) by LesHamilton

Looking west over the entrance pasageway, from within the broch.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Allt an Duin (Skelpick) (Broch) by LesHamilton

The interior of the broch still contains several stretches of walling with several courses of blocks intact.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Allt an Duin (Skelpick) (Broch) by LesHamilton

This panorama illustrates the extent of the broch’s interior.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Allt an Duin (Skelpick) (Broch) by LesHamilton

This section of the outer wall of the broch is one of the few stretches showing the original courses.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Allt an Duin (Skelpick) (Broch) by LesHamilton

Just a small sample of the massive tumble of masonry down the western flank of the broch.

Image credit: Les Hamilton

Articles

Allt an Duin (Skelpick)

Visited: June 7, 2017

Located atop a conical knoll, some 85 metres above the river Naver and about ¾ kilometre east of it, Allt an Duin is protected by steep slopes, and in summer, a jungle of bracken. This is not a target for the casual walker as the ascent is demandingly steep, though it can be eased by making for the southern ridge and completing the ascent from there. Most of the ascent was through dense bracken, until almost at the broch, when heather took over.

The broch is built from large blocks of igneous or metamorphic rock and much of its structure is concealed under a massive expanse of tumbled masonry. Hardly any structure remains in view on the exterior, although the entrance passage on the west is still discernable. Within the broch there are a few stretches of the inner wall that still reach up to eight courses high.

This must have originally been a superb fastness, not only because of its situation—defended by steep slopes—but because of the amount of rock here. If all the rocks that have cascaded down from the hilltop were replaced in the broch, it would be a mighty structure indeed.

Access to Allt an Duin is along the single-track road to Skelpick, which follows the east bank of the River Naver from the point where the A836 from Bettyhill swings to the west.

Follow the Skelpick road for almost three kilometres, passing Lochan Duinte on the way, and park in the large sand quarry on the right of the road. Immediately across the road is a farm track and the broch is prominent on its knoll about 600&nbspmetres ahead.

Sites within 20km of Allt an Duin (Skelpick)