Images

Image of Bearah Common (Long Cairn) by GLADMAN

Looking very approx southeast across the long cairn

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bearah Common (Long Cairn) by GLADMAN

The long cairn from the track... Duh, that was easy, then.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bearah Common (Long Cairn) by GLADMAN

Impressed with this... much more here than I had thought. Rain had stopped, too.. sunburst! Sharp Tor rises beyond, this horseshoe walk’s final port of call.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bearah Common (Long Cairn) by thesweetcheat

The chamber is oriented approx. southeast. The prominent hill is Notter Tor.

Image credit: A. Brookes (23.6.2016)
Image of Bearah Common (Long Cairn) by thesweetcheat

With Sharp Tor in the background. Kerb in the right foreground.

Image credit: A. Brookes (23.6.2016)
Image of Bearah Common (Long Cairn) by thesweetcheat

Looking southeast across the cairn. The well-preserved kerb can be seen bottom left of image.

Image credit: A. Brookes (23.6.2016)
Image of Bearah Common (Long Cairn) by Mr Hamhead

Looking east, early spring allows the whole of the site to be viewed, not just the cist. This photo is taken from the pointed western end of the cairn with the cist in the distance next to the bare tree.

Image of Bearah Common (Long Cairn) by ocifant

I love the moss on top of the upright – it almost looks like dripping blood to me!

Image credit: Alan S>
Image of Bearah Common (Long Cairn) by ocifant

Low bracken allows the shape to be better identified.

Image credit: Alan S>

Articles

Bearah Common

Finally got to visit on not only a dry day, but also in early spring before the bracken and everything else had taken over this site. For the first time I could make out the whole long cairn.
Stretching away up hill from the cist/quoit? is a boat shaped area walled in by low stones, this is what I have never seen before. I can see now why it is called a long cairn.
I would still love to know if the large stones that make up the central structure were ever all erect or were they a cist that was set above the present layer of earth and have collapsed as earth has been taken away........

Bearah Common

Just for the record, it’s still raining up there! The horizontal stuff that soaks you right through...

The bracken was only just sprouting, so I had no problem in finding it, though for some reason I had some doubts until a passing(!) farmer confirmed that this was indeed what I was looking for.

I can only re-iterate Mr Hamhead’s directions – it’s actually a relatively easy walk up the hill, with a couple of streams to cross, but the upright stone is quite distinctive and easily spotted from below.

Bearah Common

Third time lucky....

October is not the best time to be up on Bodmin Moor looking for sites..bracken is covering almost everything. However, at the third attempt I found the Bearah Long Cairn. If others wish to follow in my footsteps then i would advise taking the minor road from Minions to Henwood. Once in Henwood turn right and climb up beside the riding stables. As the road drops down again there is a road going off to the right. Park on the left and take the track that goes up on the left.
After going through a gate this opens out onto moorland in the bottom of a valley. Follow the track as it climbs and snakes towards Bearah Tor. After most of the bends are negotiated look out for the cairn on the right hand side. The stone that is still “upright” is half surounded by a hawthorn tree and is obscured by it if approaching down the track.
The stones sit atop a cairn that is very overgrown with bracken and i could not make out too much of what remains of the surrounding stones. The central stones, at least three large lehgnts, are laying as if fallen, the one remaining standing being at a angle of about 40 degrees.
It is only in the last 20 years that this cairn has been recognised and i am not sure if any dig has ever taken place. One wonders what form the cairn took in the past? Did all the stones stand upriight and was there a capstone, making it more of a quoit.
I will try to return when the bracken dies down and the rain that soaked me has departed.

Bearah Common

This enigmatic site is located just off the track to Bearah Tor Quarry, the cairn itself is quite ruinous, but the chamber & its capstone are in-situ.

Sites within 20km of Bearah Common