
The cup marks are there NO1751024835
The cup marks are there NO1751024835
The 3 cup marks along with a bit of pebble dash, west stone NO1751024835
The west stone with its 3 cup marks. 1751024835
East stone looking east NO1784724831
NO1748724831
The cup mark on the east stone NO1748724831
The west stone, that white thing would make a good fourth stone.
Looking WSW along the row towards the four poster.
This is the solitary stone mentioned in the field notes, 35m from the row which is just visible in the background above the ‘outlier’.
Faded cup marks or just weathering?
The most easterly stone of the row
Another view of the centre stone
The centre stone of the row, in amongst some field clearance boulders
Another view of the westerly stone, looking NW
The WSW stone in the row
Three fallen stones, two with cup marks, make up this stone row.
The east stone has a clearly visible cup mark, the west stone has 3 well worn cup marks, and the middle stone missed out on the rock art.
Nearby woods have more cup marked rocks, another day for them.
Visited 05/01/2024.
I came back to have another look here nearly 4 years on from my initial visit, armed with more information and the benefit of 4 years intensive stone-visiting. Although Canmore describes 3 stones, there is a fourth, at a greater distance from the other 3, but on exactly the same ENE-WSW alignment. The 3 stones lie approximately 7m apart, the ‘outlier’ is 35m away from the most easterly of the 3. Not sure about this – it’s not as large as the 3 in the row, but just looks and feels right. The most easterly in the row does have some possible weathered cup marks on the upper face.