05/06/2018 – Got to love them faces :-)
Images
From ‘The Isle of Bute in the Olden Time’ by James K Hewison, 1895.
Bute’s answer to Easter Island..
Keep still, Rab.... and nae bastard’ll notice.
Yeah, this is what happens when Rab and Jamesie are allowed to venture across the water to do a little restoration. Govan style.
You should be able to make out the chunks of quartz embedded in the stone
The large, frost-shattered stone.
Articles
05/06/2018 – Of all the sites on Bute this was the one I most wanted to see. Each stone looked so distinctive from looking at the photos on here. Only 3 left but each had it’s own character.
The first one is like no other stone I’ve come across. So thin at the bottom and then ballooning out higher up. A megalithic lollipop.
The middle one is my favourite. Split now and a good size. And the faces!! Once you’ve seen them you can’t un-see them, just great.
The third is smaller and has it’s own little booster mound so it can hang with the bigger guys.
Great vibe to the site, surrounded by trees. Easy access and parking, A must see place.
Visited 1.8.2016
Directions:
At the southern end of Bute take the minor road south off the A844 near Kingarth. This is signposted for St Blane’s Church (Historic Scotland site). You will drive past trees to our left. Take the first turning you come to on your left which leads to a small parking area next to the trees. From the parking area follow the ‘path’ through the ferns, into the trees, to discover the circle.
There is an information board at the car park showing the circle (and other sites) but the sign from the roadside has fallen down (hence the reason we drove past the parking area – twice!) It is only a 1 minute walk to the stones.
it has to be said, there is something special about seeing standing stones in a woodland setting – even if it is a plantation. The sun was shining brightly but the density of the trees left the circle in a sort of twilight. The first stone you come to has a metal bar helping to keep it standing. It is covered by the wet spongy moss you find in this environment. The other two stones are studded with quartz chips – some quite large. The smallest stone is built into a mound which allows all the stones to be of a similar height. This is something I can’t remember seeing before? Was this part of ‘restoration work’ in the past or is this original? The large stone which has split in two reminds me of the stones forming the Ring of Brodger for some reason.
Either way, this is a cracking site to visit and one I would highly recommend. Once you find the parking area this is a very easy stone circle to access. Enjoy!
Look closely at the stones and you will see how much quartz they are composed of.
Similar rock is found round the south of the island. Around 65 million years ago volcanic eruptions around Arran forced molten lava through fissures in the sandstone. The extreme heat metamorphosed the sandstone, baking it white and producing a quartzite rock.
It makes the stones sparkle really beautifully through the moss.
This must have been an impressive circle when it was complete.
Signposted and near a road, only three stones remain of seven which were reported in the late 18th century. But even in its depleted state, this is still impressive.
One of the stones measures 2.8m high x 2.2m x 1m and has been split by frost. The other two stones are 2.2m high.
Visited 7 March 2004
Topics
Sites within 20km of Blackpark Plantation
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Largizean
photo 12 description 1 -
Dunstrone
photo 9 -
Little Dunagoil
photo 11 -
Little Dunagoil Burial Chamber
photo 9 -
Dunagoil
photo 12 description 1 -
Glencallum Bay
photo 3 description 1 -
Scalpsie Barrow
photo 4 -
Scalpsie Cairn
photo 7 -
Loch Quien
photo 2 -
Dun Scalpsie
photo 8 -
Bicker’s Houses
photo 14 description 2 -
Glaid Stone
photo 3 description 1 -
Barone Hill
photo 8 description 2 -
St Ninian’s Bay
photo 6 description 2 -
The Gouklan Stone
photo 4 description 1 -
North Sannox
photo 4 description 1 -
Acholter
description 2 -
North Sannox 2
photo 2 description 1 -
Ettrick Bay
photo 33 description 3 -
Haylie
photo 8 description 4 link 1 -
East Colmac
photo 4 description 2 -
Diamond Hill
photo 3 description 1 -
Mid Sannox
photo 3 description 4 -
Sannox
photo 9 description 2 -
Allt Carn Bhain
photo 4 description 1 -
Castle Hill
photo 4 description 1 -
Sannox
photo 4 description 1 -
Ardlamont Point
photo 2 description 1 link 2 -
Hilton
photo 5 description 1 -
Glecknabae
photo 16 description 2 -
Creag Ghlas
photo 5 description 1 -
Blackshaw
photo 5 description 1 -
Carnbaan
photo 18 description 4 -
Dun Hill Of Glenmore
photo 3 description 1 -
Fforde’s Buttress
photo 1 -
St. Michael’s
photo 12 description 1 -
Glenvoidean
photo 12 description 1 link 1 -
Merkland
photo 9 description 2 -
Auchagoyle
photo 3 description 1 -
Colintraive
description 1 -
Low Stillaig
photo 3 description 1 -
Kames
photo 6 forum 1 description 3 -
Deer Park
photo 18 description 3