
The view from Moor Divock SE through the two standing stones and on to the Cop Stone visible on the horizon.
The view from Moor Divock SE through the two standing stones and on to the Cop Stone visible on the horizon.
From Moor Divock SE, the Cop Stone can be seen through these two standing stones.
Pike O’ Stickle looms above the scree slope of the axe factory.
The Axe Factory!
The view from Pike O’Stickle, looking over the Langdale Valley, Windermere and the North Pennines on the horizon.
Pike O’ Stickle.
A view of Pike O’ Stickle from Mickleden. The axe factory IS the scree slope!
These stones are deceptively big. The stone in the foreground is around 6 foot tall!
The Church on top of the mound, the stone to the left of the shot is a gravestone, with inscription.
This suspicious stone lies in the graveyard. On closer inspection it has an inscription dating to the early 20th century.
Notgrove.
Putting the ‘Not’ in ‘Notgrove’. This could well be part of the long barrow.
The resident chick in the NE chamber. The image quality is poor because I couldn’t use the flash (for obvious reasons!)
S chamber
SE chamber
NW chamber
NE chamber
Mid-afternoon sunlight streams in to the chamber.
Sea view.
Little remains of this site.
The beautiful view from the site.
Inside the chamber. It is still possible to crawl under the partially collapsed capstone.
The wooden support.
Horses at play round the stones.
A view out to sea and over to Snowdonia.
Just round the corner from Meini Hirion standing stones lies Cromlech Farm. The monument lies further up the track.