
RiotGibbon

from Normanton Down

Look for the 2 lines, either side of the roadsign

More visible here, on the west side of the road

A bit faint in this picture, but you can see the bank running along the centre of the picture.
Taken from Woodhenge

only the cropmark left now, but it’s very distinct on the west side

The rescued, damaged but still surviving Quoit A, as seen in
themodernantiquarian.com/image.php?image_id=2808

approaching the site (by the far waters edge)

pile of miscelleneous broken rocks ...

reconstructed ditch, north side (Quoit A visible by waters edge)

Ground level before topsoil clearing (with Doig for scale)

You can just about see it here ... it banks up slightly on the left of the picture. The width of the cursus is the gap between the trees at the top
Winter Solstice 2001

Winter Solstice 2001 – King Arthur Pendragon and friends

Winter Solstice 2001

Winter Solstice 2001 – a new alignment?

Winter Solstice 2001

a cheeky little triple-Goddess, tucked away in a corner.

the overflow from the spring pool ... a wild, elemental place, like descending into the bowels of the earth ...

the eternal recycling of sites continues ...

A few yards up Wellhouse Lane, bottom of the Toroutside of the “official” well, is a overflow, free for all pilgrims ... this is the “Red” spring, as it flows through iron ... just across the road is the “White” spring, gushing through limestone, and tasting totally different ...

The 14thC tower of St Michael (the rest was destroyed by an earthquake, apparently ...)

from the Abbey gardens

The terraces on the slope are the legendary “3d-maze” labyrinth

As you come out of Cannon Street tube station, look across the road to your right, and the remains of the London Stone is in the little lit-up glass case, in the Overseas Chinese Bank ...

Southern defences ... at one point there was a wooden pallisade here, then a sarsen stone wall ...

North-western defences, by the gate (and sheep)

view from the Ridgeway, about halfway to Wayland’s Smithy, 10 minutes before sunset ... this castle must have dominated the area ...

inside the left-hand chamber ... notice the traces of fire

After sunset, the sky turned purple and the moon rose over the Castle ...

The view across the Castle at sunset ... the picturesesque cloud is actually from Didcot Power Station ....

You can see the bald patch, where the Dragon was slain ...

Look at the state of it!!!
Would *you* put your lips on that!
I don’t think so ...