

An almost 180 degrees panorama from just behind the Panckage Rock

The only way is up!

One of these boulders could be the last remaining Bradup stone. All seem to have scars from being JCB’d out of the ground.

The field where Paul Kenyon says the last stone should be – sadly it now seems to be gone.

Rainclouds over Southside.

Site of the ploughed out henge. Little Argham farm is the white spot below the hill on the mid-right of picture.

View from the village

View from Duggleby village

Picture taken in early spring before the mound vanishes in the undergrowth

Willy Howe stands isolated in an otherwise empty landscape.

Proof that the sun does indeed shine on the monolith, despite the church.

One of the stone coffins.

The sun dappled ‘other’ side of the minilith. (See Porkbeast’s fieldnote)

Barrow 1 at SE828562

Barrow 2 at SE832556

Barrow 3 at SE835559

Barrow 6 at SE808568

Barrow 5 at SE820570

Barrow 4 at SE822570

Earthwork of unknown age at SE827563

Over the hills and far away...

East end of barrow 1

View looking up the hill to the barrows. Number 1 is to the left, number 2 to the right. When the field is full of rape seed, barrow 1 is barely visible from the road.

Barrow number 1. Picture taken when there was no crop in the field.

Barrow number 2

Looking north-east uphill

Looking south-west downhill

Looks a bit like a galleon, sailing over the hillside.

Is it a barrow, or a is it a man-made rabbit warren. The jury is still out on this one.

The barrow is in the trees at the end of the track

View from across the fields

East end of the barrow/cairn.

The entrance to the East is beyond the stone.

Looking at the outer bank of the henge.

Just out of camera-shot the mothership beams down a ray of light on Meg

Looking East. The hill on the left is Great Mell Fell. To the right is Clough Head.