
Looking W
The entrance to the passage is at the 2nd and 3rd stones from the top right.
Looking W
The entrance to the passage is at the 2nd and 3rd stones from the top right.
Looking E
E half.
W half.
Difficult to photograph. Looking NW over the narrow chamber.
This 1.7m stone plus some field clearance are all that remain of this possible Clava cairn.
Looking N with the Moray Firth in the background and the only surviving circle stone (1.3m and broken) in the foreground.
Looking E over part of the outer kerb with the surviving circle stone on the right.
The SW outer kerb.
The 4th and 5th stones from the top left are offset from the other kerbstones and mark the entrance to the passage.
Looking NE with the 2.5m circle stone in the foreground.
Looking S.
Showing the two surviving circle stones.
Part of the inner (fg) and outer kerb.
NW outer kerb stones
Looking N
Looking NW
Cup marked stone.
Looking NW.
Entrance on LH side of cairn.
Three circle stones on the NW. The tallest is 1.8m.
Looking W.
The capstone can be seen.
Looking down the very low passage.
Inside the chamber.
Looking SE
Close up of the W circle stone – an astonishing 3.4m high and 3.0m wide.
Looking NW
The S kerbstones and a fallen 2.3m stone.
The SW circle stone.
Looking W showing the largest (2.7m) circle stone.
The site from the SW with some of the circle stones visible.
The NW arc of the kerb.
Looking N over passage, chamber and W half of cairn.
Looking S
SW stone with Cairngorms in background.
SW stone with central stone in background.
Central stone with NE stone in background.
The NE stone.
Looking NW with one of the circle stones in the foreground.
From the SW.
With a very bright red car and some rooflines removed.
Looking E. Cairngorms in the background.
A bit distorted but it does show the whole cairn (18m diameter). From the NE.
The NW half of the cairn and the one surviving circle stone (2.9m).
A worm’s eye view of the outer kerb.
Taken with a zoom. Not visited more closely due to a heavy shower of rain (pathetic, really).
2.1 m and said to contain at least four cupmarks.
29/05/05
Surrounded by its fence – to stop it running off, presumably.
The pair of stones 2.4m & 3.2m. From the W.
Great location. Loch Stornoway in the background.
The third stone in the neighbouring field.
The two northen stones. The one on the right is 3.3m high.