

One of the handful of standing stones in the salt marsh with Croagh Patrick in the background.
The view south west over the entrance towards the Poulaphuca Reservoir
Looking down the passage from the entrance, with added flashes of course.
Ta Hagrat facade as the sun went down
The heavily eroded spiral like motifs can just be made out here, they are much more obvious on the full size image.
A very challenging place to photograph, this is the remains of the paved interior and orthostats that face a side chamber of the main temple structure
The exquisite ‘Sleeping Lady’ discovered in the Hypogeum
Bad news if you saw this and also happened to be a domestic animal..
Tom FourWinds at Bugibba Temple, Sat. 14th Feb 2009
Exploring the southern chamber of Dowth on Winter Solstice 2008.
Children unknown, any info please contact me via www.shadowsandstone.com
Sunset 13/12/08
Thickening clouds blocked the final stages of sunset but would be interesting to see what happens around winter solstice in a couple of weeks.
Drombeg under near full moon 11-11-08
Samhain sunset 2008, viewed from the circle entrance passage and through the portals.
Samhain sunset 2008
Sunlight in the passage a short while after sunrise, 27/10/08
Re-used rock art? Similar open air carvings have been recorded nearby on natural boulders which appear to be in-situ.
Barely there. There’s a very nice cross configuration in this shot but it’s weathered away to almost nothing.
A small hog-back boulder tucked into the corner of the garden of a modern bungalow, almost a grotto-like setting.
The upper panel consists of two cup and five rings, one cup and four rings with a gutter which is joined to three cup and rings grouped together and a nearby cup with three rings.
The lower slope panel on this very large outcrop features one cup with one ring, two cups with two rings and one cup with four pennanular rings and a gutter. One of the cups w/2 rings is just on the far edge of the outcrop below the veggies.
Apparently around 19 examples of rock art have been recorded in this townsland alone, with two more in the adjacent townsland of Letter West and the large group at Coomasaharn near the lake.
Because many were almost entirely covered in peat they have been amazingly well preserved, to compare the weathered carvings with the protected ones is like night and day. This area also has some unique cross or cruciform carvings with cups and pennanular rings at the end of each arm and sometimes inside the remaining ‘slices’ of the axis.
The numbers assigned to the panels here are the entry numbers for the Archaeological Survey of the Iveragh Peninsula.
The covered carvings nearest are some of the best preserved I’ve yet seen, the difference between these and the eroded rings just visible nearer the top are startling.
A very, very sad place. Ballykissane burial ground is a disused Cillín or burial ground for infants that died before baptism. Under the shroud of the maniacal catholic church, the un-baptised were buried away from the consecrated graveyard alongside murderers, lunatics and others deemed beyond salvation. A very nice woman who lives nearby nearly had tears falling when she was describing how grief stricken parents of infants were forced to bury their child after midnight in this graveyard away from the community and could not wake them or find comfort in the normal burial rituals. Those sick bastards. Ballykissane was in use up until the mid 20th century.
Only tiny bits of boulders mark the graves and the graveyard is so overgrown that it’s impossible to see many of them now.
Recently, perhaps in a moment of repentance, a standing stone with a plaque of remembrance for the children buried here was erected where the old track to the burial ground met the road to the east.
The rock art is now sitting under a tree along the borders of the raised burial area but has moved at least once. Along both sides of a fissure are five cup and rings and around 12 deep and rounded cup marks. Other rings may have weathered away.
Access is through a farmyard along the road south. Please ask.
Looking out from the burial ground over the bay to the mountains on the Dingle Peninsula in the distance. Shade on rock art courtesy of my no.78 O.S. map.
Looking out the passage from the chamber, the stone on the right bears what some have claimed to be a stylised face, above the end of the passage is the amazingly preserved zig-zags on a lozenge shaped stone which is thought to have originally spanned the end of the passage.
Stones along right hand side of chamber
On top of Cairn T, waiting in vain.
Greeting the dawn with Bodhráns inside Cairn U, 21st Sept. 2008
Cairn W shortly after dawn, the disc of the sun was just visible through a gap in the fog but not powerful enough to light the interior of Cairn T
Having failed to get the key once more (so close, so far!) I was going to visit Sess Kilgreen again when I passed the sign for Knockmany and decided to check it out anyway.
The forestry service guy told me to drive up until I reach the service car park nearer the top, so up I drove. And up. And then nearly drove into the side of the tomb! I didn’t realise it was possible to drive all the way up but the track is steep and not very solid so I would recommend the forest walk instead.
It was a clear, sunny day and the views were amazing, recent rain seemed to have cleared the haze. The enclosing bunker is hideous as lamented elsewhere, but the tomb inside is great, lots of bizarre and surprising carvings visible through the door and from the skylight.
By employing a few tricks (sticking camera on tripod through the bars and perching flash units up on the skylight) I was able to get some decent pics all the same.
Something should really be done about the interior of this monument, it makes the Fourknocks roof look like a work of artistic genius. Whats with the air vent to nowhere behind the backstone? At least painting the walls black would be a vast improvement.
You wouldn’t believe how many thorns I had to extract after diving into raw jungle to get this...