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Sites Gallain_Asters has logged.  View this log as a table or view the most recent logs from everyone

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Sort by: Site Name (A/D) County/ Region (A/D) Visited? (A/D) Date Added (A/D) Date Visited (A/D) Trip Number (A/D)

Dowth Passage Grave

Date Added: 2nd Jul 2024
Site Type: Passage Grave Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Meath)
Visited: Yes on 29th Jun 2024. My rating: Condition 2 Ambience 4 Access 5

Dowth Passage Grave

Dowth Passage Grave submitted by jeffrep on 11th Aug 2009. South Entrance, Dowth Passage Tomb, County Meath, Ireland.
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Log Text: The mound is accessible by a gate marked with an OPW sign letting you into the sheepfield. There is an information sign past the gate. The mound remains half-excavated which caused the top to be left as a crater. Both passage entrances and modern entrance are locked. The southern passage's entrance stone remains with deep cupmarks carved into both sides. The two cupmarks on the outside face of the stone are quite uniformly round.



Gortanimill

Date Added: 1st Jul 2024
Site Type: Stone Circle Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Cork)
Visited: Yes on 1st Jul 2024. My rating: Condition 4 Ambience 5 Access 5

Gortanimill

Gortanimill submitted by chaika on 7th Jun 2016. Gortanimill stone circle stands beside road. Easy access through gate. View looking up to circle from gate. Fall 2015.
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Log Text: Beautiful site overlooking a great view. The site is very close to the road and right by a gate that can be parked at and opened easily (this gate is not the one at the junction but a little further up the single-car road). The stone circle is in a sheep field but go slow and they'll leave you be. The quartz stone in the middle is now in two pieces but the bottom remains rooted in place. A nice big circle with many of its stones still in their original upright position.



Drombohilly Stone Circle

Date Added: 2nd Jul 2024
Site Type: Stone Circle Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Kerry)
Visited: Yes on 2nd Jul 2024. My rating: Condition 4 Ambience 5 Access 1

Drombohilly Stone Circle

Drombohilly Stone Circle submitted by kenwilliams on 23rd Oct 2005. Drombohilly is a truly magnificent circle, though a visit is not for the faint hearted. After any spell of rain the terrain here is treacherous, barb-wire, slippery rock filled streams, shoe-sucking bog... Bring a trusted pair of wellingtons.
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Log Text: Very difficult to reach, surrounded by thorny juniper and sharp pines but if you're up for the trail it's absolutely gorgeous. The center has a large white quartz surrounded by smaller stones and one white oyster shell with two embedded pebbles. The portal stones stand tall though one leans at an angle. The axial stone is very squat and nearly hidden by the grass and juniper. All remaining standing stones (9 of 11) aside from the leaning portal stones are in perfect upright original positions. Surrounded by pines on all sides and only 1-2 of the stones are vaguely visible from the teeny tiny road off the 'main' road. Coordinates are exact.



Turnaspidogy stone row

Date Added: 3rd Jul 2024
Site Type: Stone Row / Alignment Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Cork)
Visited: Yes on 3rd Jul 2024. My rating: Condition 4 Ambience 4 Access 4

Turnaspidogy stone row

Turnaspidogy stone row submitted by GaelicLaird on 12th Oct 2023. Looking south east. Lough Allua just visible to the right of the middle stone. There's a Crannog situated in Lough Allua visible from the roadside. Photo taken June 2023.
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Log Text: In the middle of a field, close to the road. There's a gate to the south to cross the fence at which is further from the road. As previously described, the tallest stone has fallen but the other two remain in original positions. White quartz veins running through the two tallest stones. There is a depression in the earth close to the narrow base of the fallen stone that is the same size as that side's base, and is positioned the same distance from the middle stone as the smaller stone is to the middle. The alignment faces south overlooking Lough Allua. It is aligned SW of the lake towards the southern mountains.



Lisnagun Standing Stone

Date Added: 4th Jul 2024
Site Type: Standing Stone (Menhir) Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Cork)
Visited: Yes on 4th Jul 2024. My rating: Condition 5 Ambience 4 Access 5

Lisnagun Standing Stone

Lisnagun Standing Stone submitted by Klingon on 8th Apr 2005. Standing Stone inside a churchyard. Our hands were prickle when touching the stone.
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Log Text: Large, wide, and thin standing stone in the front of a church yard. Public access is easy through the unlocked gates and there's parking around the side. The stone tapers upward towards the north point and is slightly lower on the south point. Very straight on both east and west sides plus along the top, well shaped. The alignment appears to be perfectly north according to my compass (taller peak facing north, alignment along the long axis). The church itself seems old as well.



Drombeg Stone Circle

Date Added: 5th Jul 2024
Site Type: Stone Circle Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Cork)
Visited: Yes on 4th Jul 2024. My rating: Condition 5 Ambience 5 Access 5

Drombeg Stone Circle

Drombeg Stone Circle submitted by GaelicLaird on 22nd Dec 2022. Winter solstice - 21 December 2022.
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Log Text: Incredible stone circle in excellent condition, part of a complex of sites in the immediate area. The view of the area is wide and stunning. Access is very easy, there is a carpark and a maintained walking path up to the site. There is a gate wide enough for a car likely for OPW use, but might be able to be used for easier disabled access via private car if arrangements are made with OPW ahead of time. Good informational signage at site giving context to both the stone circle and nearby cooking pit and hut sites.



Drombeg Fulacht Fiadh and Hut

Date Added: 5th Jul 2024
Site Type: Ancient Village or Settlement Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Cork)
Visited: Yes on 4th Jul 2024. My rating: Condition 2 Ambience 5 Access 5

Drombeg Fulacht Fiadh and Hut

Drombeg Fulacht Fiadh and Hut submitted by Klingon on 8th Apr 2005. Ancient settlement near the Drombeg Stone Circle.
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Log Text: Both the fulacht fiadh and the hut site are now outlines in the earth with partial stone walls, but the outlines of these spaces is undisturbed and clearly visible. There are numerous earthworks surrounding these two forming rings and ditches, though it is unclear if these are contemporary to the fulacht fiadh and the hut or modern earthworks. The fulacht fiadh was filled with rainwater and plucked daisies, which grow on the outer side of this site.



Burrane Standing Stone

Date Added: 4th Jul 2024
Site Type: Standing Stone (Menhir) Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Cork)
Visited: Yes on 4th Jul 2024. My rating: Condition 5 Ambience 3 Access 4

Burrane Standing Stone

Burrane Standing Stone submitted by Klingon on 8th Apr 2005. This massive Standing Stone is a granitic rock with a quartzite top.
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Log Text: Beautiful tall stone, very wide and contains much white quartz. The southern side is mostly white quartz and tapers to a point around the stone's mid-height. The northern side rises to a peak and is quite flat with shooting of white quartz running vertically to the tallest tip. In a sheepfield but very close to a gate, there is an electric wire and the gate is by two fields separated by a hedge. The stone is on the right (eastern) side. There is a signpost further back on the road before the turn indicating this is locally called "Mass Rock".



Templebryan stone circle

Date Added: 5th Jul 2024
Site Type: Stone Circle Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Cork)
Visited: Yes on 4th Jul 2024. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3 Access 4

Templebryan stone circle

Templebryan stone circle submitted by Ebor on 30th Apr 2016. 'The Druids Temple' aka Templebryan Stone Circle - The quartz stone at the centre of the circle is known as "Cloich Griene" meaning the sunstone. This is said to be the stone from where Clonakilty got it's name.
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Log Text: Five stones remain in the circle, surrounds a large quartzite boulder in the centre. The stone with gaps to both sides seems just slightly misaligned with the central quartz and the middle of two closer set stones, plus its upper face tapers up towards where the best alignment of the central quartz and middle of the portals stones would be, suggesting this remaining stone may have flanked the original recumbent, now missing. The immediate area around and in the circle has been used to dump field and hedge cuttings so it's a little precarious, just keep an eye on your footing. There's an access point into the field just a little north of the circle if you don't mind a short climb over mud. The stones are visible from the road approaching from the north. The tops of the two potential portal stones close set to each other are remarkably flat. The taller one is quite craggy like tree bark on its sides, while the stouter one has white quartz deposits along the top.



Goirtin Na Coille standing stone (north)

Date Added: 6th Jul 2024
Site Type: Standing Stone (Menhir) Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Cork)
Visited: Yes on 6th Jul 2024. My rating: Condition 4 Ambience 2 Access 4

Goirtin Na Coille standing stone (north)

Goirtin Na Coille standing stone (north) submitted by GaelicLaird on 4th Jun 2021. Photo taken June 2021
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Log Text: Very tall stone in same position as the previous log from 2021. Now beside a headstone and surrounded by farm equipment. Visible from the road at a bit of a distance if the owners are not around to ask permission.



Farranaglogh

Date Added: 12th Jul 2024
Site Type: Standing Stones Country: Ireland (Republic of) (Co. Meath)
Visited: Yes on 12th Jul 2024. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 4 Access 3

Farranaglogh

Farranaglogh submitted by Gallain_Asters on 12th Jul 2024. Western side looking eastwards. The stone leans forward towards the west. Only this side has smaller stones at the base, possibly added for structural stability against the lean.
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Log Text: When I visited this standing stone I could not see the second collapsed stone nearby on the little hill the remaining one is on. The stone that is there is broad and thin with even, flat wide sides. It is leaning westward at a small angle but still freestanding. Stones are visible at the base on the west wide, no stones seen on the east side. The top of the stone is taller at the southern point. According to my GPS, the stone is aligned either 30° NNE from true north or 210° SSW depending on which direction it points in (looking from the shorter to taller peak is 210° SSW). The remaining stone is in a farmer's field about 100m west from the gate. The stone is at least 5 foot 7 inches tall.




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Sites Gallain_Asters has logged.  View this log as a table or view the most recent logs from everyone