Two young mangalitza sows on Mary Arden’s Farm, Wilmcote, which had managed to cake themselves in mud during the long hot dry spell this summer.
Category: David
Rollright Stones: the King Stone
The King Stone is the third component of the Rollright Stones; a single standing stone, on the opposite side of a narrow but sometimes busy coutry rode to the stone circle. The two features are hidden from each other by a belt of trees cloaking the circle from the road.
The King Stone’s contorted shape is less to do with weathering since it was raised, perhaps around 1,500 B.C., than with bits being chipped off by people in more recent centuries.
Broad-leaved helleborine, Baggeridge
Rollright Stones: the King’s Men
The King’s Men stone circle, 33 metres in diameter, originally constructed around 2,500 B.C., and with a long (and continuing) alleged association with witchcraft and other forms of paganism.
Since 2001 the site of the complex has been owned by a Trust, which has made changes to improve access, with predictable results.
Follow that boat (Avon swans)
The Rollright Stones are a complex of prehistoric monuments on the Warwickshire / Oxfordshire border. The Whispering Knights, probably the oldest part of the complex, are the remains of a five thousand year old burial chamber. In my opinion, they look most impressive when approached from the footpath which runs across further down the field to the south, giving a view of the stones standing cutting the skyline.







