Gors Fawr, Wales. Where Stonehenge Came From.

avatar
(Edited)

Gors Fawr, Wales. Where Stonehenge Came From.

Read "Gors Fawr, Wales. Where Stonehenge Came From." on TravelFeed.io for the best experience


C3CDBF25-11FE-4886-A402-A48A3834EB98.jpeg

When most of us think about stone circles Stonehenge usually pops to mind in short order. Yet the UK and Western Europe are filled with these strange often unexplainable monuments. Stonehenge itself is far from the largest or the oldest. Today’s post is on Gors Fawr (Great Wasteland) in Wales, which is where the bluestone used in the construction of Stonehenge came from. Basically this stone circle could well be Stonehenge’s mother.

Sat in the middle of a plain surrounded by massive hills hundreds of miles away from Salisbury plain this little area is far from easy to get to. When we were driving to it I had to contend with extreme down pours, flooded lanes, and road closures. The weather was brutal. However after an hour and a half we finally made the turn off down a single lane road that takes you to the monument.
49369B39-96E8-4E6C-8A57-337C1A8F718A.jpeg

Once we had pulled up something dawned on me... it was pissing down rain and the plain area around the stones was starting to flood... I hadn’t brought the right water proofs for the conditions. Furthermore if I was going to take photos I had to be quick so my iPad didn’t get waterlogged. So out the car we jumped for some fast photo taking... within five minutes I was soaked through with winter rain.
570AB8D9-2862-4D25-B98A-0DF47B2FBFBF.jpeg
46178908-3B04-4CF1-9E0C-FB5CE1008264.jpeg
5150BBAC-68AE-4C2B-89C8-C84D25F05D05.jpeg
0EE7F193-E01F-4258-88AF-99E105515791.jpeg
47B1851A-DA90-4FD3-A1E2-92BA1524B198.jpeg
D3FFCE23-E98B-45AE-8984-A1CFC379432D.jpeg

The stone circle itself doesn’t posses the same amount of size and grandeur of places like Stonehenge, Stanton Drew, or Avebury. But as you wonder around the site you begin to get a picture of how big this site must have once been. Little stone by little stone going outward for hundreds of meters forming larger circles mostly sunken into the ground. Despite the weather conditions I still found myself wondering what this place must have looked like when it was newly built. It’s almost hard to believe that it’s as young as archaeologist have settled on it being. In fact many say it’s easily four times older. You can almost believe that standing on this massive plain staring out from the centre of the circle at the Presley mountains in the background.

After 30 minutes of trying to get the best photos I could for the blog while trying not to ruin my electronics we retreated back to the car. I was soaked through... my partner being sensible brought a change of clothes as she always packs for everything nowadays. In my great wisdom I chose not to follow her example. So she changed out where we were parked into nice dry clothes, and I had to strip down to my boxers and a T-shirt for the rest of the drive.... never before have I appreciated heated seats so much.

When I say this area is remote I mean it’s remote. Well for the UK anyway. As we drove out I couldn’t help but notice something incredibly odd... every farm building, wall, old cottage, all of them were built in part with large chunks of white quartz. It was odd as I’ve never before seen that in any of the areas I’ve traveled in Europe. Today it’s not a cheap building material, but even centuries ago I would have thought that the blue stone in the mountains nearby would have been more practical. It was an interesting curiosity.
AC89BD69-AC72-4B0A-9195-9BF94A5ED4B7.jpeg
73394483-C819-42DD-A203-95458BA8561A.jpeg
This was just a quick post to cover my three hour detour to this rather special isolated place here in the UK. I really wish I had better equipment to get better pictures in tough conditions. Sadly I had to make due with what I’ve got. If ever you find yourself in this neck of the UK it’s advisable to bring wellies and water proofs... and a change of clothes. Unless awkward driving is your thing. But the drive in is beautiful. Even in rough conditions. It has a similar feel to areas I’ve hunted in Tennessee and Kentucky. Pleasantly isolated but non negotiably beautiful.

Well guys thanks for reading this quick little write up. I’d of loved to have gotten more to build on here but the conditions were to rough. There will be a next time though as I intend to return to this location. As always looking forward to your posts and projects. Keep on Steeming. :)


View this post on TravelFeed for the best experience.



0
0
0.000
10 comments
avatar

I can picture it now...Aren't you going to pack a change of clothes?...Nah, I'll be fine...Sometimes we just need to listen to common sense. (the lady in our lives, that's why we have em) LoL.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Hit the nail on the head my friend. Lol

0
0
0.000
avatar

Congratulations @mudcat36! You received a sweet smile from TravelFeed. We love your work so keep up the good job. 😊

Feedback

Based on your post, we have the following feedback for you:

  • We noticed that you did not publish your post through TravelFeed.io or edited your post on other Steem frontends. For better-looking blogs, we recommend you use our EasyEditor. As a bonus, when you post through our platform, you receive double upvotes from us, you are eligible for the top pick of the day (resteem + featured on the TravelFeed.io front page) and you can earn extra rewards from being featured in our daily curation posts. You can simply login with your existing Steem account using Steemconnect or Steem Keychain. See you next time on TravelFeed.io!
  • Your post will be hard to find. With the location picker in the TravelFeed.io editor you can easily add a location to your post to improve its discoverability.

Thanks for using TravelFeed!
@for91days (TravelFeed content team)

PS: Why not share your blog posts to your family and friends with the convenient sharing buttons on TravelFeed.io?

0
0
0.000
avatar

Congratulations, Your Post Has Been Added To The Steemit Worldmap!
Author link: http://steemitworldmap.com?author=mudcat36
Post link: http://steemitworldmap.com?post=gors-fawr-wales-where-stonehenge-came-from


Want to have your post on the map too?

  • Go to Steemitworldmap
  • Click the code slider at the bottom
  • Click on the map where your post should be (zoom in if needed)
  • Copy and paste the generated code in your post
  • Congrats, your post is now on the map!
0
0
0.000
avatar

Hiya, @LivingUKTaiwan here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made into our Honorable Mentions in Daily Travel Digest #732.

Your post has been manually curated by the @steemitworldmap team and got an upvote from @blocktrades to support your work. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting us so we can keep the project going!

Don't forget to check out our Haveyoubeenhere 2019 Steemitworldmap Travel Contest, it closes on 12th January!!

Become part of the Haveyoubeenhere community:


0
0
0.000
avatar

Thank you for giving it a read and the support! :)

0
0
0.000
avatar

If only we could ask stones what the hell they were used for. I think if I had any super power it would be to view history as it happened.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Lol. Likewise. The CIA tasked some of their remote viewers back in the 90's with looking into that. lol. .. Speaking of superpowers is all. Meanwhile here on earth, in the late 70's Geiger readings were taken of several stones here in the UK. The Roll Right stones in Oxfordshire alongside other sites did show high peaks of β-radiation beyond normal background levels. Especially on dates relating to solstices, right before sunrise, and right before sunset.

I must admit there is a feel to these places. I spend a lot of time around old sites like this and I'm not really one to believe in the Woo factor... but they are distinct in how they feel. I even slept under open skies in the middle of the Porlock stone circle area one evening. I was out hiking the west country and chose there to unfurl my bedroll. I slept like a baby. The stone circle at Avebury has one of the larger stones with a small spot that looks like it was highly polished thousands of years ago. The explanation from archaeologist here in the UK is they have no clue why it looks that way or how the area was polished. It almost threatens to debunk the agreed age though, as it would mean the rest of the stones weathered to their current state which would take tens of thousands of years.

I'm not big on the whole ancient alien crap, but there is something more to these sites than we are told. Some say aliens (eye roll), some say a lost race of humans (jury's out), some say lost chapter of our history (makes more sense than the others)... But I find these old sites a rather pleasant reminder of how little we do know. World would suck if we ran out of things to be curious about. Thanks for stopping by and giving it a read @whatamidoing. :)

0
0
0.000
avatar

Wow! What a great post! If you do a post like this one about Splinterlands it would be given a 100% Steem Monsters upvote from me if I see it!

0
0
0.000