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Sites theCAptain 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)

Le Palet de Gargantua (Nottonville)

Trip No.204  Entry No.280  Date Added: 11th Sep 2020
Site Type: Burial Chamber or Dolmen Country: France (Centre:Eure-et-Loire (28))
Visited: Yes on 8th Aug 2005. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3 Access 5

Le Palet de Gargantua (Nottonville)

Le Palet de Gargantua (Nottonville) submitted by theCaptain on 22nd Mar 2012. Just to the south of the La Brosse chateau and farm can be found the Palet de Gargantua dolmen, sitting right at the D.357 roadside.
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Log Text: Just to the south of the La Brosse chateau and farm can be found the Palet de Gargantua dolmen, sitting right at the D.357 roadside. It has a lovely capstone sitting at a jaunty angle partly on the ground, and partly on a couple of support stones. It is sort of trapezoidal shaped, about 4m by 4m. I found it difficult to make out any semblance of structure underneath, as most of the support stones have all collapsed.



Le Petit Dolmen de Bagneux

Trip No.204  Entry No.94  Date Added: 20th Jul 2020
Site Type: Passage Grave Country: France (Pays de la Loire:Maine-et-Loire 49)
Visited: Saw from a distance on 16th Jul 2005

Le Petit Dolmen De Bagneux

Le Petit Dolmen De Bagneux submitted by ocdolmen on 12th Oct 2009. Site in Site in Pays de la Loire: Maine-et-Loire 49:
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Log Text: High up on a cliff edge (because of a quarry) this dolmen can just about be seen through the trees from the roadside next to the cemetary. However, its on private land, and a proper viewing is not possible. It looks like a pretty big dolmen despite its name, and perhaps a more typical Angevine dolmen. It looks to be in fairly good condition.



Le Petit Ménec

Trip No.203  Entry No.369  Date Added: 11th May 2020
Site Type: Multiple Stone Rows / Avenue Country: France (Bretagne:Morbihan (56))
Visited: Yes on 12th Jun 2005. My rating: Condition 4 Ambience 5 Access 4

Le Petit Ménec

Le Petit Ménec submitted by ermine on 6th Aug 2004. Confusingly, Petit-Menéc is in fact at the opposite, eastern end of the alignments to le Menéc village at the western end. You need to turn left onto the D186 main road after continuing from Kerlescan. After about 250m turn right into a minor road going past a forest, there is a clearing where you can park after about 400m. The menhirs are in the forest on your right, arranged in a gentle curve. You don't get the same clear overview of the alignments since the view is obscured by the trees, bu...
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Log Text: This is a nice place to explore on a hot afternoon, a nice walk in a cool woodland filled with stones. There are hundreds of them to be seen, lined up through the woods, mostly less than a metre tall but some reach up to about 2 metres. There are round ones, pointy ones, square ones, thick ones, thin ones, indeed all shapes and sizes. Look a bit further into the woods away from the footpath and you'll find more stones.

The lines seem to get closer together, as does the spacing of the stones, the further east you go, but nothing seems very ordered or regular. From where I sit and have a contemplate, I can count 8 rows, but there are probably more hidden by trees or under walls.

Excellent. I later find out that there was once much more to be seen here, with the rows being destroyed and removed in order to build the Belle Ile lighthouse.



Le Pont du Gard

Trip No.205  Entry No.198  Date Added: 26th Nov 2020
Site Type: Ancient Mine, Quarry or other Industry Country: France (Languedoc:Gard (30))
Visited: Yes on 21st Sep 2005. My rating: Condition 5 Ambience 5 Access 5

Le Pont du Gard

Le Pont du Gard submitted by Humbucker on 25th Jul 2020. The Pont Du Gard in Provence on a beautiful May afternoon 2019
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Log Text: Rive Gauche or Rive Droite? I went to the first one signed, Rive Droite. Probably better to have gone to the other side as that’s where all the information is. The Rive Droite side all got washed away in a storm on the 9th September 2002, when the river rose over 29 metres. They have pictures. Incredible.

What a lovely place. Fantastic bridge (used for over 500 years to supply water to the city of Nimes), lovely river and some splendid walks round signed footpaths which take you to various viewpoints and other bits of the ancient aqueduct system. Yes, you could spend ages here walking around, visiting the various museums etc (I didn't). Two and a half hours disappeared in no time and I was being quick. I'd best buy a book of pictures. Beautiful colours. Blue sky, golden bridge, green forested banks, shimmering green water and nearly white rocks.

Beautiful.



Le Quadrilatere

Trip No.203  Entry No.386  Date Added: 14th May 2020
Site Type: Passage Grave Country: France (Bretagne:Morbihan (56))
Visited: Yes on 13th Jun 2005. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3 Access 4

Le Quadrilatere

Le Quadrilatere submitted by rw1 on 3rd Mar 2008. 09/2007
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Log Text: This is a quadrilateral of stones in the forest to the north of the alignements. It initially looks to me like the outside peristalith from a long gone passage grave, but closer inspection shows it to be more than that.

As I am here, a party of horse riders ride right through, and then a bus tour of people, who all turn up, take a picture, and then move on elsewhere. While here I met a couple of Brazilian ladies who saw I was writing, and came up to ask me some questions. They are looking out the old stones, and were interested in what I was doing, and wanted to take my internet address. I should have got them to take a picture of me beside the Giant.



Le Rigourdou

Trip No.203  Entry No.88  Date Added: 6th Apr 2020
Site Type: Cave or Rock Shelter Country: France (Aquitaine:Dordogne (24))
Visited: Saw from a distance on 20th May 2005

Le Rigourdou

Le Rigourdou submitted by TheCaptain on 14th Jan 2011. These days, this cliff shelter is contained within a little visitor centre with bears.
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Log Text: Within this cliff shelter just a bit up the hillside from Lascaux found in March 1954 had the discovery made on 22 September 1957 of a complete Neanderthal skeleton in it. Not only this but also several burials of at least 5 bears were found suggesting some strange bear cult or activity. These days its fenced off with a little visitor centre and bears.



Le Riverais 1

Trip No.203  Entry No.296  Date Added: 26th Apr 2020
Site Type: Standing Stone (Menhir) Country: France (Pays de la Loire:Loire-Atlantique)
Visited: Yes on 8th Jun 2005. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 2 Access 4

Le Riverais 1

Le Riverais 1 submitted by AlexHunger on 3rd Jun 2005. 3 Meters tall irregular shaped menhir with holes, on farmer's field in center of Hamlet of Riverais 4.5 Km West from Saint-Pere-en-Retz. Other Menhir nearby.
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Log Text: Just beside the road in the hamlet of Riverais, to the west of St-Père-en-Retz, can be found this menhir beside a farmyard entrance. Its about 2.5 metres tall, but looks like the top has been broken off.



Le Rocher du Diable

Trip No.203  Entry No.543  Date Added: 2nd Jun 2020
Site Type: Standing Stone (Menhir) Country: France (Bretagne:Finistère (29))
Visited: Yes on 23rd Jun 2005. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3 Access 4

Le Rocher du Diable

Le Rocher du Diable submitted by TheCaptain on 18th Apr 2011. This is a pleasant enough menhir in a field beside the road on the western slopes of the hill upon which the Chapelle St Michel is built. It's approaching three metres in height, nearly as wide at the base, and made of the local quarzite stone, which is pointed at the top.
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Log Text: This is a pleasant enough menhir in a field beside the road on the western slopes of the hill upon which the Chapelle St Michel is built. It's approaching three metres in height, nearly as wide at the base, and made of the local quarzite stone, which is pointed at the top. There is another block of stone beside it which is the top which was broken off after a lightning strike. With a name like this, there should be legends and stories, but I dont know of any.



Le Roi Gradlon

Trip No.193  Entry No.9  Date Added: 13th Jul 2020
Site Type: Rock Outcrop Country: France (Bretagne:Côtes-D'Armor (22))
Visited: Yes on 30th May 1993. My rating: Access 5

Le Roi Gradlon

Le Roi Gradlon submitted by TheCaptain on 28th Jun 2020. Old postcard of Le Roi Gradlon
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Log Text: Cycling camping trip of north Brittany, day 2. Tregastel, Ile Grande, Tel Star Satellite place. Snake! Lots of ancient stones. A large granite outcrop which resembles a crowned kings head protruding up through the earth towers above the beach of la grêve blanche.



Le Trepied

Date Added: 18th Sep 2010
Site Type: Passage Grave Country: Channel Islands and Isle of Man (Guernsey)
Visited: Yes on 11th Jun 2008

Le Trepied

Le Trepied submitted by thecaptain on 11th Jun 2008. Postage stamp featuring Le Trepied Chambered Tomb beside the road close to Le Catioroc at Perelle Bay in Guernsey.
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Log Text: None



Le Tribunal

Trip No.203  Entry No.9  Date Added: 30th Mar 2020
Site Type: Stone Circle Country: France (Bretagne:Ille-et-Vilaine (35))
Visited: Yes on 13th May 2005. My rating: Condition 4 Ambience 3 Access 4

Le Tribunal

Le Tribunal submitted by thecaptain on 23rd Nov 2005. One of the stones in the arc of the Tribunal, at St Just. An amazing rock, in an amazing place.
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Log Text: What is now an arc of 9 large white stones is the remains of what was once a 15 stone semicircle facing towards a single large white stone (the Judge) about 50 metres to the east. This is said to be an astronomical alignment of some kind. One of the stones at the southern end of the Tribunal is the most fantastically marked stone with black and white swirls everywhere.

I met some Americans here one of who asked if I knew anything much about the stones as she could see I was taking notes. They had been looking for information on the internet and had found about Saint Just being a focal point of many Ley lines. She had also found the megalithic portal. When I told them what I was doing they made sure they took my picture with some stones in action taking notes and said they would send the picture on. They also wanted my autograph on their little leaflet and map that they had ! A nice moment.



Le Wuy Menhir

Trip No.212  Entry No.17  Date Added: 30th Mar 2020
Site Type: Standing Stone (Menhir) Country: France (Normandie:Seine-Maritime (76))
Visited: Yes on 27th Dec 2012. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3 Access 5

Le Wuy Menhir

Le Wuy Menhir submitted by theCaptain on 1st Jan 2014. Described as a menhir, this site is more likely the remains of a burial chamber of some sort, which has been largely destroyed by agriculture.
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Log Text: Described as a menhir, this site is the remains of a burial chamber of some sorts, which has been largely destroyed by agriculture. The remains I found consist of one large standing stone, about 2 m width and just over a metre in height. Its a lovely slab of sarsen like stone, which is all smooth on the southern face, but all lumpy and holed on the northern face, as sarsen often is. Beside this stone is another slab of sarsen flat to the ground.

I am sure this is not a menhir as described, but a remaining slab from a burial chamber of some sort, whether a side slab or end slab is not clear. It is possible that this stone is not in its original position, but has been moved here to help clear the fields for ploughing.



Leaze Cist

Date Added: 18th Sep 2010
Site Type: Cist Country: England (Cornwall)
Visited: Yes on 24th Mar 2005

Leaze Cist

Leaze Cist submitted by TheCaptain on 24th Mar 2005. Walking northwards towards King Arthur’s Hall from the end of the road out into Bodmin Moor near Leaze waterworks, the remains of a fine cist within a kerbed cairn are to be found. The cist is about 3 foot long by 18 inches wide, and a couple of feet deep, lined with good slabs of stone. The surrounding cairn is fairly small, probably only about 3 metres in diameter, but with a clear circle of stones surrounding it.
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Log Text: None



Leckhampton Hill

Date Added: 7th Aug 2021
Site Type: Hillfort Country: England (Gloucestershire)
Visited: Yes on 4th Aug 2021. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 4 Access 4

Leckhampton Hill

Leckhampton Hill submitted by h_fenton on 10th Nov 2011. Leckhampton Hill hillfort / promontory fort, Gloucestershire. Viewed from the south-west. Kite Aerial Photograph 6 November 2011
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Log Text: Cotswold Way walk around Leckhampton Hill from Seven Springs, wonderful views all over Cheltenham and the Severn valley all the way round, with an exploration of the hillfort, trig point and quarry with the Devil's Chimney. Then south to Ullenwood, turning east past Cuckoopen Farm and then down past the big old longbarrow to Coberley and heading back north to the Seven Springs for a pint.



Leeden Hill

Date Added: 30th Apr 2022
Site Type: Standing Stone (Menhir) Country: England (Devon)
Visited: Would like to visit

Leeden Hill

Leeden Hill submitted by Anne T on 19th Sep 2016. The Leedon Hill Standing stone, submitted on behalf of Prehistoric Dartmoor Walks.
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Leeden Tor

Date Added: 30th Apr 2022
Site Type: Stone Row / Alignment Country: England (Devon)
Visited: Would like to visit

Leeden Tor

Leeden Tor submitted by Brian Byng on 7th Feb 2002. Leeden Tor - Cairn at upper end SX 5653 7147. A scrappy row 107 m long but with only 4 stones still upright. Cairn 6m dia with large central pit. Runs NW - SE with cairn at uphill N W end. The cairn Has a reeve cutting across it and the row has another reeve cutting across. Reeve - local word for a prehitoric field boundary maade from roughly assembled granite blocks now sometimes only traces exist as here. Reeve building on Dartmoor circa 1400 BC. Seems likely that the rows pred...
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Legis Tor Cairns

Date Added: 29th Oct 2019
Site Type: Cist Country: England (Devon)
Visited: Yes on 27th May 2013

Legis Tor Cairns

Legis Tor Cairns submitted by theCaptain on 27th May 2013. Legis Tor Cairn 2 has its cist still well defined by two side stones; its capstone offset to the south, and much of its encircling kerb still present. View here north of west
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Log Text: None



Legis Tor Enclosures

Date Added: 29th Oct 2019
Site Type: Ancient Village or Settlement Country: England (Devon)
Visited: Yes on 21st May 2013

Legis Tor Enclosures

Legis Tor Enclosures submitted by TheCaptain on 21st May 2013. One of the Legis Tor hut circles
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Log Text: None



Leigh Down

Date Added: 29th Oct 2019
Site Type: Stone Circle Country: England (Somerset)
Visited: Yes on 12th May 2012

Leigh Down

Leigh Down submitted by theCaptain on 12th May 2012. Description of Leigh Down stone circle from "The Lost Stone Circles of North Somerset" by EK Tratman.
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Log Text: None



Leighterton Long Barrow

Date Added: 23rd Oct 2021
Site Type: Long Barrow Country: England (Gloucestershire)
Visited: Yes on 14th Nov 2004

Leighterton Long Barrow

Leighterton Long Barrow submitted by thecaptain on 15th Nov 2004. View from the lane at the east by the village school.
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Log Text: Massive long barrow to the east of the village of Leighterton, which can be seen walled in across a couple of fields. I could find no public access. The remains of this barrow are massive, and as is often the case, covered with trees. It looks to be one worthy of further exploration if possible.




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