I lived 2 minutes away from the cheesering on Bodmin and would take great walk nearly every day growing up and ever since that as a young child I’ve had should we say other worldly experiences all my life in the sky in numerous landscapes and fields so it’s been lovely too see your video of the place I grew up Luvz yuh bro ✌️👌🇬🇧🌎🌍
Ah ! nice one Hugh :) my Home patch !! you picked a good day weather wise !! ...... ps, the Pipers are an Equinoctal device .. directly due North of them Is Stowes Hill and the 'Pound' , a Neolithic Sacred citadel, and on that Hill near the edge of the Quarry is a triangular stone that if you stand lying against it and face inwards to the Sacred Enclosure you are facing exactly North ...an ideal place to watch the transit of the heavens . The so called 'crystal pavement' also has a small rock fast 'pyramid' stone at its centre and the Michael line goes through it . The Mary and Michael lines node /cross over in the central circle just south of the centre stone .
The Cheesewring Quarry supplied some of the granite for Tower Bridge's foundations (London) and it was threatened with destruction in the late nineteenth century by blasting operations, but was saved by local activists!
I'm not far from here, just the other side of the Tamar. They are said to have healing properties but sadly did not help my friend's wife. We sometimes visit to lay flowers at the site in her memory.
I have a distant memory of seeing an apple press where chopped or 'mashed' apples were contained in square folded muslin parcels, called 'cheeses', and then stacked and pressed between screw-boards, or a wringer. The juice ran out through the muslin into a trough. The same process could be used for hops, I think. This dolmen therefore was named a 'cheese-wring(er)' because of the appearance of the stacked stones. But it is a dolmen.
I lived 2 minutes away from the cheesering on Bodmin and would take great walk nearly every day growing up and ever since that as a young child I’ve had should we say other worldly experiences all my life in the sky in numerous landscapes and fields so it’s been lovely too see your video of the place I grew up Luvz yuh bro ✌️👌🇬🇧🌎🌍
It's certainly an amazing area. Thanks for your comment.
Fantastic vid Hugh, great aerial views, love all our mystic heritage. Thanks!
Thanks for your kind comment.
Ah ! nice one Hugh :) my Home patch !! you picked a good day weather wise !! ...... ps, the Pipers are an Equinoctal device .. directly due North of them Is Stowes Hill and the 'Pound' , a Neolithic Sacred citadel, and on that Hill near the edge of the Quarry is a triangular stone that if you stand lying against it and face inwards to the Sacred Enclosure you are facing exactly North ...an ideal place to watch the transit of the heavens . The so called 'crystal pavement' also has a small rock fast 'pyramid' stone at its centre and the Michael line goes through it . The Mary and Michael lines node /cross over in the central circle just south of the centre stone .
Thanks for the inspired info Stuart! See you at Megalithomania!
I have to visit Cornwall again, someday.
Very interesting
I wanna hit a Love button !! Yay , thank you
*The stone is forever present for us . Its us being forever present for the stone*
Cool place
More,
This video opens so many questions.
Is that a quarry below the cheesewring ?
The Cheesewring Quarry supplied some of the granite for Tower Bridge's foundations (London) and it was threatened with destruction in the late nineteenth century by blasting operations, but was saved by local activists!
I live near by you didn't mention the famous rillaton or druids cup found at cheesewring made of solid gold
I'm not far from here, just the other side of the Tamar. They are said to have healing properties but sadly did not help my friend's wife. We sometimes visit to lay flowers at the site in her memory.
I have a distant memory of seeing an apple press where chopped or 'mashed' apples were contained in square folded muslin parcels, called 'cheeses', and then stacked and pressed between screw-boards, or a wringer. The juice ran out through the muslin into a trough. The same process could be used for hops, I think. This dolmen therefore was named a 'cheese-wring(er)' because of the appearance of the stacked stones. But it is a dolmen.
Nice hat Hugh
Someones gotta represent the Smithsonian!
I'll see your Giants and raise you we see to far.
° Cheers Hugh ,One tasty giant burger ayy
Yeah, not sure why I said it was a mega "quadruple decker burger". Must have been hungry! ha ha.
Well Hugh it was about a (Cheese) wring so maybe a qauddruple Cheesewring burger for a Hugry giant . HaaHaa Cheers
Tors , we live in a torus field.
Old and new...glimpse Bodmin moor transmitter in background... Too much to ask...
Yoh
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