Early morning and the dog is crashing around downstairs, she had a 'freaky' day yesterday and it has left her full of energy. Not so me, a migraine all yesterday has left me washed out....
Another birthday will turn round on Monday, my choice of meals out has been fish and chips, strange choice I know but I miss the Silver Street chip shop just round from the old cottage in Whitby. We should be exploring the town whilst the summer visitors are away, but only go in for shopping days...
Sometimes I think to change my personality with a new batch of clothes, Gudrun is a possibility but even I could not wander round in brightly ethnic clothes layered one on top of another, and of course for a muddy stroll in the country they are not exactly practical, there again amongst the Goths of Whitby I would hardly strike a different note........
The day before the headache I had been studying Orkney, prodding my consciousness as to whether one could live in such an environment with that windy stormy weather that is so capricious and then in plain little four square houses with no trees, that would break my heart. The landscape has its own beauty, but the act of living where everything has to be fetched from the mainland and fresh vegetables must be at a premium would be difficult. A map shows how scattered the islands are, prehistoric burials and probably settlements all perched on the edge of the land next to the sea.
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| National Geographic map |
Yet these faraway flung islands in Scotland are now taking centre stage as the Neolithic centre of Great Britain, the two circles that encompass the Ness of Brodgar settlement point to a way of life that is maybe not sophisticated but must have been very well organised.
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| Wiki @ S Marshall - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, |
Has Stonehenge been shunted off its podium, cannot answer that one but it is later in date and of course somewhat different, and if we must look on competition as the driving force of mankind perhaps they did it better in the far North in the early stone period than they did in the South - now that is a turn around for the books... Of course diet might explain it, next to bountiful water plenty of fish and animals to hunt on land, cattle of course. Not forgetting that there was more land around to move from the continent across those wild running seas.
But no matter how much you look at the map, compared to the great bulk of the rest of our island, it was the very tip of the land mass these people settled. What pulls my heart is not the archaeology of the place, but the ruggedness of the land itself, the rocks, the stones erected so labouriously.
The exquisite corbelling of the Maes Howe tomb, surely an architectural wonder of the world, though I notice it has been restored, in the 19th century? so many questions.....