Category: Sotland

  • Rousay

    It was time for a day trip to Rousay, the little island just vis a vis from Evie and the Broch of Gurness. It is the 6th largest island of Orkney and around 200 people live in Rousay.

    Travelling there is a bit scary, at least the part when you have to reverse drive onto the ferry, down a pier. Lucky for me the guys at the ferry are great at directing and we didn´t land in the sea. The ferry ride to Rousay is short, but better keep your car windows closed, there might be some waves…

    Little daytrip to Rousay an Orkanian island filled with neolithic finds.

    Rousay has been nicknamed ‘The Egypt of the North’ due to its richness in archaeological sites – a total of 166, including Midhowe Broch and Cairn, a popular destinations for visitors to the island. (Around Rousay.co.uk)

    Little daytrip to Rousay an Orkanian island filled with neolithic finds.

    Unfortunately, many places to visit were closed, but I still walked up a hill to see the Knowe of Yurso from the outside.

    Knowe of Yarso

    Knowe of Yarso is one of at least 15 chambered tombs on the small island of Rousay. These were used for communal burial and their distribution probably relates to landholding by small farming communities. (Historic Enviroment Scotland)

    The remains of at least 29 people, as well as deer and dogs, were found in this cairn.

    Little daytrip to Rousay an Orkanian island filled with neolithic finds.

    Knowe of Yarso dates back to between 3500 and 2500 BC and was in use until the late 2000s BC. The chamber inside is divided into compartments by upright slabs.

    Little daytrip to Rousay an Orkanian island filled with neolithic finds.

    Little daytrip to Rousay an Orkanian island filled with neolithic finds.

    The site was closed, but I still enjoyed the walk up the hill and the views from here towards “mainland” Orkney and the island Eynhallow.

    Little daytrip to Rousay an Orkanian island filled with neolithic finds.

    Little daytrip to Rousay an Orkanian island filled with neolithic finds.

    Little daytrip to Rousay an Orkanian island filled with neolithic finds.Little daytrip to Rousay an Orkanian island filled with neolithic finds.Little daytrip to Rousay an Orkanian island filled with neolithic finds.

  • Click Mill

    Visiting an 1800s water mill in Orkney.

    Click Mill

    Time for a little visit to Click Mill, a fully restored water mill built in the early 1820s, and was operational until the mid-1880s.

    The tradition of horizontal water mills in northern and western Scotland dates back to Norse times. The Click Mill at Dounby is one of the best surviving examples of this kind of mill. (Historic Enviroment Scotland)

    Visiting an 1800s water mill in Orkney.

    Inside the mill, there is still the full machinery. These kinds of mills are quite genius designs, making the best of a low head and volume of water.

    Visiting an 1800s water mill in Orkney.

    Click Mill is quite hidden in the landscape, might that have been intentional to avoid paying the landlord?

    Visiting an 1800s water mill in Orkney.Visiting an 1800s water mill in Orkney.

    Burgar Hill Wind Farm

    On my way back to Evie I stopped near the Burgar Hill Wind Farm, to enjoy the views over Orkney.

    View from Burgar wind farm over Orkney

    These windmills are huge!

    View from Burgar wind farm over Orkney

    Sands of Evie

    Walking along the sands of Evie in Orkney.

    The beach in Evie goes towards the Broch of Gurness – a wonderful place to take a walk and just enjoy the views and sounds.

    Walking along the sands of Evie in Orkney.Walking along the sands of Evie in Orkney.

    Walking along the sands of Evie in Orkney.Walking along the sands of Evie in Orkney.

    View towards Rousay, may destination for the next day.

  • The Knowes of Trotty

    Walking around a Bronze Age cementary - the Knowes of Trotty in Orkney.

    The Knowes of Trotty – I actually “found” them while looking for a nice little walk in Orkney. And taking a little hike to a Bronze Age cemetery really sounded intriguing. I circled around them first as I couldn´t find the starting point for the walk, but in the end I found the tiny parking (on the other side than I thought it was) and was on my way to explore the Knowes of Trotty.

    Walking around a Bronze Age cementary - the Knowes of Trotty in Orkney.

    The Knowes of Trotty are found tucked away in the heart of the parish of Harray, in Orkney’s West Mainland. What might look like a patch of land with small hillocks on it is actually one of the largest Bronze Age cemeteries in the UK, featuring up to 16 burial mounds, or barrows. (Orkney.com)

    First excavated in the mid 19th century the mounds are believed to be 4000 years old, today they might not be looking that impressive due to erosion, but more than 4000 years ago they would have been visible from all around.

    The barrows are stone burial cists covered with a stone cairn and earth, some marked with standing stones. (Orkney.com)

    Walking around a Bronze Age cementary - the Knowes of Trotty in Orkney.

    It is a lovely walk through marshland with some little wooden bridges going over wet areas, just hearing birds chirping.

    When the biggest mound was opened in the 19th century some golden artefacts from the Bronze Age, which today are on display in the National Museum in Edinburgh.

    In 2005, around 150 years after the opening of the cist, archaeologists came back to the Knowes of Trotty and opened the mounds again. They found remains from their Victorian colleagues and had a hard time reconstructing how the barrow originally looked like.

    But they were still able to reconstruct the original shape.

    The barrow had also been raised on top of a deliberately sculpted, natural mound, presumably to increase its height and enhance the visual effect. There is no doubt the burial monument would have been striking in the landscape – appearing as a conical mound on top of an earthen platform. (NessofBrodgar.co.uk)

    Walking around a Bronze Age cementary - the Knowes of Trotty in Orkney.

    Besides bone fragments also some of the lost beads were found.

    As well as the gold, the re-excavation produced another five triangular amber beads and a rectangular spacer plate.

    The re-excavation allowed the archaeologists to view what Petrie had presumably witnessed in 1857/58.  Seeing the cist first-hand, the parallels between its architecture and that of the Early Neolithic were striking – if not slightly puzzling at first. (NessofBrodgar.co.uk)

    The cist was very large and look like an early Neolithic stone house – might it have been adapted for the Bronze Age cist?

    A possible explanation lay a short distance to the north-east, where, in 2002, the unexpected remains of an Early Neolithic house had been uncovered. Based on its architecture the house clearly dated from the fourth millennium BC.
    The building was constructed sometime between 3400BC and 3100BC. The different wall sections showed the house had seen at least three phases of occupation and alteration during its 200-year lifespan. (NessofBrodgar.co.uk)

    Walking around a Bronze Age cementary - the Knowes of Trotty in Orkney.

    There are theories that the Knowes of Trotty would have been a larger Neolithic settlement built on the natural mounds. These structures had been levelled to allow the barrow’s construction. The barrow probably was then influenced by its preceded buildings.

    Walking around a Bronze Age cementary - the Knowes of Trotty in Orkney.

    Walking around a Bronze Age cementary - the Knowes of Trotty in Orkney.

    It is a very easy and lovely walk, definitely would recommend it!

    Walking around a Bronze Age cementary - the Knowes of Trotty in Orkney.