Category: Sotland

  • Skara Brae

    Stepping back into the neolithic times, Skara Brae in Orkney.

    In 1850 a storm uncovered something truly special lying under the sand dunes next to Skaill beach in Orkney: Skara Brae – a Neolithic settlement.

    The Neolithic village of Skara Brae was discovered in the winter of 1850. Wild storms ripped the grass from a high dune known as Skara Brae, beside the Bay of Skaill, and exposed an immense midden (refuse heap) and the ruins of ancient stone buildings. The discovery proved to be the best-preserved Neolithic village in northern Europe. And so it remains today. (Visit Scotland)

    Stepping back into the neolithic times, Skara Brae in Orkney.

    This revealed the outline of a number of stone buildings – something that intrigued the local laird, William Watt, of Skaill, who embarked on an excavation of the site.

    In 1868, after the remains of four ancient houses had been unearthed, work at Skerrabra was abandoned. The settlement remained undisturbed until 1925, when another storm damaged some of the previously excavated structures. (Orkney Jar)

    Skara Brae was inhabited around 5000 years ago – even before the pyramids or Stonehenge were built and thanks to being buried under the sand for around 4000 years it is very well preserved and gives us a glimpse of life back in the Neolithic age.

    Stepping back into the neolithic times, Skara Brae in Orkney.

    Original an inland settlement next to a freshwater loch Skara Brae consists of 10 stone structures. All of them are well built with flat stones (slap stones), set in the middle of a mould and all of them are connected by covered passageways.

    Each house has one room, around 40 square meters, with fitted stone furniture, like shelves, dressers, beds, fireplace and tanks in the floor.

    Stepping back into the neolithic times, Skara Brae in Orkney.

    There is one bigger structure without beds which might have been a workshop or meeting place.

    The villagers were farmers, hunters and fishermen who were able to produce beautiful and complex items using basic tools. (Historic Enviroment Scotland)

    Stepping back into the neolithic times, Skara Brae in Orkney.Stepping back into the neolithic times, Skara Brae in Orkney.

    Each house was constructed along the same design and many have the same sort of furniture and the same layout of the rooms. The village had a drainage system and even indoor toilets. (Worldhistory)

    Stepping back into the neolithic times, Skara Brae in Orkney.

    Skara Brae has probably abandoned around 2500 BC when the weather became colder and wetter. There were also theories that there was a storm which made the inhabitants leave quickly, but others disagree.

    Stepping back into the neolithic times, Skara Brae in Orkney.Stepping back into the neolithic times, Skara Brae in Orkney.Stepping back into the neolithic times, Skara Brae in Orkney.

    Like the Broch of Gurness, it is a fascinating step back in time.

     

  • Broch of Deerness

    A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.

    It was a sunny day, perfect for a little walk to the Broch of Deerness, or better said, another day, another broch.

    It is a lovely walk along the coastline of the Deerness Peninsula right in the East of the Eastern side of Mainland Orkney.

    A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.

    Starting at “The Gloup” – a collapsed sea cave – the walk

    winds its way along the craggy coastline, offering beautiful views out over the North Sea, the island of Copinsay. (Orkney.com)

    A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.

    A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.

    First view of the Broch – can you spot it? Today it lies on the top of a large rock stack standing detached from the nearby cliffs, with only low remnants of the narrow neck of land that once connected it to the cliffs.

    A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.

    There is a (very) narrow path leading down the cliffs and then up the rock to the broch, but it was closed due to landslides.

    So what exactly is the Brough of Deerness? That’s a very good question that no one has yet fully answered. Some feel it started life as an iron age clifftop fortification. Some feel the focus was as a pre-Norse Christian settlement and point as evidence to a number of circular features found in the 1930s: (Undiscovered Scotland)

    A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.

    Excavations in the 1970s unearthed the structure we can see today, the ruins of a chapel dating back to the pre-Norse period.

    A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.

    It was re-established on the same site in the Viking era, in the years around 1100, and continued in use until the 1500s and still later as a place of pilgrimage. (Undiscovered Scotland)

    A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.

    The Brough of Deerness is a well-preserved Viking Age settlement set atop a c. 30 m high sea stack in Orkney’s east Mainland, Scotland. The summit of the stack is crowned by the ruins of a c. tenth- to twelfth-century chapel and the earthworks of approximately 30 associated buildings. (Department of Archeology)

    A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.

    I continued my walk along the coastline for a bit before cutting back towards the start of the walk.

    A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.A walk along the Deerness peninsula towards the Broch of Deerness in Orkney.

  • Evie

    Lovely day in Evie, Orkney.

    My first stay in Orkney was at a lovely croft near Evie, with this stunning view of Roosay. My home was the former cattle stable and was very cosy and neat. I enjoyed visits from the cats of the croft and from the poultry or better said the very curious chickens.

    Lovely day in Evie, Orkney.

    Lovely day in Evie, Orkney.

    On my second day in Orkney, I went to a peninsula in the east of Orkney, Durness. On the way I stopped at a beach, I can´t remember which one it was, but it was stunning!

    Lovely day in Evie, Orkney. Lovely day in Evie, Orkney.

    Lovely day in Evie, Orkney.

    My cute little home in Evie and one of the curious but very friendly chickens.

    Lovely day in Evie, Orkney.