Showing posts with label Carnac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carnac. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Shellfishing at Locmariaquer

We awoke December 2 to the sound of cars arriving and people heading for the beach at sunrise (which is pretty late in these parts). What we initially assumed was the early morning sunrise yoga practice at Pierre Plats turned out to be scores of people in Wellies with rakes and buckets and claws, walking and wading out into the tidal flats to gather mussels, clams, and oysters. Alas, we left our clam digging gear back in Montana!













Shellfishing










Scores of people








Gleaners of the Sea...the whole village it seemed like....









A whole basket of oysters!

Pierre Plats

At the end of the Locmariaquer peninsula, out on the sand dunes, just a few feet from the sea, is the unusually large and curved Pierre Plats passage grave. After exploring, we spent the night at an aire right next to it.
Moi, there, at the entrance












Carvings on interior stones











Ditto











Double ditto











From the other end you can see the curve; also the nice menhir
marking the place

Locmariaquer

Locmariaquer is the next peninsula around, 10-15 miles by
road from Carnac; it has its own cluster of major, incredible
sites; above, a hundred meters or so away, is the Grand
Menhir of Brise, some twenty meters in length; it is not
known whether it ever stood, although both medieval and
18th century sources indicate it did; it is surely the largest
of menhirs, whether standing or not, and was moved to
Locmariquer from a quarry 3 miles or so distant...imagine
the size of the trees/rollers it would have taken (and felling
such trees with stone tools) to move this puppy...calculated
to be about 280 tons







The Grand Menhir from the entrance to the Table of Merchants;
the Table of Merchants is of great interest by itself; it is now
known that the "table" itself was part of a smilarly large menhir
that was taken down and broken up...one piece went to the
Merchants Table, one to the Er Grah tumulus (see below),
another to be the roof of Gavrinis (greatest of all these places),
3 miles away in the (now) Gulf of Morbihan; and a fourth piece
is missing










Inside the Table of Merchants









One of the side pillars in the Table of Merchants








The head piece in the Table, about 8 feet tall, carved
beautifully in shepherds' crooks (animal husbandry
being one of the hallmarks of the neolithic)












Same shot, different lighting












The ceiling of the Table of Merchants, that is, the table itself,
with its exquisitely carved 4 foot hafted axe; this is a piece
of the aforementioned chopped-up menhir











Hardly a stone's throw away from all this is
the now-uncovered tumulus of Er Grah,
unkown until quite recently; it is a 130 foot
long tumulus, with a single grave...
somebody important; and another piece of
the chopped-up menhir














Me, by pieces #2 and #3 of the Grand Menhir; it is fascinating
to imagine that the menhir culture actually predated the
tumulus and passage grave culture, that the latter had no use
for the former, all this five, six, seven thousand years ago

Kerlescan

A big megalithic day, December 1, continues; from here we
drove back east to Locmariaquer and its sites; above, the
little alignment between Menec and Kermario







Part of the Kerlescan alignment









Ditto








Cupmarks on one of the big stones










Part of the Kerlescan cromlech











The Tumulus St. Michel, in Carnac; originally there were seven
of these large tumuli scattered around, many mistaken for
natural hills

Monday, December 7, 2009

Kercado Tumulus

The Kercado tumulus and alle couverte is back in Carnac,
where we drove next, again, about a quarter mile south
of the Kermario alignment. Again, it is something we
had never seen before--always in too much of a rush, I
guess, and the Carnac area has some 30,000 megaliths
to look at. Kercado is much older than anything else in
the area, dated authoritatively to 5,000BC, the oldest
known human stone construction anywhere. I am glad
we finally got around to seeing it! Above, Kercado
tumulus, really intact, with trees on top, etc.















Vicki atop the entrance...it's not small











The tumulus has a partially-intact stone circle around it, very
unusual for Brittany










Interior stone carvings..."abstract"











Ditto; I guess they got over the realism of the
Magdalene era (cave paintings, really old)

Rondassec

Right in the middle of a residential neighborhood of
Plouharnel, still northwest of Carnac, is a pretty much intact
tumulus containing three parallel passage graves; the
Rondassec tumulus








Special parking for visitors to dolmens, menhirs, etc.







One of the covered alleys








Another








Me, exploring








Interior view








As a parapente drifts by...

Kerzeho Alignment

Near a village called Erdeven, some miles
northwest of Carnac, there are the remnants
of what would have been the largest of all
the alignments, the Kerzeho. It extended
some two miles, changing course about
midway along the route. But now, much
of it is degraded or missing. Again, no one
has the foggiest of what all this was about
except that it was very important to someone.
All of it high neolithic for these parts, 2,500-
3,500BC.















The highway goes right through the alignment...







View of the alignment








Vicki by the Geant Menhir, part of what was perhaps the
alignment's cromlech; the fallen menhir is pretty big too











Another really huge one, lightning-struck











Part of the cromlech/alignment/whatever







What the locals refer to as the "slaughter stone"








Some 20th century construction, not comparing well...








More of the alignment








And, at the foot of the Geant, another "zero" stone

Night at Kermario


We returned to the Kermario alignment for dinner and a full-
moon stroll among the stones and spent the night there too. Above,
poached salmon with my patented mustard cream caper sauce
flanked by a couple langoustines, with Muscadet wine; Vicki had
frozen pizza and was happy...








Night on the alignment









The Kermario dolmen by flash








More flash...