So, Stonehenge. While numbers are limited tickets have to be booked for a half hour entry time slot, and mine was 2 to 2.30pm. There is a large, relatively new visitor centre (opened in 2013), with a permanent exhibition, shop, cafe and reproduction late neolithic houses. When I arrived it was raining slightly, so I decided to visit the indoor exhibition first. As well as the permanent exhibition on the history of the henge and the other prehistoric features in the landscape (lots of barrows, mostly of later date than the stones), there was an exhibition of photographs sent in by members of the public showing people enjoying visits to Stonehenge over the decades. Until 1978 there was open access to the stones - I remember playing on and around them when I visited as a child - but the sheer number of visitors meant that for their protection they had to be roped off.
It seems almost certain that the point of Stonehenge was to allow celebrations of the summer and winter solstices. The single stone in the picture above is the heel stone, which points directly through a gap in the centre of the henge to the setting sun on the winter solstice. Looking the other way, at the summer solstice the sun rises behind the heel stone.
At the end of the circuit of the stones I sat on a bench for a while, enjoying the sun and the view. According to my Watch I had walked 7.5 miles by then and my legs decided they didn't fancy walking back so I took the shuttle bus back to the visitor centre. I bought myself a couple of pencils and a key ring in the shop as useful souvenirs and fuelled up on coffee before heading home. I possibly had just enough juice left in the car battery to make it home, but decided to make a quick charging stop at nearby Amesbury just to be on the safe side. A ten minute top up was all it needed and I made it home in just over 2 hours. Such a treat of a day, rounding off a busy but very enjoyable couple of weeks. Five months of lockdown, and now it seems as though everything is happening at once!
1 comment:
How wonderful you were able to get there, what a treat. We visited when I was fourteen (that was rather a while ago, early ‘80s!!).
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