The north-western segment of the "sheepfold" wall -- very ruinous and very old, and heavily colonised by lichens.
Paul Sambrook's map showing the ruinous enclosure and the other enigmatic features in the neighbourhood.
The small rectangular enclosure inside the western part of the periphery wall.
The enclosure is very large, about 40m north-south, and over 50m west-east. It has one rectangular feature inside the western wall and another smaller rectangular feature near the angle in the eastern wall; might these have been shepherd's shelters? There are a couple of quite narrow gaps in the walls -- but were they ever big enough to have been used in connection with the herding and containing of sheep or other animals? For the most part very substantial boulders have been used -- some of them are over a metre long, and moving them must not have been an easy task. I have some doubts that these walls ever were high enough and tidy enough to have held sheep -- for that you need a vertical wall almost 2m high.
Within 100m of the enclosure there are a number of "platforms", mounds and signs of stone arrangements, and the most prominent is a a ruinous "long hut" which must have been rectangular and which is now largely covered with turf. Shepherd's hut, or something else?
The remains of the "long hut" near the eastern bank of the river.
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