The Legend of Cheesewring in Cornwall
(Link to an expanded version)



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The Legend of Cheesewring in Cornwall
(Link to an expanded version)
Cheesewring by Tony Via Flickr: A granite tor in Cornwall, situated on the eastern flank of Bodmin Moor on Stowe's Hill in the parish of Linkinhorne approximately one mile northwest of the village of Minions and four miles (6 km) north of Liskeard. It is a natural geological formation, a rock outcrop of granite slabs formed by weathering. The name derives from the resemblance of the piled slabs to a "cheesewring", a press-like device that was once used to make cheese.
Human stone balancers, go home.
Village scene in Cheesewring, Cornwall, England
British vintage postcard
Minions and Hurlers
The next day (23 May), we started at Minions and the Hurlers stone circles. A guide with another group entertained us with a lot of information about the circles, some of it sounding plausible, some not so much (radiation in the circle is lower than outside the circle, stuff about ley lines). Cows were resting among the neolithic stones. We then made our way up to the Cheesewring, so called,…
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A Thousand Miles of History XXXX: Second Time Lucky…
A Thousand Miles of History XXXX: Second Time Lucky…
Three days and countless ancient places earlier, our attempts to visit the Cheesewring with Alethea and Larissa had been thwarted by the roiling mists of Bodmin Moor. Mists or not, we were determined to try again on our way home, so once again we found ourselves walking through the triple stone circles of the Hurlers.
This time it was sunny and there were people wandering the stones with us……
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A Thousand Miles of History XXXX: Second Time Lucky…
A Thousand Miles of History XXXX: Second Time Lucky…
Three days and countless ancient places earlier, our attempts to visit the Cheesewring with Alethea and Larissa had been thwarted by the roiling mists of Bodmin Moor. Mists or not, we were determined to try again on our way home, so once again we found ourselves walking through the triple stone circles of the Hurlers.
This time it was sunny and there were people wandering the stones with us……
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A Thousand Miles of History X: Mist and mystery
A Thousand Miles of History X: Mist and mystery
It took us about an hour to drive the twenty-odd miles from Brentor to the Cornish village of Minions on Bodmin moor. There were two sites that we wanted to visit, both of them on the Michael Line, the ley that crosses the country from toe to rump. The girls were amused by the name of the village and by the sheep that occupied prime position in the middle of the road, showing little inclination…
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