Stones above Grasmere
#5
Original Poster

Joined: Jun 2012
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Janis, they're about three feet tall, but het, they've been deliberately placed there. They don't cover anything and don't seem to be in use in any way. I've googled the heck out of them, but no luck. They have a square pattern and geometric lines on them.
#6



Joined: Oct 2005
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I noticed the geometric patterns and the holes on the back side like they may have been mounted on something.
I'm curious too . It is definitely a long shot but I PM'd BritishCaicos on the off chance he might have some ideas . . .
I'm curious too . It is definitely a long shot but I PM'd BritishCaicos on the off chance he might have some ideas . . .
Last edited by janisj; May 17th, 2018 at 12:52 PM.
#7
Joined: Feb 2004
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My first thought was that perhaps they were sample stones from a stone mason or apprentice but the fact that they are metal dismisses that idea. Might be a metal worker trying to replicate a particular stone pattern, or for some type of religious piece inside a church.I imagine there are several stages/stories between the making of the metal slabs and their placement. Perhaps they found their way to Grasmere or were brought there by someone with imagination who placed them in that particular spot. I doubt they have any religious or historical significance.
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#8
Joined: Oct 2006
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walking on the fell above Grasmere
Used to have family there. Say used to as the last one passed away a few weeks ago. I went there for vacations for many years.
Other possibles are FAceBOOk
Maybe another point to contact? Grasmere Blog.
The email for the local tourist information centre is [email protected]
Please let us know if you find out the information.
#11
Joined: Feb 2004
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Sorry I cannot help w/your question *but* I was very recently thinking of how wonderfully delicious these treats are! I hope that you have enjoyed some while you are there in Grasmere. https://www.grasmeregingerbread.co.uk
#13
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#14
Joined: Jul 2004
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When I was hiking in the Alps last year we passed a set of 7-8 foot tall wooden sculptures vaguely reminiscent of Easter Island, or perhaps totem poles. They were placed in a spectacular location below Mont Blanc. I'm not sure how old they were (50-100 years?) and no one, including our guides, had any idea what they were doing there. Online searching also came up blank. Presumably a local resident with an artistic streak?
Perhaps a nearby neo-neolithic artist propped them up there?? Someone taking the time and effort to do that could have aligned them in a significant direction. Who knows? Good luck finding an answer!
Perhaps a nearby neo-neolithic artist propped them up there?? Someone taking the time and effort to do that could have aligned them in a significant direction. Who knows? Good luck finding an answer!
#15
Joined: Oct 2006
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I found the email via only one website. The rest just phone numbers. Sorry about that it was bum information. I was really hoping for some news. Maybe the blogger for the village would know. I have done search via Google but all that came up were the grave stones in the churchyard.
So you do not know which fell, can you give us a clue in which direction you walked and from where. Things like the book store, or the Heaton Cooper Studio , the church, the car park...or ???
With those symbols maybe it is a witches gathering point.
So you do not know which fell, can you give us a clue in which direction you walked and from where. Things like the book store, or the Heaton Cooper Studio , the church, the car park...or ???
With those symbols maybe it is a witches gathering point.
#16
Joined: Feb 2004
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Lucky you, Rubicund, to have had a Mum who could make that gingerbread. For DH and me, we had never had any like that....the gingerbread in the states (that we have had, there may be others..) has either been cake-like or cookie-like, whereas the one in Grasmere was totally unlike any we had ever had tasted.
Anyway, I hope you continue to have a good trip. Thanks for the photo of the shop!
Anyway, I hope you continue to have a good trip. Thanks for the photo of the shop!
#17
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Joined: Jun 2012
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socialworker, maybe the gingerbread is a Northern England thing. We also have something called parkin which is first cousin to gingerbread, although I prefer the gingerbread. The walk was on a day trip up to the Lakes from where we live in Pendle, maybe a 90 minute drive.
ribeirasacra, we walked from the village roughly in a south eastern direction and did an clockwise loop back into Grasmere where we had parked. It was in the first"15 minutes" of the clock face that we saw these slabs. I'd also googled it, googled the photo too, but no luck. I'll keep trying.
ribeirasacra, we walked from the village roughly in a south eastern direction and did an clockwise loop back into Grasmere where we had parked. It was in the first"15 minutes" of the clock face that we saw these slabs. I'd also googled it, googled the photo too, but no luck. I'll keep trying.
#19
Joined: Oct 2006
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socialworker, maybe the gingerbread is a Northern England thing. We also have something called parkin which is first cousin to gingerbread, although I prefer the gingerbread. The walk was on a day trip up to the Lakes from where we live in Pendle, maybe a 90 minute drive.
ribeirasacra, we walked from the village roughly in a south eastern direction and did an clockwise loop back into Grasmere where we had parked. It was in the first"15 minutes" of the clock face that we saw these slabs. I'd also googled it, googled the photo too, but no luck. I'll keep trying.
ribeirasacra, we walked from the village roughly in a south eastern direction and did an clockwise loop back into Grasmere where we had parked. It was in the first"15 minutes" of the clock face that we saw these slabs. I'd also googled it, googled the photo too, but no luck. I'll keep trying.

I have found another interesting blog located around the Lakes.
https://lakedistrictgems.co.uk/2017/...bank-grasmere/
So this is not time wasted for me
#20
Joined: Jul 2004
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I played around with the contrast and clarity of the photo in an attempt to make those patterns more visible.
Not a great job, but here it is. Maybe it means something to someone. Is there a druid in the audience?

With those eye rings on the back side they are somewhat like irrigation ditch sluice gates that are around near where I live.
The Allan Bank house story was interesting,
Not a great job, but here it is. Maybe it means something to someone. Is there a druid in the audience?

With those eye rings on the back side they are somewhat like irrigation ditch sluice gates that are around near where I live.
The Allan Bank house story was interesting,



