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A Spiral Stone Circle

jsalt

Jill
Time of past OR future Camino
Portugués, Francés, LePuy, Rota Vicentina, Norte, Madrid, C2C, Salvador, Primitivo, Aragonés, Inglés
I am currently reading “The Way of Stars and Stones, Thoughts on a Pilgrimage” by Wilna Wilkinson. (Published in 2009.) On page 184 she writes:

“After leaving Atapuerca, with its remains of prehistoric man, there’s a steady climb for several kilometres over particularly stony ground. When you near the top of the hill . . . slightly to your left . . . is a very tall cross . . . When you continue up the hill, suddenly, without warning, a vast plateau opens in front of you . . . in the middle of this wide-open plateau on top of the world is a stone spiral; a spiral made of a single continuous line of stones, one against the other, that pilgrims have placed there over time. The spiral covers an enormous area . . . I calculated that the total length of the spiral must be more than a kilometre . . . And when I added my own stone at the end of the line I felt as if I was making my own contribution to a most hallowed place.”

I remember the cross, and the vast plateau at the top of the hill, but I only vaguely remember a line of stones. Does anyone know if the complete spiral is still there, and if anyone still adds another stone to the end of the spiral? If so, I must pay more attention to this place next time I’m wandering through. Jill
 
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It was still there in 2014 as I walked past. Here a pic, SY

Stonecircle.jpg
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
I am currently reading “The Way of Stars and Stones, Thoughts on a Pilgrimage” by Wilna Wilkinson. (Published in 2009.) On page 184 she writes:

“After leaving Atapuerca, with its remains of prehistoric man, there’s a steady climb for several kilometres over particularly stony ground. When you near the top of the hill . . . slightly to your left . . . is a very tall cross . . . When you continue up the hill, suddenly, without warning, a vast plateau opens in front of you . . . in the middle of this wide-open plateau on top of the world is a stone spiral; a spiral made of a single continuous line of stones, one against the other, that pilgrims have placed there over time. The spiral covers an enormous area . . . I calculated that the total length of the spiral must be more than a kilometre . . . And when I added my own stone at the end of the line I felt as if I was making my own contribution to a most hallowed place.”

I remember the cross, and the vast plateau at the top of the hill, but I only vaguely remember a line of stones. Does anyone know if the complete spiral is still there, and if anyone still adds another stone to the end of the spiral? If so, I must pay more attention to this place next time I’m wandering through. Jill
Saw that circle of stones last summer, but no way did it look to be 1000 meters in length in any shape or form and didn't seem to be very "hallowed". Looks relatively new, and not ancient as one would associate "hallowed" with. Just looks like some inventive, imaginative peregrinos started a circular, spiraling, stone marked path.
Ms. Wilkinson sure has quite the imagination there. ;)
 
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Shops from Belerado to Santiago to Sligo in Ireland will be happy to sell you genuine and authentic Celtic style/New Age spirals, concentric circles, interlocking geometric figures. Hey, people have to make a living! The only real Celtic culture easily found remains the gaita galega-the Galician bagpipes. Similar to the Scottish variety and used by the police in both countries to test sobriety of drivers. If you enjoy the music, you're drunk.
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
there's one between Terradillos and Moratinos. And one between Hospital de Orbigo and Astorga. And a couple on the Via de la Plata, too. But I am not listing them, or giving lots of detail, because they should be discovered individually.
 
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...The only real Celtic culture easily found remains the gaita galega-the Galician bagpipes. Similar to the Scottish variety and used by the police in both countries to test sobriety of drivers. If you enjoy the music, you're drunk.

Then I must be permanently drunk :eek: as I love gaita/bagpipe music! SY
 
Shops from Belerado to Santiago to Sligo in Ireland will be happy to sell you genuine and authentic Celtic style/New Age spirals, concentric circles, interlocking geometric figures. Hey, people have to make a living! The only real Celtic culture easily found remains the gaita galega-the Galician bagpipes. Similar to the Scottish variety and used by the police in both countries to test sobriety of drivers. If you enjoy the music, you're drunk.

I understand the joke. I wouldn´t go to a gaita galega concert, but the gaita galega is very important for us (Galegos) and most of us feel something inside when we hear its sound.
 
Spotting the stone circles sometimes depends on where you are standing - the perspective you have is important. One one occasion, I didn't realize people were staring at a stone circle until I was practically on top of them.
People build lots of things out of stone along the Camino. Besides walls and houses, I mean.
 
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I am currently reading “The Way of Stars and Stones, Thoughts on a Pilgrimage” by Wilna Wilkinson. (Published in 2009.) On page 184 she writes:

“After leaving Atapuerca, with its remains of prehistoric man, there’s a steady climb for several kilometres over particularly stony ground. When you near the top of the hill . . . slightly to your left . . . is a very tall cross . . . When you continue up the hill, suddenly, without warning, a vast plateau opens in front of you . . . in the middle of this wide-open plateau on top of the world is a stone spiral; a spiral made of a single continuous line of stones, one against the other, that pilgrims have placed there over time. The spiral covers an enormous area . . . I calculated that the total length of the spiral must be more than a kilometre . . . And when I added my own stone at the end of the line I felt as if I was making my own contribution to a most hallowed place.”

I remember the cross, and the vast plateau at the top of the hill, but I only vaguely remember a line of stones. Does anyone know if the complete spiral is still there, and if anyone still adds another stone to the end of the spiral? If so, I must pay more attention to this place next time I’m wandering through. Jill

I walked it 2 or 3 days ago. It is still there, and very visible. Walking it in and out = c. 1km. I didn't add a stone. Maybe next time!

There are other 2 (smaller) between San Juan de Ortega and Agés, near two big trees.
 
Canadian pilgrimage legend Laurie Dennett keeps a spectacular full-scale Chartres labyrinth in her yard in Laguna de las Tablas, a hamlet just outside O Cebreiro. It is listed in the Quiet Gardens registry, and you can walk it if you behave yourself and don't go banging on the door. https://quietgarden.org/gardens/el-jardin-del-labirinto/ It's about a kilometer off the Camino.
 
Canadian pilgrimage legend Laurie Dennett keeps a spectacular full-scale Chartres labyrinth in her yard in Laguna de las Tablas, a hamlet just outside O Cebreiro. It is listed in the Quiet Gardens registry, and you can walk it if you behave yourself and don't go banging on the door. https://quietgarden.org/gardens/el-jardin-del-labirinto/ It's about a kilometer off the Camino.
Rebekah Scott,
What a beautiful spot this appears to be in these link photos. Thank you for posting it!
Someday when I might travel easily again I should like to see this at Lagoa and also your hillscape at Moratinos.
Stay safe and Carpe diem
 
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I have walked by the stone circle at Atapuerca a few times and just looked at it ... but in September I decided to walk it. It did take me much longer than the few minutes I'd anticipated ( I was walking with a couple of other ladies who decided to jump in and walk it too as I was taking so long :) ) I felt strangely contented and satisfied once I completed it... and felt it was worth the wait :)

Do we know how long that circle has been there?
 
I have walked by the stone circle at Atapuerca a few times and just looked at it ... but in September I decided to walk it. It did take me much longer than the few minutes I'd anticipated ( I was walking with a couple of other ladies who decided to jump in and walk it too as I was taking so long :) ) I felt strangely contented and satisfied once I completed it... and felt it was worth the wait :)

Do we know how long that circle has been there?
LesBrass,
Is this the one you walked?
near Atapuerca .jpg

Check out this earlier thread
for varied relevant (?) data.
 
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The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
The first edition came out in 2003 and has become the go-to-guide for many pilgrims over the years. It is shipping with a Pilgrim Passport (Credential) from the cathedral in Santiago de Compostela.

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