Thursday, February 26, 2015

12 Flights 7 Weeks: Stonehenge

My Stonehenge adventure started early on November 1st. I caught a train from London Waterloo station got into Salisbury Train Station and walked out to catch the bus to Stonehenge. Now I’d done my research and bought my Stonehenge entrance ticket ahead of time. And I bought my bus ticket but apparently the bus ticket also has the entrance fee in it, but you can get just a return bus ticket for 7£ you just have to ask for a bus ticket only.

That was sorted and off I went! The bus takes you on a little tour of Salisbury city centre before going toward Stonehenge. It was pretty cool actually I learned a lot of little random facts. Then I got to Stonehenge and I was so psyched! I got my ticket and audio tour and I was ready for an adventure!

When I travel I have a little bit of anxiety about leaving my backpack places, regardless of how secure it is. If I had wanted to drop my bag I would have had to leave it at the Salisbury train station. I did not. So I hiked around Stonehenge with my backpack. On the way out I walked from the visitor centre to Stonehenge which is about 2.4 km (1.5 miles). It’s actually an insanely pleasant walk because it’s flat and it’s a very English looking countryside that you walk through all green hills and sheep.




When I got out to Stonehenge it was really breathtaking. Stonehenge had always been one of those things that you see in photos or in Doctor Who and you’re like that place looks so cool. Then you get there and it’s like holy shit this place is real! The stones are huge and it just boggles your mind even more when you see it after reading all the theories behind it and the fact that the stones aren’t from the local countryside. They were hauled in from ages away aka the yellow line.



Before we get to the fun pictures it’s fun facts time! Because seriously Stonehenge’s history is nothing but fun facts! You can obviously find out more on the English Heritage site.

-it was built in several stages. The iconic stones were erected around 2500 BC
- The first monument at Stonehenge was as an early form of henge monument, built about 5,000 years ago
- About 64 cremations have been found, and perhaps as many as 150 individuals were originally buried at Stonehenge, making it the largest late Neolithic cemetery in the British Isles
-About 200 to 300 years after the original blustones were erected in the center they were rearranged to form a circle (like seriously how crazy they set them up and then changed their minds and moved these huge stones!)
- One of the last prehistoric activities at Stonehenge was the digging around the stone settings of two rings of concentric pits, the so-called Y and Z holes, radiocarbon dated by antlers within them to between 1800 and 1500 BC. They may have been intended for a rearrangement of the stones that was never completed
- Many barrow groups appear to have been deliberately located on hilltops visible from Stonehenge itself, such as those on King Barrow Ridge and the particularly rich burials at the Normanton Down cemetery

- Stonehenge appears to have been frequently visited in the Roman period (from AD 43), since many Roman objects have been found there (we all know it’s because the Pandorica is under Stonehenge and Rory had to be there for Amy and the Doctor)
- From 1927, the National Trust began to acquire the land around Stonehenge to preserve it and restore it to grassland.
- Stonehenge is the most architecturally sophisticated and only surviving lintelled stone circle in the world
- The stones were brought from very long distances – the bluestones from the Preseli Hills, over 150 miles away, and the sarsens probably from the Marlborough Downs, 19 miles to the north
- The stones were dressed using sophisticated techniques and erected using precisely interlocking joints, unseen at any other prehistoric monument

I won’t delve into all the different theories about what it’s used for or why it was built. At least not in this post as I don’t want to bore you all to death with miles of reading.

After one walk around the stones I was hungry. 










And had my picnic makings from London aka baguette and cheese! So I hiked up the little sort of hill across from Stonehenge and camped out for lunch and a little bit of journaling. I could even see some barrows!



Then I took one last stroll around the stones and caught the shuttle back to the visitor’s centre.





The new visitor’s centre is pretty cool too. There’s a room when you first enter where you can see a sort a small film about the progression of Stonehenge and it’s from the point of view that you’re standing inside of the stones. I totally watched it 3 or 4 times.

Then I had to hustle it over to the bus stop to catch the last bus. By the time I got back to Salisbury train station it was just before 4 and the perfect time to see Salisbury!

Cheers,

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