With three trips remaining on this project, I’m anxious to hit the road. The weather, however, is playing up – one minute the sun’s out, the next the clouds conspire to steal the light. My destination today – Tinto Hill – involves a day trip, but one I’m almost tempted to invent rather than venture 50 miles south east of the city. Does my physical presence matter, I ask myself, or could I simply make a virtual journey, pieced together from maps, Google Earth and other people’s accounts? Not really. Not if I want to feel the ground under my feet, breathe unpolluted air and leave with photographic evidence. That, and any excuse for a picnic.
I know virtually nothing about Tinto Hill apart from the few articles I’ve read, found mostly on hillwalker’s websites and in geological papers. Of course, in Glasgow’s Secret Geometry, Harry Bell refers to Tinto as a visible end-point of a line stretching from Duncolm, north west of the metropolis. The hill is also known as Tintock and Tintock Top. The name Tinto is said to derive from teinnteach, Gaelic for fiery. It’s also Spanish for red, as in vino tinto. Others allude to the felsite and red sandstone rocks visible on the hillside, shaped by the poetic-sounding terms periglacial geomorphology and meltwater channels. Harry Bell calls it the Hill of Fire.
If you want to learn about an area, often the best place to look is in local newspapers. An item in the Hamilton Advertiser intrigues me:
I’m compelled by this idea, of the locals carrying stones – moving mountains – and the human endeavour expended to no practical purpose other than petty point-scoring against another lump of rock. It’s the Sisyphusian futility I admire. According to my husband, more mathematically-inclined that I will ever be, a phenomenon called stacking and other esoteric calculation ensures the fans of Tinto Hill will never succeed at their task, not in 32,000 years. Not ever.
Via the M8 and M73, it takes roughly an hour to travel to the heart of the Clyde Valley. On arrival, the light is diffuse and gauze-like, casting no shadows. Taking the B-road on a loose circuit of the hill, I catch my first glimpse of the shape-shifting contours of Tinto’s north face and its prominent ridge. At 707 metres, (making it a Graham in the index of Scottish hill elevations) Tinto is the highest point of the upper reaches of the Valley, said to offer excellent 360 degree views of both the east and west coasts of Scotland, even as far as Northern Ireland and the Lake District.
Not that I plan to test the theory, being unsuitably clothed and shod. Besides, it’s the hill I’m here to view, not the view itself. And as my husband reminds me, hillwalking is a modern pursuit, not practiced by people until the Romantic era, when those with private means or an indolent bent – often poets – would climb a hill as an end in itself, whereas the mass of the population were too preoccupied with scratching a living out of the land. Today Tinto Hill hosts several leisure activities, such as downhill racing and hang-gliding.
Pausing to take pictures close to the Garf Water I find an old mound not marked on the OS map and ponder what lies beneath it. As a place of ancient foundation, it’s easy to see why Harry Bell chose Tinto as a notable location. However, given its distance from Glasgow – the line from Duncolm is the longest in his diagrams – its significance as part of a secret network of aligned sites eludes me. Bell, of course, refers to Druidical worship on Tinto. Rooting around the internet, I find a reference to Tinto Hill, South Lanarkshire and Druidical worship, in Old Scottish Customs, written in 1885 by E.J. Guthrie –
A once ‘favourite’ festival? Favoured by the tithe collectors, no doubt. This prompts a question – at what point in the human timeline did organised religion decide that extorting money was a legitimate practice? Many of Harry Bell’s sites are places of worship of one form or another. Until recently churches have survived, often built and rebuilt over the centuries. Only lately have these buildings become secular, victims of advanced capitalism, converted to carpet warehouses, pine furniture stores and luxury dwellings.
Close to the River Clyde, I stop on the A73 where a sign announces Tinto Sand and Gravel. The light is not on my side today, the skies overcast, the air moist and chill. Moving on, I arrive at Fallburn, the starting point for hillwalkers. The nearby cafe is closed, the car park empty save for a 4×4 and a white van that for some irrational reason gives off bad vibes. Among the litter I find – bizarrely – a bag of clothes and a broken radio-cassette player. A solitary woman with an Alsatian makes her way along the path leading up the hill.
Untempted by the prospect of a walk, instead I take the single track road running alongside the path for an alternative view of the hill. Here I find the multi-coloured banding – reds, ochres, greenish yellows – that give the hill its name. Spotting me with my tripod, a farmer drives over in his quad bike to chat. I explain – as briefly and as neutrally as possible – the purpose of my trip. Like most people I encounter, his curiosity gives way to bemusement. When I mention the word sacred he’s pleased. Most people are.
The road has run out. Time to go. Heading back to Glasgow by the A73, I pass several small towns: Lanark, Carluke, Wishaw. It’s encouraging to find in these days of recession and competing media channels they manage to retain their own newspapers. Lanark and Carluke have their Gazettes, Wishaw has its Press. Later I find a list – Rutherglen has the Reformer, Hamilton has the Advertiser, Motherwell has its Times, East Kilbride has the News. I particularly like another story I found in the Advertiser about a recent UFO sighting in Larkhall. To quote a resident –
You couldn’t make it up.
The first time I have dipped my feet into the plantation which rings childhood memory bells of the Yorkhill Plantation where we played fitba on red gravel – it was nae fun being the bloody goalie, I can tell you!
I just gasp at all the detailed hard work you must have put in and I have only read this wee bit – it’s wonderful!
I love the photo of the hillock with the copse of trees but at the top, just to the left, there looks like a figure or statue or something that looks ‘strange’ – a ‘watcher’?
Looking forward to peeling off more layers and journeying on. Great work!
Thanks Maurice,
Thanks for visiting the site and taking the time to comment. You’re not the first person to comment on the strange figure in one of the trees at the De’il’s Plantin. I didn’t spot it until someone else pointed it out!
I hope you make it to the end of the journey. I’m telling visitors to take their time and treat it as if they’re going on a walk to a place they’ve never been before. Before you know it, the secret will be revealed…
all the best,
May
Hello May
I came upon your site by accident recently, when I was looking for cup and ring markings at Carlin Craigs near the Craw Stane. I had tried to find the Craw Stane a few years ago but as it was not on any maps I had seen. I did ask golfers at Bonnyton but they had no idea! I also objected to “them” building another golf course in East Kilbride as the site went through an old road with large stones at the corner of one field. I have a thing about stones! I bought Harry’s book in the 1980s and around that time I am sure the East Kilbride library gave away free maps of the aligned sites. Since I found your site I have been looking for my map – I am sure I put it somewhere that I would not loose it – yes I still cannot find it. The line from Tinto through Torrance House and Mains Castle probably also goes through Priestknowe (now a roundabout) between St. Brides Church and the old Kirk in the Village, which has a circularish graveyard. Last week we went to the Craw Stane and you could get a good view of Tinto. The Rotten Calder which runs pass Torrance house gets it’s name from the the brownish red colour of the stones, Rot is German for Red. You mentioned in your trips about Lunatic Asylums, I used to stay in Easterhouse as a kid and the Mental Hospital at Gartcosh was know as the Looney Bin and we were convinced folk escaped from there when some sort of siren went off. Also in the woods going up to the hospital we were told that wass where Bible John hid! Anyway I will stop rambling. Maybe I even saw you at the Bungalow Bar in Paisley. I remember one time going to see the Fall but me and my mates could not afford a carry out and the train fare there and back, so we just left early and walked. I have really enjoyed your trip notes, photos and videos. Tell Mary Ross I was asking for her.
Hi Graeme,
Thanks for taking the time to comment.
I don’t know if you’ve looked through the photo albums in the blog section of my site – there’s five of them, including one of Harry Bell’s places which contains a photo of what I believe is the Craw Stane, well, according to what he wrote in Glasgow’s Secret Geometry. Does it match what you saw, I wonder?
It’s always nice to hear from someone as interested in these old sites as I am. Believe me, the site is an ongoing labour of love – I must have made hundreds of trips over the two and a half years I spent following in Harry’s footsteps. It’s a shame his work isn’t more famous – and coming from EK himself, surely he was aware of the places you mention. In fact, I’ve often wondered if he didn’t miss out on a few sites close to home – and further afield – because GSG is curiously unresolved for me, which is why I made it my mission to complete his journey. I love the fact that I might be right – just as I love the fact I might be wrong! Because what I set out to do on The Devil’s Plantation was not about about Harry or Mary – it was as much about storytelling and having enough faith in someone – or even just enough curiosity to go out and find what lies beyond my everyday experience – even the stuff that’s on the doorstep.
I never caught The Fall at the Bungalow – wish I had. Usually I went there to see crappy post-punk bands from Glasgow, but I did see Elvis Costello play at the Silver Thread Hotel in Paisley in 1977!!
I’ll tell Mary you’re asking for her…
Thanks again and happy trails
May