Field Visit
Date 1 April 2022 - 7 April 2022
Event ID 1158573
Category Recording
Type Field Visit
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1158573
NO 00228 89475, NO 01360 88800 and NO 00720 88449
Walkover survey was conducted around the environs of known shieling clusters in order to record these features in greater detail and to identify other features in the surrounding landscapes, as well as ground-truthing features identified from aerial photograph interpretation. Features identified were recorded with measured sketch plans and photographs and notes were taken about their condition, construction, and relationship to other features.
NO 00228 89475 Ten shieling hut structures and a storage hut or dairy were identified on a terrace above the River Dee at a height of about 450m above sea level. These structures were all constructed of turf some with low stone foundations and vary in size between 4 x 2m and 6 x 3m.
Above these, sitting on the modern track through the Glen – which we can presume follows the earlier estate hunting tracks – lie two larger drystone constructed rectangular structures which have been interpreted by previous surveys as early hunting camp structures, an interpretation supported by local tradition which relates these structures to an early hunting lodge of the Earls of Mar. Above the hunting camp feature, sitting on the lower slopes of Coire na Cula between 460–500m above sea level, another six shieling hut structures can be identified. These are all of substantial drystone construction, likely due to the nearby scree slope, and varied in size and form similar to the turf shielings below.
NO 01360 88800 five shieling huts structures were identified
along with a storage hut structure and a platform. These lay on a terrace on the hillslope overlooking the Dee at White Bridge at a height of 420m above sea level. These huts varied in form but were mostly rectangular or sub-rectangular and constructed in both stone and turf. Most of these bore similar forms to those identified at the previous shieling cluster. Above these at NO 01358 88928 an additional feature was identified which featured a hut structure constructed in drystone, likely with a now lost turf upper wall, and five associated spaces – some of which may represent pens or small storage hut spaces. It is possible this structure represents either an early irregular sheepfold or a slightly different form of shieling hut – perhaps the location where calves were penned at night to prevent them feeding from the otherwise free roaming dairy cattle. This feature sits between 450–460m above sea level, against a spur in the hillside.
NO 00720 88449 A cluster of 22 shieling hut structures were
identified mostly turf built, some with stone foundations, sitting within the incised valley and along the bank of a burn flowing from the W towards the Dee southeastward. These huts varied in size and form with those in the burns valley a mix of sub- rectangular and rounded in plan and ranging between 4 x 3m to 6 x 3m, and those on the banks above this incised valley more clearly rectangular and ranging from 6 x 3m to 8 x 4m.
Of the three shieling hut structures which were identified in previous surveys, sitting close to this latter cluster above the banks of the Dee, around NO 01137 88583, only one could be identified, the other two may have been lost during improvements to the estate track and drain which run at a similar point in the hillslope.
Archive: The National Trust for Scotland and NRHE (intended)
Funder: CSCS, Scottish History Endowment and ScARF
Edward Stewart – University of Glasgow
(Source DES Volume 23)