A TOWN BUILT ON LEYS

Ley Lines through crieff streets

The town of Crieff sits close to the powerful Highland Boundary Fault. which runs a mile to the west of the town with many standing stones and circles using its  energy to bild the ley lines.  

In the above illustration you can see that all of the straight styreets in this old town are aligned with ancient sites with energies flowing down them.

The town of crieff, a ley line town

 

 

 Crieff, one of the Gateways to the Highlands, nestles on the slopes of the Knock. 

Below: some of the elements on the illustration above.

The right angled triangle of King street elementor

Crieff has its main streets in the shape of a right-angled star, with outlying sacred sites.

Sun setting at the foot of King Street, Crieff, scotland, on the Winterr soldtice.

The Sun setting at the foot of King Street on Christmas Day, the Winter Solstice.

Crieff Jail map

Above: alignments of round towers and churches and some ancient sites around crieff, all aligned to the local jail, below.

Crieff Old Jail

The Crieff jail (above) is aligned to a number of sites, especially churches and outlying standing stones and circles. There is also a door at the foot of the tower leading to a cellar where the bodies of thos hung on the “kind” gallows were kept.

Samson stone.
 The Samson Stone, above, focal point of a number of ley lines, below. Not a glacial erratic!
  Notice the five roads from the burial ground (inset, top right of illustration below) are aligned to ancient sites, including two” Samson Stones” which may have been placed to rock.
Ley lines around Samson Stone, Crieff
Stone circle, Crieff golf copurse
Cradle stone Crieff.

The “Cradle Stone” on the knock behind Crieff. Young girls at one time would put their e4ars against it and if they could “hear” a baby cry, would know thatsome day they would be married and hae a child. 

Grave, reputedly of Fionn MacCumhail
A long walk with a long walk to the "Kind Gallows" of Crieff.

Bottom right of the above illustration is the Stayt of Crieff, originally a Neo-lithic, later a Bronze age burial and later still a Justiciary Court. An Earl of Strathearn would sit on a chair on top of this mound dispensing justice often to cattle thieves. 
   This town was the centre of the cattle buying and selling for much of Scotland and the meeting place for clans all over the country, the equivalent of America’s wild west. 
   A cattle thief would be taken or had to walk along four straight roads, one aligned to a stone circle, one to the front door of the old Catholic church, also to the local jail, a standing stone and the Gallows Tree with a large circle of graves aligned in the distanc

The Youtube film below shows a picture of “The Serpent of St. Fillans” and explains more about Crieff and its surrounding ley lines.