You ever bite the inside of your mouth, while eating? You really have no idea how it happens. Your jaw just suddenly goes the wrong direction? I took a small chunk out of a tooth today. I was biting into a sandwich with tough bread, when my jaw did something weird, and I chipped my upper front tooth. It's like my jaw was jutting outwards, and I pulled it back just as my teeth came together. They still feel out of place. Not a serious chip, just annoying. I'll notice it for the rest of my life.
Feb. 4th, 2014
Kilchoman Church
Feb. 4th, 2014 09:39 pmAfter Kilnave Chapel at Loch Gruinart, my dad and I made our way west. We stopped at Kilchoman Distillery for a taste (after photographing the barley field). They closed at 6, and we were there a little past that. Then we went a little further west, nearly to the end of the road, where we'd seen an old church.
It's derelict, with the windows bricked up and the roof fallen in.

It was built in the mid-1800's, and closed in 1974, when the population of the local area had dropped to almost nothing.
There had been a church on the site for centuries. The old one was torn down to make way for this one, and many stones from that era exist. We didn't see many of them, unfortunately, as they weren't marked as such. Many of them are all but illegible, anyway.
(click to embiggen)
This cross dates to the 1300's or 1400's. It wasn't until last night, when I did a little research on the place, that I discovered I never looked at the back. The front has this intricate Celtic scrollwork, but the back also has Christ on the cross, saints, angels, a horseman, people and an inscription in Latin! You can see it *here*. This cross was erected as a memorial. There is another cross a little ways out from the churchyard, that is much older, but we didn't see it.

Clergyman.
I posted many more pictures at Mourning Souls. See them!
It's derelict, with the windows bricked up and the roof fallen in.

It was built in the mid-1800's, and closed in 1974, when the population of the local area had dropped to almost nothing.
There had been a church on the site for centuries. The old one was torn down to make way for this one, and many stones from that era exist. We didn't see many of them, unfortunately, as they weren't marked as such. Many of them are all but illegible, anyway.

This cross dates to the 1300's or 1400's. It wasn't until last night, when I did a little research on the place, that I discovered I never looked at the back. The front has this intricate Celtic scrollwork, but the back also has Christ on the cross, saints, angels, a horseman, people and an inscription in Latin! You can see it *here*. This cross was erected as a memorial. There is another cross a little ways out from the churchyard, that is much older, but we didn't see it.

Clergyman.
I posted many more pictures at Mourning Souls. See them!