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  2. Bastle house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bastle_house

    The characteristics of the classic bastle house are extremely thick stone walls (about 1 metre thick), with the ground floor devoted to stable space for the most valuable animals, and a vaulted stone or flat timber floor between it and the first floor with internal access such as a stairway or ladder. [2]

  3. Agriculture in Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_Scotland

    Agriculture in Scotland includes all land use for arable, horticultural or pastoral activity in Scotland, or around its coasts. The first permanent settlements and farming date from the Neolithic period, from around 6,000 years ago.

  4. Shed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shed

    Farm sheds and other outbuildings are used to store farm equipment, tractors, tools, hay, and supplies, or to house horses, cattle, poultry or other farm animals. Run-in sheds are three-sided structures with an open face used for horses and cattle. Shearing sheds can be large sheds found on sheep stations to accommodate large-scale sheep shearing.

  5. National Museum of Rural Life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Museum_of_Rural_Life

    The 44-hectare (109-acre) farm was gifted in 1992 to the National Trust for Scotland by Mrs. Margaret Reid who had run the farm for many years with her late husband James, the last of ten generations of Reids. The Reids, as Lairds of Kittochside, farmed the property over a period of 400 years from 1567 to 1992.

  6. Staddle stones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Staddle_stones

    At Higher Farm in Heathfield, Tavistock, staddle stones are part of the substantial barns built by the Duke of Bedford in the 19th century. The dressed granite stone bases have specially hewn slate tops. The materials used depended on the stone available, giving rise to sandstone, red sandstone, granite examples, etc.

  7. Kirkwood Estate, East Ayrshire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirkwood_Estate,_East_Ayrshire

    Kirkwood Farm from the road. The Lands of Kirkwood (NS3947) formed a small estate in the Parish of Stewarton, East Ayrshire lying between Stewarton and Dunlop, which in 1678 became part of the lands of Lainshaw, known as the Lainshaw, Kirkwood and Bridgehouse Estate. Kirkwood was anciently known as Bloak Cunninghame. [1]

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