Well of Stones
The name of a well in Coll, near the tung or burial ground of the Macleans, and not too far from a sunken rock in the sea called Cairgein. It was a saying that as long as a person got water from the one and dulse (seaweed) from the other he need never die of want.
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References
Source
- Campbell, J.G. (1902). Witchcraft & Second Sight in the Highlands & Islands of Scotland. Glascow: James MacLehose and Sons, p. 102.