Overview
Yes Tor projects a powerful, wind-scoured energy that visitors describe as simultaneously exhilarating and humbling. The exposure at the summit, one of the highest and most weather-beaten points in southern England, strips away pretension and invites a direct encounter with elemental forces. The Bronze Age cairn adds a dimension of ancestral purpose to the wild energy, suggesting that the tor has been recognized as a place of power for four millennia. Many visitors report a dramatic clearing of mental fog at the summit, as if the persistent Dartmoor winds carry away accumulated psychic debris. The energy is raw, honest, and deeply liberating, offering those who make the ascent a taste of the primal freedom that comes from standing at the threshold between earth and sky.
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History, Archaeology & Significance
Yes Tor is the second-highest point on Dartmoor and in southern England, standing at 619 meters in Devon. The tor and its surrounding landscape preserve Bronze Age cairns dating to approximately 2000 BC, marking it as a site of ritual significance for the prehistoric communities who inhabited Dartmoor's uplands. The granite tor, formed by millions of years of weathering, creates a dramatic summit feature that would have been a natural focal point for ceremonial activity. The summit cairn, a deliberately constructed mound of stones, indicates that the tor served as a burial or commemorative site. Yes Tor is adjacent to High Willhays, Dartmoor's highest point, and together they form the roof of southern England, commanding vast views across Devon and Cornwall.
Rory's Field Notes
Highest point on northern moor with Type 4 node and vast views.
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