From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Shuggling Stone or "Clochnabogaddy" is a 13-ton boulder that sits at the edge of the moorland road between the Lackagh Bridge and Glen village in County Donegal in Ireland. [1]

It is called the Shuggling Stone because it "shuggles" very easily. [1] "Shuggling" is an Irish word meaning to rattle, shake or jiggle something. With the aid of a short stick the huge boulder can be rocked or "shuggled" backwards and forwards.

The stone is a lump of glacial granite and was first recorded in 1834 by Lt. Lancey during the first Ordnance Survey of Ireland; he noted then that it could be rocked back and forth with one finger. [2]

References

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Shuggling Stone or "Clochnabogaddy" is a 13-ton boulder that sits at the edge of the moorland road between the Lackagh Bridge and Glen village in County Donegal in Ireland. [1]

It is called the Shuggling Stone because it "shuggles" very easily. [1] "Shuggling" is an Irish word meaning to rattle, shake or jiggle something. With the aid of a short stick the huge boulder can be rocked or "shuggled" backwards and forwards.

The stone is a lump of glacial granite and was first recorded in 1834 by Lt. Lancey during the first Ordnance Survey of Ireland; he noted then that it could be rocked back and forth with one finger. [2]

References


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