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Leave your worries behind.
There are places in the world where the veil feels thinner, where the land seems to breathe a little deeper, and where time folds in on itself. The Clootie Well on the Black Isle is one of those places. It is not a tourist spot. It is a living thread of Highland heritage, a sacred place honoured long before maps and long before the old gods slipped into legend.
Historically, this well is said to date back to at least the time of Saint Boniface, also known as Saint Curitan, a missionary in Scotland around AD 620. Yet the energy of the place feels older still, as if it had already been sacred long before Christianity laid its hand upon the land. In the pre-Christian traditions, a well like this would have been watched over by a goddess of the waters or a nature spirit, perhaps an elemental guardian tied to the spring. The kind of presence that does not need to be seen to be felt.
To visit the Clootie Well is to step into something ancient and alive. The air shifts. The land listens. The moment you approach, you feel the weight of centuries held quietly in the moss and water.
The tradition is simple. You take a cloot, a small piece of cloth, dip it in the blessed spring, and tie it to the branches surrounding the well. The cloth carries your prayer, your pain, your request for healing. As it weathers in the Highland elements, the burden it represents fades with it. This is the old magic. The true magic. Not dramatic, but deep. Not loud, but faithful.
This ritual predates Christianity in Scotland. It is part healing, part offering, part surrender. The people believed, and many still do, that the water has the power to cl

Wishing you well.
eanse and restore. That the land itself has a spirit that listens. And that intention, carried with sincerity, is never ignored.
Centuries later, the well still stands. The trees stand with it, thick with cloots from generations of visitors. Every strip of cloth is a story. Every knot a prayer. Every faded thread a message entrusted to the care of the spirits that dwell there.
To stand at the Clootie Well is to step into a living piece of Highland magic. The water still blesses. The land still answers. The old ways still breathe through the branches. You cannot stand there without feeling it. The place remembers.
It is a healer’s place. A witch’s place. A place where the past and present meet in the quiet work of release and renewal. Where the forgotten goddess of the well, or the elemental guardian of the spring, still seems to linger in the air, woven through the roots and the running water.
If you are ever called to visit, follow that pull. But please, go with respect. This is holy ground. Ancestral ground. A working of land, water, and spirit. Only leave cloots made of natural material. Please do not leave plastics or synthetic fabrics, as they do not return to the earth and they disrupt the natural energy of the place. Offer only what the land can take back gently.
The old ways remain because people honour them. The well gives healing because people approach with sincerity. Some places call us because they hold exactly what our spirit needs. The Clootie Well is one of them.
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Where memory, magic, and meaning meet.
Photographs courtesy of Sokara-Banana and Mags B
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