Mairi wrote:Lesley, that definition of brain cells at work will be correct!
Am showing signs of addiction to on-line and book research. Am so fascinated I become oblivious to time, discomfort and needs; movement, sustenance, other tasks, etc. (Daresay these could start a thread.)
Just watch the blood sugar level

. A wise move could be to stash a secret supply of Mars Bars next to the computer

, - let's face it, minutes lost away from the 'puter taking on board sustenance are truly minutes wasted
Mairi wrote:Have spent the afternoon printing off sections of an 1818 map of West Lothian and pasting the sheets together. The names of the farms and land features are fascinating. Thoughts of making little flags to plot the homes and movement of the Cuthbertsons through the parishes have crossed my mind----just for my own enlightenment of course!
(Mad?) Mairi
You didn't invent the technique
It's a well known approach, and a perfectly valid and potentially very valuable technique of tracking families and understanding the area as it was nearly 200 years ago, when the "Lowland Clearances" were not long under way, - the consolidation of small farms into larger units, more viable in terms of the investment required in terms of the Agricultural Revolution, - such as drainage, fertilisers, increasing mechanisation (initially horse powered, but with steam soon to follow), as well the use of lime to make acid soils more productive.
It's also valuable in terms of understanding where siblings of a generation and previous generations could be found; as well as where to look when a family "disappears", - a frequent answer being that, for one reason or another, they have returned to an "ancestral" parish.
The only drawback can be that, if you are implementing this technique for several different lines at the same time, it's amazing how quickly you can run out of wall space
David