This paper focuses on St Nectan's Glen, Cornwall, where layers of ritual deposition imply a long history of spiritual significancean implication that is debunked by a diachronic examination of the site, which reveals a relatively recent, and conscious, crafting of the sacred. St Nectan's Glen: The Deposits The rubber duck is just one of many deposits at St Nectan's Kieve, Cornwall. 1 Here the River Trevillet, having run tranquilly through the woodland of St Nectan's Glen, becomes a sixtyfoot waterfall. This cascades down into a surprisingly placid pool below, enveloped by granite cliffs and a rocky shore, which are bedecked with a myriad of deposits, of which the rubber duck is only one example (Figure 1). Candles, some bearing Christian imagery, sit amidst scattered coins, beaded bracelets, hair accessories, and various unique deposits: an owl-shaped purse, a pair of wooden mushrooms, a water flask, and a miniature model of a Mayan pyramid, to name only some (Figure 2). Pieces of slatehundreds of themlean up against the cliff faces, their surfaces adorned with scratched initials, names, messages, Celtic symbols, even painted pictures. Others have been piled on top of each other, in or throughout the water, forming what are known in Cornwall as 'fairy stacks'. The surrounding trees and foliage are festooned with brightly-coloured ribbons, frayed strips of cloth, hair bobbles, jewellery, shoelaces, key-rings, pendants, a prism, and a smiley-faced car air-freshener. One branch is tied with a lock of somebody's hair; another has a Polo mint slipped onto it; while another is affixed with a laminated photograph of a man, the words 'well, hello there' written beneath. A plastic wallet hangs from another, containing the photograph of a dog named 'Ollie', accompanied by the words 'I miss u sooo much. .. '. Propped up against one cliff-face, sloping at a narrow gradient down into the water of the pool, is a coin-tree (Figure 3): a hardwood log, 850 cm in length, embedded with over four thousand coins. 2 The majority of the coins, which run in neat longitudinal lines with the grain of the bark, are one penny and two pence pieces, but there are some higher denominations, including four fifty pence pieces and two one pound coins. Along with the coins, the log has also been embedded with three plastic tokens (one from the Sealife Centre), a Hobgoblin beer bottle cap, a key-ring, a piece of green aventurine, and a couple of ribbons, held in place by coins. 3 St Nectan's Glen is clearly a melting pot of various depositional practices, some boasting long historiesthe deposition of coins, candles, hair, ragsand others entirely novel, such as the rubber duck and the Polo mint. Not only was the diversity of deposits noteworthy, so too were their quantities. Unfortunately, while the author recorded every item embedded into the coin-tree, no systematic attempt was made to catalogue each deposit at the site, but their numbers certainly reached the thousands. If each individual deposit signifies an individual depositor, more or less, t...