Road - class 3 togher, Derrynagran, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Roads & Tracks
In the bogland of Derrynagran in County Longford, a road lies preserved in waterlogged peat, built not from stone or gravel but from carefully chosen hazel branches.
A togher is a type of ancient trackway laid across wet or boggy ground, allowing people and animals to cross terrain that would otherwise be impassable. What makes this particular example quietly remarkable is not just its survival, but the evidence of deliberate craft behind it.
The structure measures 1.4 metres wide and roughly 16 centimetres deep, orientated east to west across the bog. It consists of a tightly packed layer of longitudinal hazel brushwood, stacked four pieces deep, with occasional transverse rods woven in for stability. The branches used are notably consistent, averaging around 28 millimetres in diameter. That uniformity was not accidental. The people who built it appear to have selected their materials with care, choosing hazel rods of matching thickness rather than simply gathering whatever timber came to hand. That level of intentionality, preserved in the compressed dark of a bog for what may be thousands of years, gives the structure an unexpectedly precise quality, more engineered than improvised.