Designed landscape - tree-ring, Carrownacregg, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Designed Landscapes
In a quiet corner of County Galway, a circular arrangement of trees rises from the landscape in a way that feels deliberate rather than accidental.
These tree-rings, sometimes called ring plantations, are a feature of designed landscapes from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when landowners across Ireland shaped their estates with an eye for geometry and visual effect. Planted in careful circles, often on low rises or at field boundaries, they served partly as ornament and partly as shelter, marking ownership and aesthetic intention in equal measure.
Carrownacregg's tree-ring belongs to this tradition of demesne planting, in which the land around a house or estate was treated as a composition to be arranged rather than simply farmed. The practice drew on broader European fashions for landscape design, and in Ireland it left behind scattered survivals that are easy to overlook unless you know what you are looking at. A ring of mature trees standing alone in a field, with no obvious building nearby, is often the last legible trace of an estate that has otherwise vanished entirely.