Enclosure, Derreenboy, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Enclosures
Halfway up a steep, rocky ridge in west Cork, a narrow gully leads to a level terrace that most walkers would pass without a second thought.
Tucked against a rock face with Barley Lake visible to the north below, the terrace holds the remains of two hut sites and a small enclosure, the kind of cluster that speaks quietly of people who once chose this awkward, semi-sheltered spot for reasons now difficult to reconstruct.
The grouping sits in an area of rough grazing, which itself suggests the land has never been heavily improved or built over, leaving the remains relatively undisturbed. Hut sites of this kind are simple stone-walled or earthen structures, the foundations of small dwellings or shelters, often associated with seasonal agricultural activity such as summer grazing of livestock, a practice known in Ireland as booleying. The small enclosure nearby, a defined bounded area typically used for penning animals or marking out a working space, fits that pattern. The position on a terrace partway up the ridge, rather than at the summit or valley floor, would have offered some shelter from wind while keeping the lake and surrounding landscape in view. Whether the site dates to the early medieval period or somewhat later is not recorded, but such upland groupings in Munster commonly reflect centuries of intermittent use rather than a single moment of occupation.