Designed landscape - tree-ring, Hazelwood Demesne, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Designed Landscapes
On the low ridge running through the pastureland of Hazelwood Demesne in County Sligo, there is nothing to see.
That is, precisely, the point. A feature that was once deliberately planted, carefully shaped, and significant enough to be recorded on Ordnance Survey maps across two centuries has since been levelled entirely, leaving no trace visible at ground level. Its existence is now confirmed only from above.
The 1837 edition of the six-inch Ordnance Survey map shows a neat oval tree-ring at this spot on the gentle summit of a SSE-NNW orientated ridge within the demesne of Hazelbrook House. Tree-rings of this kind were a common element of designed landscapes in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, used to create focal points, mark boundaries, or simply impose a pleasingly geometric order on an estate's grounds. By the time the 1912 OS edition was produced, the oval had lost its regularity; what was recorded then was an irregular grouping of twelve trees spread across a maximum dimension of around 45 metres, suggesting either natural attrition or deliberate replanting in a looser arrangement over the intervening decades. Aerial photographs taken later confirm a poorly defined, roughly circular trace still readable from altitude, even after the feature had been levelled at ground level.
What remains is essentially a cartographic ghost, present in archival maps and aerial imagery but absent from the land itself. The ridge it occupied sits within gently undulating pasture, and a visitor standing there today would have no indication that the ground beneath them was once considered worth marking out, tending, and recording across the better part of a century.