Designed landscape - tree-ring, Ringacoltig, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Designed Landscapes
At Ringacoltig in County Cork, a deliberate arrangement of trees marks the land in a way that speaks less to accident or agricultural habit than to intention.
Tree-rings of this kind, sometimes called ring plantations, are a feature of designed landscapes, created to draw the eye, define a boundary, or simply to signal that someone once cared enough about a piece of ground to shape it with patience and a long view toward the future.
The planting of ornamental or structural tree-rings in Ireland is generally associated with the period of estate improvement that ran from the eighteenth century into the nineteenth, when landowners across the country reshaped their demesnes with avenues, shelter belts, walled gardens, and decorative stands of timber. Such features were as much about displaying cultivation as about any practical function, and they often outlasted the houses and households that commissioned them, surviving as quiet remnants of a social world that has otherwise largely disappeared from the Irish countryside.