Enclosure, Barranastook, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Enclosures
On the crest of north and west-facing slopes in County Waterford, a near-perfect square of land sits quietly enclosed by field banks on three sides, its south-western edge left open to the hillside. What makes Barranastook unusual is not dramatic ruin or visible antiquity but a kind of formal geometry imposed on the landscape, a roughly ninety-metre-square grass-covered area whose regularity feels deliberate, almost architectural, in the way it holds itself apart from the surrounding fields.
The Ordnance Survey six-inch maps of 1840 and 1927 both record the enclosure as a subrectangular copse, integrated with avenues of trees running north to south and east to west. The consistent appearance across nearly a century of mapping suggests something carefully maintained rather than accidentally grown, a planned arrangement of trees and boundaries whose original purpose remains unclear. Whether the enclosure pre-dates the plantation-era tradition of formal tree avenues, or was laid out as part of one, the maps alone do not say. What they do confirm is that the feature was legible and recognisable to surveyors across two separate generations, its dimensions remaining essentially stable at around eighty-eight to ninety metres on each axis.