Enclosure, Inchincoosh, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Enclosures
On a west-facing hillside in Inchincoosh, County Kerry, a small rectangle of tumbled drystone marks out a space that refuses to explain itself.
The enclosure measures roughly 5.4 metres east to west and just 1.5 metres north to south, its defining wall reduced in most places to a low, half-buried line, with only the eastern side retaining any visible trace of its original course. What makes it quietly puzzling is what it is not: the dimensions and construction method closely resemble a turf stand, the kind of simple low-walled structure traditionally used to stack and dry cut peat out on the bog. But there is no evidence of peat in the interior, which leaves the question of its purpose genuinely open.
Drystone construction, in which stones are fitted together without mortar, was the default building technique across much of upland Kerry for centuries, used for field boundaries, animal enclosures, storage structures, and domestic buildings alike. The similarity to a turf stand suggests a working landscape origin rather than anything ceremonial or defensive, yet the absence of peat residue means that identification cannot be confirmed. Roughly 60 metres to the north-north-east, a separate hut site has been recorded, hinting that this part of the hillside was once a place of some activity, perhaps seasonal, perhaps more sustained. The two features together suggest a small pocket of organised human use on what is now rough hill pasture, though the relationship between them, and the period in which they were in use, remains unclear.