Hut site, Cloontreem, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Settlement Sites
On a west-facing slope in County Cork, a small circle of tumbled stone sits half-swallowed by bog, the remnant of a structure so modest in scale that it could easily be mistaken for a natural outcrop.
The hut site at Cloontreem measures just two metres in diameter, its defining wall no more than half a metre high in places, yet the care taken in its construction is still legible in the ground itself. Whoever built it cut into the uphill slope on the eastern side and raised the western edge, engineering a level interior from an otherwise tilted hillside.
The stonework, now jumbled and partially submerged in the bog surface, sits within a broader landscape of relict field boundaries, the ghostly outlines of an agricultural system long since abandoned. One of those old boundary walls still abuts the hut site to the south, suggesting the structure was once integrated into a working pattern of enclosures and managed land rather than standing in isolation. The bog has done what bogs do, slowly consuming the lower courses of the wall while preserving the arrangement well enough for the relationship between the hut and its surrounding field system to remain readable. Hut sites of this kind are generally understood as the remains of small shelters associated with seasonal farming activity, the sort of temporary or semi-permanent structure that would have housed a person watching livestock on upland ground, though the precise date and function of this particular example are not firmly established.

