Road - class 2 togher, Derryoghil, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Roads & Tracks
In the bogland of Derryoghil, Co. Longford, a strip of ancient timber lies just below the surface, no wider than a person's shoulders and barely half a metre thick, yet it represents one of the more quietly remarkable feats of early Irish engineering.
This is a togher, a bog road constructed from wood to allow safe passage across otherwise impassable wetland, and what makes it unusual is simply how specific and legible it remains.
The exposed section runs twenty-three metres in length, oriented roughly northwest to southeast, and is made up of closely set parallel roundwood timbers interlaid with brushwood, a method that distributes weight across the soft, yielding bog surface. The overall structure measures just over a metre in width and roughly forty centimetres in depth. A single wooden peg was also recorded, likely used to pin or anchor elements of the surface in place. Toghers of this kind are classified by their construction method, and a class 2 designation indicates this particular combination of roundwood and brushwood laid in parallel, as opposed to split planks or other materials used in different types. The bog itself would have acted, paradoxically, as both the obstacle the road was built to overcome and the preserving medium that kept it intact for centuries.
