Road - class 3 togher, Derrindiff, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Roads & Tracks
In the boglands of Derrindiff in County Longford, what passes for an ancient road amounts to nine small pieces of hazel brushwood, each barely three centimetres across, laid side by side to form a track half a metre wide.
It is, by any measure, a modest thing, yet its modesty is precisely what makes it interesting.
This is a togher, the Irish term for a trackway built across wet or boggy ground, typically constructed from timber, branches, or other organic material pressed into the soft substrate to create a walkable surface. Toghers range considerably in scale and ambition, from elaborate multi-layered plank roads to the simplest of brushwood paths, and this one at Derrindiff falls into the latter category, classified as a class 3 togher. The use of hazel is not accidental; hazel produces long, straight, flexible rods and was widely managed through coppicing in early medieval Ireland, making it a practical and readily available material for exactly this kind of task. What the bog has done, as it does so well, is preserve the wood in a state that would otherwise have rotted away entirely over the centuries, leaving a record of a crossing point that someone, at some time, considered worth making passable.