Road - road/trackway, Ahapouleen, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Roads & Tracks
In the undulating pastureland of Ahapouleen in County Galway, the faint outline of an old raised trackway persists in the landscape, even though the physical structure itself was largely cleared away in the late 1980s.
What remains is visible not underfoot but from above, traced in aerial imagery as a ghostly corridor running for approximately 115 metres across the fields.
A raised trackway, sometimes called a toghér in the Irish tradition, was typically constructed to allow movement across boggy or waterlogged ground, built up with layers of timber, brushwood, peat, or gravel to lift the surface above the surrounding terrain. The one at Ahapouleen was a short stretch of such a feature, and according to the landowner, it was cleared during land improvement work in the late 1980s, a period when field drainage and agricultural development removed countless unrecorded features from the Irish countryside. The clearing was thorough enough to erase the raised profile from ground level, yet the soil disturbance, the differential growth, or the remnant compaction left a trace legible in 2019 aerial photography.
What makes this particular site quietly interesting is less what survives than what the aerial record has managed to preserve as documentation. The outline is visible on orthographic aerial imagery, meaning the kind of corrected overhead photograph used in mapping, where the faint shadow or tonal difference in the grass marks something that would be entirely invisible to a person walking across the same ground. It is a reminder that the landscape holds a great deal of information about features that no longer physically exist, and that the record of a thing can outlast the thing itself by decades.