Turf stand, Glantrasna, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Textiles & Processing
On a south-west-facing slope in the blanket bog of Glantrasna, County Kerry, there is a low rectangular platform that most walkers would step over without a second thought.
It measures roughly 8.8 metres east to west and just 1.6 metres north to south, its perimeter defined by a crudely built stone facing no more than 0.4 metres high. The interior is partly grassed over, with loose stones and remnants of turf still visible on the surface. What it represents is the kind of vernacular infrastructure that sustained rural communities across the Irish uplands for generations: a turf stand, a raised or roughly revetted surface on which cut turf was stacked to dry before being carried home as fuel.
Turf cutting in Irish blanket bog was not casual work. It followed a seasonal rhythm, typically beginning in late spring, with the cut sods left to dry through summer before being brought in for winter. A stand like this one served a practical purpose within that cycle, keeping stacked turf off the waterlogged ground and allowing air to circulate. The stone facing, however rough, represents a real investment of labour, someone's decision that this particular spot on this particular slope was worth improving and returning to. What makes the Glantrasna example quietly significant is its context: six hut sites have been recorded in the immediate area, suggesting this was not an isolated working spot but part of a broader pattern of seasonal or semi-permanent activity in the uplands, perhaps connected to the tradition of booley farming, where cattle were moved to higher ground in summer and people followed to tend them.