Togher Patrick, Boheh, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Roads & Tracks
In the townland of Boheh, on the slopes below Croagh Patrick in County Mayo, there is a route known as Togher Patrick.
A togher is an old Irish term for a causeway or paved pathway, often constructed across boggy or difficult ground using timber, stone, or other material, and the name alone signals that this is no ordinary track. It is a pilgrim road, one of the ancient approaches to the summit of Croagh Patrick, Ireland's most significant mountain of devotion, where Saint Patrick is said to have fasted for forty days in the fifth century.
The Boheh approach to Croagh Patrick is associated with one of the more quietly remarkable astronomical observations in the Irish landscape. The rock at Boheh, sometimes called Saint Patrick's Chair, is a glacial boulder covered in Bronze Age cup-and-ring markings, and it sits at a point on the old pilgrim route where, on specific evenings in April and August, the setting sun appears to roll down the northern shoulder of Croagh Patrick when viewed from the stone. This phenomenon, sometimes called the "rolling sun" effect, has been documented by researchers as a potentially deliberate alignment, suggesting the site held ceremonial significance long before Christianity gave it a new layer of meaning. The togher itself, as a physical route, threads through this older sacred geography, connecting the carved boulder to the mountain above.
