The Oban Times

Turf times ahead for trust’s Glencoe project

- By Mark Entwistle

The National Trust for Scotland (NTS) is appealing to landowners to donate turf to help reconstruc­t a traditiona­l turf-walled ‘creel’ house in Glencoe.

According to NTS, creel houses have been completely lost from Scotland’s architectu­ral landscape but they were a building style that would have dominated West Highland rural communitie­s until the 19th century.

The conservati­on charity says archaeolog­ical excavation­s in the heart of Glencoe have shown that creel houses were once dotted throughout the glen in small townships and, thanks to the support of hundreds of donors, the trust plans to recreate one particular building that would have been occupied during the 17th

A design for a creel house.

century and at the time of the infamous massacre of 1692.

Creel houses combined a sturdy ‘cruck’ frame of timber, with basket-like ‘wattle’ internal walls weaved from freshly cut ‘green’ wood and were lined on the outside with thick, insulating walls built from blocks of turf. The roof would have been lined with thinner turf below thatch, usually made of heather. Materials for the replica creel house, which will be located outside Glencoe Visitor Centre, are being sourced from within the glen and from other land in the care of NTS, but the project team is seeking another 60m² of turf to complete the building’s 1m thick turf walls.

Mark Thacker, a craftspers­on on the project team which specialise­s in earth-building, explained: ‘The task is not quite as simple as heading down to a local garden centre to pick up some turf lawn rolls – it needs to be cut up to 20cm deep and preferably come from an ‘unimproved’ grassland with a stone-free soil.

‘By unimproved, I mean a grassland which has ideally not been drained, ploughed, resown or artificial­ly fertilised in recent years, as intensive cultivatio­n will tend to weaken the root structure within the turf, which gives it its strength for constructi­on.’

It is hoped the turf can be sourced relatively locally, so the team can harvest and transport it without clocking up too many ‘turf miles’ but they will welcome offers from anywhere in Scotland.

The turf needs to be harvested in summer 2021 when the Glencoe creel house building work will be well under way, as it can dry out quickly after being cut.

Once a common material in vernacular Scottish constructi­on, the use of turf died out in the 19th century and the project is a great opportunit­y to relearn lost skills as well as helping give visitors a glimpse of the kind of buildings the MacDonalds of Glencoe once lived in.

If you think you may be able to offer all or part of the turf required, please contact Glencoe National Nature Reserve on 01855 811307 or email glencoe@nts.org.uk

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom