Buried in the bog

Buried in the bog

Peat cut from an Irish bog • Gary Miotla (CC BY 3.0)

Originally published 4 September 1989

DINGLE, Ire­land — They say it was one of the dri­est Irish sum­mers in years, but on the Ker­ry hill­side where I’ve been stay­ing there’s water aplen­ty. It tum­bles from the clouds. It hangs in the air. It seeps out of the ground. It glis­tens as dew. Around here it rains 250 days a year and the ground is nev­er dry. Per­fect con­di­tions for a peat bog.

Ire­land is not the only place in the world with peat, but it is cer­tain­ly the best known. One-sixth of the coun­try is cov­ered with the stuff — a thick creamy sim­mer­ing heap of part­ly decayed plant mat­ter, slathered onto the west­ern hills and cen­tral low­lands like gobs of ran­cid brown butter.

Not much use­ful will grow on it. You need a good pair of rub­ber boots to walk across it. But in a coun­try with almost no coal and few trees, peat (or turf as the Irish call it) has one great advan­tage: Cut into chunks and prop­er­ly dried it will burn, with a cool­ish but fra­grant flame. The smell of a turf fire is as unique­ly Irish as the taste of Guin­ness, and the mere mem­o­ry of that sweet aro­ma is enough to make any Irish émi­gré long for home.

In effect, a peat bog is a poor­ly func­tion­ing com­post heap. The com­post heap at the back of your gar­den turns rec­og­niz­able plants into a uni­form brown humus that is per­fect for dig­ging back into the soil. To do its job prop­er­ly, the heap must be nei­ther to dry nor too wet. Unbal­anced, the heap stag­nates, plants do not ful­ly decom­pose, and the whole thing becomes a sour smelly mess.

A hard-scrabble existence

As a com­post heap, the Irish bog is too wet. The mass of decay­ing plant life is super­sat­u­rat­ed with water. Micro­scop­ic organ­isms that are the agents of decom­po­si­tion are aer­o­bic; that is, they depend on oxy­gen. But oxy­gen is not very sol­u­ble in water, and in stag­nant water, as in the bog, the sup­ply of oxy­gen is soon deplet­ed. Decom­po­si­tion comes to a screech­ing halt.

Plants that grow on the sur­face of the bog can­not, like nor­mal plants, get their nutri­ents from the soil. The lay­er of peat below is water-logged, dank, and dead. Instead, bog plants sur­vive on what­ev­er mea­ger sup­ply of min­er­als comes with the wind and rain. It is a hard-scrab­ble sort of exis­tence, not unlike that of the impov­er­ished Irish peo­ple of yes­ter­year who were forced by bur­geon­ing pop­u­la­tion and unscrupu­lous land­lords to eke their liv­ing from the bog.

Still, for the ama­teur nat­u­ral­ist who is will­ing to get down on his knees, the com­mu­ni­ty of bog flo­ra is rich enough. Not least among these resource­ful lep­rechaun plants are the insec­ti­vores, includ­ing bland­er­worts, but­ter­worts, sun­dews, and pitch­er plants, plants that trap and digest what­ev­er unwary bugs light upon their sur­face. My favorite is the but­ter­wort of coun­ties Cork and Ker­ry, with its del­i­cate vio­let blos­som held aloft on a thin stem and sticky yel­low leaves cov­ered (if the plant is lucky) with the tiny car­cass­es of flies.

Of such plants the bog grows, ever upward on the part­ly decom­posed residue of pre­vi­ous gen­er­a­tions, as long as the ground remains poor­ly drained and soak­ing wet.

Ire­land’s peat has accu­mu­lat­ed for thou­sands of years, since the end of the last ice age. In places, the peat is 10 feet thick and there’s plen­ty to cut. In the flat bogs of the cen­tral plains the cut­ting is done by huge machines oper­at­ed by Bord na Móna, the gov­ern­ment agency empow­ered to har­vest the peat and turn it into fuel suit­able for the gen­er­a­tion of elec­tric­i­ty. In the west­ern hills the har­vest­ing is done by hand with a spade called a slane, whose shape is as par­tic­u­lar to a coun­ty as the inhab­i­tants’ accent. When on occa­sion I’ve been made the recip­i­ent of a mod­est sup­ply of that sweet brown gunk from the hill, I’ve count­ed myself lucky.

Ire­land’s his­to­ry is buried in the bog. Because of the non-decom­pos­ing con­di­tions of the soil, what­ev­er gets buried is beau­ti­ful­ly pre­served. Pollen, twigs, tree trunks, bones, and antlers are main­tained in the peat in rec­og­niz­able form, enabling nat­u­ral­ists and cli­ma­tol­o­gists to recon­struct past cli­mates, flo­ra, and fau­na with remark­able com­plete­ness. Human his­to­ry, too, is in the bog. Dwelling places, tim­ber track­ways, tubs of but­ter, even clothed bod­ies are yield­ed by the peat for study by arche­ol­o­gists. Most remark­able of all are the troves of eccle­si­as­ti­cal trea­sure — jew­eled chal­ices and oth­er litur­gi­cal arti­facts of wood and met­al — buried in the bog a thou­sand years ago, per­haps in ner­vous antic­i­pa­tion of a Viking raid, and not recov­ered until our own time.

In a rapid­ly erod­ing bog on a shoul­der of Mt. Bran­don, near Din­gle, at the places where the blan­ket of turf has been cut away by wind, one can find hun­dreds of care­ful­ly sharp­ened spikes of yew wood, about a foot long, lying hel­ter-skel­ter on the exposed stony sur­face of the moun­tain. Arche­ol­o­gists are uncer­tain of the ori­gin or pur­pose of the spikes, which as far as I know occur nowhere else. Local tra­di­tion ascribes the “arrows” to an epic bat­tle between the cham­pi­ons of the provinces of Ulster and Mun­ster in the days of myth and leg­end, and indeed the town­land in which they are found is called Com an Áir, or Val­ley of the Slaughter.

A time before history

There is a place in the bog where ero­sion had exposed dozens of the spikes in situ, aligned in a mass, all point­ing upwards and tipped in the same direc­tion, their bases jammed into an ancient sur­face of the bog. My guess is that the curi­ous arti­facts were used by hunters, to lame ani­mals dri­ven toward the mat of spikes.

This sum­mer I came across a neat bun­dle of the sharp­ened sticks pro­trud­ing from a ver­ti­cal sur­face of the erod­ed bog where a pre­his­toric hunter laid them down, thou­sands of years ago, and then appar­ent­ly for­got them. The bog grew up to cov­er the lost bun­dle, even­tu­al­ly with more than four feet of turf. Then the bal­ance of wind and rain some­how changed, and ero­sion began to cut the turf away, reveal­ing at last a per­fect­ly pre­served glimpse of human fal­li­bil­i­ty at a time before history.

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