The Story of Turf Cutting in Ireland -- Irish History Documentary

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  • Опубликовано: 17 фев 2020
  • This video tells the story of how Turf was harvested in the bog and the importance that it had for the people living in rural Ireland. We show the turf being cut as it would have been through the centuries in Ireland. We film each step required to produce turf capable of heating an Irish dwelling and as a source of fuel for cooking. In this film we also show the more modern methods used today to harvest peat on a commercial scale.
    Also featured on this video are bee keeping, old breeds of cattle kept on Irish farms and a look at small scale poultry farming. This video runs for one hour.
    This film was produced by John Thompson Videos Production. To find out more about our Irish Farming Videos check out www.irishfarmingvideos.com
    To find out about licensing footage from this video contact us on 02829558688. All copyright belongs to Thompson Videos N. Ireland

Комментарии • 505

  • @borderreiver3288
    @borderreiver3288 4 года назад +301

    I lived in Scotland for a short time and used to cut the turf..it was said it warmed you several times...cutting it...stacking it...carrying it home...stacking again...carrying it in the house..and burning it....

    • @bustersmith5569
      @bustersmith5569 4 года назад +10

      The heat is always in the tools !!!! Lol,,,

    • @ivarlaupet8972
      @ivarlaupet8972 3 года назад +7

      buster smith
      Ahh yes, just burn the tools🤣

    • @rorybone100
      @rorybone100 3 года назад +6

      My uncle wouldn't return to the Hebrides until the peat stack was built.

    • @ShalomMichael
      @ShalomMichael 3 года назад +8

      Just like going out and getting your own firewood, from tree to cordwood.

    • @umaxen0048
      @umaxen0048 3 года назад

      Lots of goat cheese farts along the way...

  • @hoshiarsingh6523
    @hoshiarsingh6523 3 года назад +53

    Farmers all over the
    World are same. Toiling hard getting nothing to feed the world. I salute the farmers of them world and particularly of Ireland. Thanks.

  • @charlesrae3793
    @charlesrae3793 4 года назад +118

    My mother, who passed away at the end of last year, came from Cavan and was always talking about her life there. The number of times I would hear her talking about the bog, and cutting the turf. I grew up with all these stories in my head, so it is wonderful to watch this and learn more about the life she knew.

    • @charlesrae3793
      @charlesrae3793 3 года назад +3

      @v8 tangs ireland Mum came from a farm near Baillieborough, always spoke about it, about the towns nearby, Shercock, Virginia, Kingscourt. We went over in 2001, 2003 and 2004.

    • @charlesrae3793
      @charlesrae3793 3 года назад +2

      @v8 tangs ireland I was in Ballyjamesduff in 2004, visiting the museum there. Mum loved to sing Come back Paddy Reilly. It's a small world, eh?

    • @Whiteboytripping
      @Whiteboytripping 3 года назад +2

      I am sorry for your loss.

    • @theirishcailin333
      @theirishcailin333 Год назад +1

      ​@Charles Rae know all the places you've mentioned, I don't live too far away from kingscourt. Sorry about the loss of your mother

    • @user-gm3om2cv4z
      @user-gm3om2cv4z 9 месяцев назад +1

      Did you never cut the turf,like anything it's hard until you learn how to work smart. Lovely smell ,but it's a hard life.

  • @funkyprepper
    @funkyprepper Год назад +3

    Loved it, don't worry. These methods will be in use this decade

  • @charlesyoungblood1402
    @charlesyoungblood1402 Год назад +7

    Absolutely outstanding and thanks so much ! As times toughen , we'll need to draw on this proven knowledge just to survive .

  • @FedoraSpunk
    @FedoraSpunk 3 года назад +21

    Oh my god I'm gonna take a nap, this cured my insomnia

  • @justa.american8303
    @justa.american8303 3 года назад +44

    Thank you for taking the time to make this documentary. I thoroughly enjoyed it and it brought back memories of my Grandmother's farm. Since I was the younger of her grandchildren I had the chore of cutting, stacking and fetching wood for her kitchen stove. She could regulate the temperature precisely to a recipe's needed temp to cook & bake. And she never cooked on any other type of stove. Now at 68, I 'm still teaching my daughters as much of the 'old school' ways as they want to learn. And both can cook as well or better than my wife (don't tell her I said that). And she's a a good cook. Bless The Emerald Isle.

  • @SkepticalChris
    @SkepticalChris 2 года назад +4

    There is something so visually satisfying about watching how they cut the peat out. That almost always, they are cut in smooth blocks with such perfect rhythm makes it so satisfying to watch.

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      It has been a process that has destroyed a lot of biodiversity and rare natural habitat in ireland

    • @thejiggitygiggity90
      @thejiggitygiggity90 8 месяцев назад

      @@beaglaoich4418 Listen, I don't know what kind of nonsense you are reading, but without this work, you wouldn't have a decent life to whinge about it, now beat it and go to California or tel aviv or anywhere else, were you happen to be getting that nonsense from chara

  • @rabbitskinner
    @rabbitskinner 3 года назад +31

    We're a tough old race, I'm so proud of my Irish heritage

    • @dieselphiend
      @dieselphiend 3 года назад +2

      Where did your people come from before Ireland?

    • @marcusp905
      @marcusp905 3 года назад

      @@dieselphiend Wales =)

    • @dieselphiend
      @dieselphiend 3 года назад +1

      @@marcusp905 Not.

    • @rambunctiousduck9072
      @rambunctiousduck9072 3 года назад +4

      "I'M 1/50,000th Irish", nice man

    • @skitzochik
      @skitzochik 3 года назад

      @@dieselphiend why do you have to be negative? youre such a know it all why dont you endulge us ...

  • @Treeman196
    @Treeman196 3 года назад +7

    I'm English but my father was from a place called ardtresna in sligo .we used to go over a couple of times a year in the 50s and 60s always cut turf and picked spuds you where expected to I loved it

  • @KatherineUribe-1
    @KatherineUribe-1 Год назад +9

    I love this video series. I traveled to Ireland twice, and I love Irish history and cultural. (I, like millions around the world, am of Irish descent.) I love Ireland, and watching these videos fills my heart. Erin go bragh! ☘💚☘

    • @PrincessNottingham
      @PrincessNottingham Год назад

      Do you know what Erin go Bragg means? 😀🇮🇪☘

    • @ChenkoTheDog
      @ChenkoTheDog 8 месяцев назад

      ⁠@@PrincessNottinghamIreland forever or Ireland until doomsday

  • @EricK-vz5ww
    @EricK-vz5ww 3 года назад +22

    I fondly remember the last time I was in Ireland. As we would near each village, we would come upon the sweet, almost incense-like odor of the peat burning in the various dwellings. It was not unlike the smell of burning leaves, which I suppose makes perfect sense. :-)

  • @refusedross4113
    @refusedross4113 Год назад +7

    I'm not Irish, but see the cultural rural roots of my (American) European ancestors in this documentary. There is much honor and the continuaty of civiliazation carried forward as a whole by the agricultural knowledge of the people portrayed in this film. No food no, civilization. Peace.

  • @MartinsGarage97
    @MartinsGarage97 3 года назад +16

    My father (who past in July) use to tell us how much he hated doing this job. I was brought up in the states, so I can't imagine heating a home like this. Also, my parents settled in Oregon, so wood is extremely inexpensive, even though we had gas heat, my parents still loved their fire. We were told to put a sweater on if we were cold 🤣.

  • @jamessmith7691
    @jamessmith7691 3 года назад +34

    This was a great video. Not much of Ireland comes across my path. I like old farming and factory machinery. Thank you for posting .

  • @ronin472100
    @ronin472100 3 года назад +8

    Although I deplore our modern ways and culture, our lives in many ways cannot function without certain technologies... Obviously to go back to the earlier ways of life would be giving up many comforts... It is very possible that Man may be forced to go back, through a cataclysmic event on the Good Earth... I really learned from this very well produced video... Thank You

  • @chrishull9983
    @chrishull9983 2 года назад +12

    I couldn't stop watching this - what a wonderful, albeit hard and honest way to live - I'm left wondering whether we have actually moved forwards since those days - or backwards. Thankyou.

    • @patrickboyle6727
      @patrickboyle6727 Год назад +3

      I agree,less self sufficiency,more dependence on outside sources,less appreciation for an honest day's work.

    • @thejiggitygiggity90
      @thejiggitygiggity90 8 месяцев назад +1

      Very Honest way to make a living, People don't need crime or political ways to make a living, they just need to get up off their back side and get stuck in, its not pretty, though boy, is it worth it. You may sweat and earn the odd bit of money , here or there, the honest work is the best work imho

  • @larryconnolly1008
    @larryconnolly1008 9 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for doing this documentary it brought back great memories. My family cut the turf down slane .Larry

  • @demos113
    @demos113 3 года назад +9

    I remember doing a lot of that as a kid, not the actual cutting but all the laying out, footing & stacking that came after.

  • @isabellaciella1187
    @isabellaciella1187 2 года назад +2

    You have been blessed by the good algorithms graces today~

  • @taraalan1131
    @taraalan1131 2 года назад +2

    They’re still cutting the turf in the South West but it’s a procession of cars carrying the turf back from the bog. I love the smell of the turf burning.

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад +1

      It’s really really bad the day people stop cutting turf will be a good day

  • @ninamorse4677
    @ninamorse4677 Год назад +2

    Thank you for this video! I learned so much about how you work so hard for what you have! Nina in Southern California.

  • @stellayates4227
    @stellayates4227 3 года назад +5

    I remember visiting relatives in the country near Galway as a small child and I absolutely loved the smell of burning turf.

  • @BoxxerCore
    @BoxxerCore 2 года назад +2

    There is no more pleasant smelling fuel source than the burning of Irish turf & peat. My family moved from Letterkenny, Co Donegal to Glasgow in the 60s, and my gran would go back to visit every year and bring back a few bricks of turf to burn in a miniature ornament of an Irish cottage. You put a little piece of turf in the side door and when it burned the smoke came out the little chimney on top, reminded her of the smells of her homeland.

  • @charlieindigo
    @charlieindigo 4 года назад +10

    What a superb and informative video. It's more than forty years since I left the oul' country, although I tend to go back every two or three years to soak up the atmosphere and breathe the good country air. I'd love to know when this video was shot, for it seems that much of it was done in the 1960's. I certainly remember what life was like during the 1950's - steam rollers, haystacks, horse-drawn turf and coal carts, domestic swill buckets for the pigs, milk that tasted like milk - with cream top, buttermilk, cheese with rind - oh the list goes on; sadly, and as this video shows, all now long gone. Not all progress has been good!!

  • @Andyroohigg
    @Andyroohigg 9 месяцев назад +4

    Having recently moved back to the south west of Ireland, with my Irish Mother. despite the ban, we are fortunate enough to have access to turf via close family. With a few bog days now under my belt. You fully appreciate how vital it is to a large part of Ireland still. If your lucky enough to take a break for a few moments. for anyone who enjoys the general outdoors, it truly is one of the most beautiful environments to spend the day in. i understand the future may well be leaning towards renewable energy however, until a suitable substitute at an affordable price can be found. I'll hopefully still be spending a few more days at the bog yet.

    • @ph-vf5hx
      @ph-vf5hx 8 месяцев назад

      It takes millions of years to form, so once it's gone, as far as we're d concerned, it's gone for good

    • @rossclarke8028
      @rossclarke8028 8 месяцев назад +1

      It's not a complete ban, if your land has a turf bank on it you can burn away. The intention was to stop the use of turf fired powerstations

    • @danwebb4418
      @danwebb4418 8 месяцев назад

      God bless the Turf cutter ..

  • @VallornDeathblade
    @VallornDeathblade 3 года назад +18

    My Father's from Antrim and this was really fascinating to watch. Thank you for producing and publishing these important documentaries on classical Irish life!

    • @andrewdaley3081
      @andrewdaley3081 3 года назад +1

      Type in the word. Hands. on utube you will find lots of uploads on old Irish traditions. Andy England 🇬🇧👍if you have trouble finding it let me know

    • @caddycommercials8570
      @caddycommercials8570 Год назад

      Me too

  • @chrismullan7191
    @chrismullan7191 2 года назад +2

    As a child in Derry, our fire always had Turf on it, at Christmas time it was just so wonderful to come home from school and that smell of the turf filled the whole house.

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      Turf is a really awful fuel source and harms the environment by its extraction and being byrned

    • @thejiggitygiggity90
      @thejiggitygiggity90 8 месяцев назад

      chris mullin there seems to be an annoying little eejit chatting nonsense underneath you called beaglaoich4418 hes chatting nonsense tbf my granda had coal from bheal feirste co. aontroim myself lol

  • @bradleywalsh4103
    @bradleywalsh4103 8 месяцев назад +1

    Coming from the island province of Newfoundland in Canada, I was just reminiscing with my mother about a memory, when I was only knee high, of being out cutting turf for the woodstove with family members :-)

    • @finnmcginn9931
      @finnmcginn9931 14 дней назад +1

      Wonderful island full, of good people. One of my favourite places to visit.

  • @aaronoshea3453
    @aaronoshea3453 3 года назад +2

    I'm so glad I've found this channel. Reminds me of home.

  • @dimidomo7946
    @dimidomo7946 3 года назад +3

    Exceptional video of the utilitarian and hard working Irish people.

  • @veronicaquinn2578
    @veronicaquinn2578 4 года назад +3

    Wonderful, thank you so much. Please keep these videos coming.

  • @deshaunjackson8188
    @deshaunjackson8188 8 месяцев назад +1

    I remember my late father used to always say "I hate this fookin Island! When it's not raining, it's snowing, and when it's not snowing, it's raining!" He had a way with the words😅

  • @fantail7214
    @fantail7214 3 года назад +2

    What a fantastic little doco.

  • @born2soon
    @born2soon 3 года назад +2

    A wonderful video! Thank you!

  • @Drewsky840
    @Drewsky840 3 года назад +2

    Warms my Irish blood to watch this

  • @updownstate
    @updownstate 3 года назад +5

    This was fascinating. I never had any idea what peat is and this video is so informative. Subscribed.

  • @131dyana
    @131dyana 3 года назад +2

    Loved this thank you very much.

  • @susanjaeger5645
    @susanjaeger5645 3 года назад +2

    It's lovely to see how my people lived. 💜💖

  • @truckertom3323
    @truckertom3323 3 года назад +4

    I am so glad that i watched this video, thank you for sharing it.
    God bless Ireland, and her wonderful people.

  • @EtherealOde
    @EtherealOde 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for giving me a look at how my ancestors lived in the past. My grandparents told me the stories they had heard from their parents and grandparents. This was almost like a time travel for me listening to them telling me the stories again.

  • @kenquid8091
    @kenquid8091 3 года назад +8

    I loved this video. The old days was damn hard work. I don't think people today would be able for it. The time and effort would mean they have no time for facebook and twitter and all the other bs people seem to think is important.

    • @hortondlfn1994
      @hortondlfn1994 3 года назад +1

      Seems to me you just listed a couple of very good reasons for going back to the old days!

    • @kenquid8091
      @kenquid8091 3 года назад +2

      @@hortondlfn1994 I totally agree. What I see on "social media" these days is also FAR from social. Quite the opposite. People have far too much time on their hands these days and spend it on social media which in turn fills their head with crap and hatred. Technology can be an amazing tool but it can also be the devils tool. Give me the old days every time.

  • @lisaclark1181
    @lisaclark1181 3 года назад +4

    This was a lovely video to watch. A good month in Ireland is on my bucket list and now I'd like to visit a working farm. Thank you!

  • @annroberts3635
    @annroberts3635 2 года назад +2

    Fascinating. Sorry the old ways are gone but thank you for sharing this video. My spirit is warmed watching these wonderful people, because my

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      It’s a good thing turf cutting has reduced hopefully never to return

  • @jamesheagney7926
    @jamesheagney7926 3 года назад +6

    Thanks for sharing , this will be of huge interest to the future generations. I spent many years doing this backbreaking but enjoyable work - if the weather is kind!

  • @shervin6711
    @shervin6711 Год назад

    Fascinating!

  • @garrycane1170
    @garrycane1170 3 года назад +10

    An absolutely fascinating and informative film. Inspired to visit even more... greetings from the Rheintal, Switzerland.

  • @safetymikeengland
    @safetymikeengland 3 года назад +1

    Great Video. I enjoyed learning about peat-cutting and burning.
    And, the story about where the Dexter cattle came from was something I had never heard about.

  • @kappre5165
    @kappre5165 2 года назад +1

    I just came across a video of a man cutting turf and thought its so satisfying to watch then my curiosity hits so I'm here 😁 I live in the tropical country so

    • @ralfschaper6731
      @ralfschaper6731 7 дней назад

      I came across this video the same way. It is 85 deg. Outside and just sitting on the couch. I saw them working so hard in the video and thought better them working so hard them me.😂

  • @anvilbrunner.2013
    @anvilbrunner.2013 3 года назад +21

    I thoroughly enjoyed every second of this video. You always knew where you were coming home with the smell of a turf fire.

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      I can’t smell it without thinking of the fact it is absolutely ruining our ecosystem in ireland

    • @anvilbrunner.2013
      @anvilbrunner.2013 2 года назад

      @@beaglaoich4418 Commercial turf cutting ought be banned. If it was still families seeing to their own supply, from their own stretch of bog, then it'd be part of the eco system.

  • @MrDorbel
    @MrDorbel 3 года назад +1

    Well I learned a lot there, thank you so much, very well done.

  • @sugarfalls1
    @sugarfalls1 3 года назад +4

    Look at how green and moist that land is. That comes from a lot of rain! Beautiful stuff! Hard working people!

  • @dallyjacobson2146
    @dallyjacobson2146 3 года назад

    Fantastic program

  • @johnmccormick8159
    @johnmccormick8159 4 года назад +41

    This is wonderful. I have fond childhood memories of sitting around a turf fire (something completely unknown in the US) with cousins in Antrim. The beekeeping segment was very informative. Cheers from Alaska.

    • @VideosofIrishFarmingLife
      @VideosofIrishFarmingLife  4 года назад +3

      Thanks for the comment John.. Yeah there's nothing like a turf fire. Glad you enjoyed the video, Chris

    • @born2soon
      @born2soon 3 года назад +2

      I was told if you're considering going into the beekeeping business only do so if you've been in it 15 years already.

    • @leatcanned
      @leatcanned 3 года назад +1

      In the Usa, there is a similar thing that was done in Oregon and Nevada, it's originally Of Irish origin supposedly, they call it pucking, where you use the wet soaked soil of the Below the water level in the soggy lands as horse, bull or goat sties, every summer you strip it of the top 3 inches roll it into a mat and make 12-inch pucks out f them, they were typically used to start fires and for foundation coverings.

  • @SgtSnausages
    @SgtSnausages 3 года назад

    This was amazeballz.
    Thanks!

  • @theirishcailin333
    @theirishcailin333 Год назад +2

    My mother, brothers and I would head down to the bog every year after the turf was cut and start footing it. Long days, mam would bring a big picnic and baby brother would be under a makeshift tent to keep him out of the sun. Showed my children how to foot turf last year

  • @GoldGalahad
    @GoldGalahad 3 года назад +1

    Thanks so much, this was a wonderful video and I learned so much. Well done!

  • @KowboyUSA
    @KowboyUSA 3 года назад +6

    Worked in my father's parents highland peat bog when I was a kid. Interesting seeing how it's done back over there.

    • @finallythere100
      @finallythere100 2 года назад

      That sounds very interesting! I wonder what they do if it rained? I assume they had no tarp covering..

  • @craigdutton6072
    @craigdutton6072 8 месяцев назад

    That was a good little show 😎

  • @LTPottenger
    @LTPottenger Год назад

    Beautiful birds and little black cows, too.

  • @cottagemommy5116
    @cottagemommy5116 4 года назад +16

    Enjoyed this very much. Please keep producing these, so we can learn more about our roots. You never know, we may have to go back to some of these things someday.

    • @VideosofIrishFarmingLife
      @VideosofIrishFarmingLife  4 года назад

      Thanks for the comment.. We will be uploading more videos like this in the future so please subscribe and keep an eye on the channel for new uploads. Chris

    • @cottagemommy5116
      @cottagemommy5116 4 года назад

      @Carolluke1 There's good and bad to that. But I confess I'd like to try it- preferably not under traumatic circumstances though.

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      @@cottagemommy5116 god forbid we go back to destroying our unique and amazing peatland.
      We are now trying to pay people to undo the destruction and havoc brought on by this

  • @matthewfarmer6830
    @matthewfarmer6830 2 года назад

    Great stuff, thanks for sharing 👍

  • @plantnerdguy
    @plantnerdguy 3 года назад +1

    very interesting and varied subjects, thanks. I want to go and live in Ireland for a little while now

  • @bondee5865
    @bondee5865 3 года назад +4

    Very revealing to the lifestyle of most families just a couple of generations ago! These films are very appreciated; we have learned so much.
    I enjoyed reading the contribution of the comments as well.
    .
    Thank you Videos of Irish Farming Life.
    .

    • @VideosofIrishFarmingLife
      @VideosofIrishFarmingLife  3 года назад +2

      You're welcome, Glad you are getting something from our videos and thanks for dropping a comment, they really help the channel grow..

    • @bondee5865
      @bondee5865 Год назад

      Thank you again🙂

  • @rockykoast7065
    @rockykoast7065 Год назад +1

    Delightful to be educated on turf-cuttig and rural life! (From an ex-teacher brought up in the industrial north of England! - though I did many other jobs too...the first job being tater-picking when I was about 10).

  • @christopherkenny3488
    @christopherkenny3488 2 года назад +1

    Very good 👍

  • @marywrigjt7614
    @marywrigjt7614 3 года назад +1

    Very informative 👍👍.

  • @christophernyland1256
    @christophernyland1256 3 года назад +17

    So sad the flavor that turf peat gives to Irish food the smoking salmon mussels oysters boar eel herring and Irish whisky is undeniable trademark to the Irish peoples.....what a tough great people that have contributed so much to our world

    • @dicey8928
      @dicey8928 2 года назад

      My scots family name is peat wonder how we got the name Peat my mothers name is mortensen from Faroe 🇫🇴lslands

    • @bartoszbielecki1722
      @bartoszbielecki1722 2 года назад +2

      Simillar like in my village in Poland years ago. Everyone could dig out clay in his farm and make bricks. All families could use them to biulid own house or barns. Small scale of production was friendly for eco system and let people to get small income

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      It’s really not worth extracting it’s very harmful

  • @michael7423
    @michael7423 3 года назад +12

    I love the docile Dexter cattle, they are becoming popular on small homestead farms in the US these days. I’m intrigued by the other cows mentioned here!

  • @SilencedButNotForgotten
    @SilencedButNotForgotten 2 года назад

    Wonderful video!

  • @XS65080
    @XS65080 3 года назад +2

    Used to love cutting turf when I was younger.

  • @janewrin1830
    @janewrin1830 Год назад

    The closed captions are hilarious, apparently John bought the turf tractor in 1984 6,000 poems. Good on ye John, best day's work any poet ever had.

  • @SgtDuster
    @SgtDuster 3 года назад +10

    No wonder why Irish people is tough as nails

  • @storminnormanz
    @storminnormanz 3 года назад

    thats cool, that looks like fun!

  • @bangkokbaby
    @bangkokbaby 7 месяцев назад

    amazing history video 10/10

  • @blameusa7082
    @blameusa7082 3 года назад

    great video!!

  • @Discover-Ireland
    @Discover-Ireland 2 года назад

    Brilliant and yes the old days were the best

  • @irishcoffee6894
    @irishcoffee6894 3 года назад +7

    Great to see this "old way" of Irish farming.
    Not so much different as farming in the Netherlands in those years.

  • @johnthompson9444
    @johnthompson9444 4 года назад +3

    Great stuff!

  • @demanisrecks2049
    @demanisrecks2049 3 года назад +2

    Once in awhile you click on something and You find a Jewel. Thank You

  • @squigmcguigan8965
    @squigmcguigan8965 8 месяцев назад

    Very informative indeed.
    Regarding turf cutting. I'm exhausted, just watching.

  • @bigtoelittlefinger6133
    @bigtoelittlefinger6133 9 месяцев назад

    I have just remembered when I was a wee guys we stumble upon a peat bed when we wer digging up the hills I am going to go back up the hill and dig me some peat..much love fae bonnie Scotland

  • @Cypher791
    @Cypher791 3 года назад +2

    Well i live in scotland and.. typical of the modern man i knew nothing at all about this tradition but i am totally fascinated with this documentay now, thanks for sharing.

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      Trust me you’re better off for it.
      It destroys a really important habitat in our countries

  • @maureenmmcdermott9728
    @maureenmmcdermott9728 5 месяцев назад

    My cousins husband John made this he was an amazing guy . Rip ❤️

  • @colingoode3702
    @colingoode3702 2 года назад +1

    This takes me back to the one & only time I visited my grandfather who lived in Mountmellick Co Laois. I used to watch my dad's sister cook my grandfathers breakfast on a peat fired stove. Different times. Once things get back a more normal way of life I plan to travel back to Ireland to re-visit my roots.

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      I hope you come and have a wonderful time.
      Though can I ask that you don’t cut turf when you’re here? It’s destroying the Irish ecosystem and has lots of harmful effects for people as well as nature

  • @SavedTraveler-1975
    @SavedTraveler-1975 3 года назад +5

    This is one of the reasons Irishmen are badass. Look at the backs on these over the hill age gents!!

  • @GooTerzik
    @GooTerzik 3 года назад

    keep up !!

  • @arfarms5711
    @arfarms5711 3 года назад

    This was awesome. Thank you. New sub

  • @Rosco-P.Coldchain
    @Rosco-P.Coldchain 7 месяцев назад

    I remember visiting my grandfather’s farm in Longford in the 80s..I remember marching across his pete bogs to bring the cows in at 4 am and seeing these little stacks everywhere..I learned a lot about my roots when I visited..Love from Leeds..❤ I still remember his lifelong friend and neighbour who was then 90 still lived with no electricity or running water…I hope to return home one day for good

  • @benfried3745
    @benfried3745 3 года назад +2

    Nice video. The turf cutting was very interesting. Country and farming people are the best anywhere one goes in this world. Maybe I'm biased

  • @bluegtturbo
    @bluegtturbo Год назад +1

    My family cut turf by hand for years up to the 80s.
    Nothing more than labour intensive hardship. But we had to keep ourselves warm during the winter.. Very few houses had central heating back then!

  • @born2soon
    @born2soon 3 года назад +3

    My sister and I had hoped to visit County Roscommon and look into our McMannis past next year. Let's hope maybe the next year...

    • @VideosofIrishFarmingLife
      @VideosofIrishFarmingLife  3 года назад

      Thanks for the comment, yeah lets hope things get back to normal and you can enjoy your trip to Ireland..

  • @sicksideworldwide1599
    @sicksideworldwide1599 3 года назад +5

    Can't beat the smell of a turf fire it's the smell of victory 💪

    • @sicksideworldwide1599
      @sicksideworldwide1599 3 года назад +3

      @Bertie Bollocks the bog will always replenish so it's a never ending battle

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      Bog can’t replenish if you keep digging it out it’s ruining the peatlands

  • @richardwilliams1334
    @richardwilliams1334 2 года назад +1

    I have a garden in Peete soils.
    Never have I thought to do as this program shows with the Peete soils.
    My Peete garden grows the largest strawberries I've ever seen anywhere.
    About the size of a tennis ball.
    The melons also grown in the same area their average weight is between 12kg and 14kg and they are often much sweeter then brought stock perhaps because they are given more time to ripen about 90 days from seed to fruit.
    Thank you for sharing the lives of my Irish ancestors of yesterday.
    Today I have always lived here in NZ.

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      Please don’t buy moss peat for gardens it’s really bad for the planet

  • @mezroth
    @mezroth 3 года назад +3

    The old days were the best

  • @jalenjose3905
    @jalenjose3905 8 месяцев назад +1

    The earth has always changed its climates from windy to calm from snow to rain. since the beginning of the time.

  • @floro7687
    @floro7687 3 года назад +5

    In Norway a crude shed was commonly used to dry the peat, otherwise the methods are the same.

  • @mrplease66
    @mrplease66 3 года назад +8

    funny side note, in southern Germany and Bavaria the term moss is also used to designate turf areas (Halbermoos, Erdinger Moos, etc.), and we also talk about working 'in the moss' or 'im moos'.

  • @ladylaois8184
    @ladylaois8184 3 года назад +6

    When I was a very young girl in the 1960s I remember getting turf for my Granny in Rathdowney

    • @beaglaoich4418
      @beaglaoich4418 2 года назад

      Please don’t use turf it’s terrible heat source and bad for the environment

  • @davidnyc487
    @davidnyc487 Год назад +2

    We still use tuff cutting machines in the west of Ireland today 2022.