Coish Bog

Bibliographic Details
Main Creator: Gesparo, Michael photographer
Contributors: Shortt, Joe
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Summary:This year, we in Ireland experienced some of the wettest months on record. Fortunately however, the mid-autumn fine spell of weather brought reprieve and a scurry to the bogs. Throughout the midlands people worked feverishly to save their winter fuel crops of "machine turf" as it is called to distinguish it from the familiar briquette type milled peat and also from the hand-won turf which is now very rare. Machine-turf is cut by contractors and sold in plots to people who undertake the savings of it themselves. This picture shows the savers buisily at work. Nowadays there are only two kinds of peat, machine or briquette, which refers really to the method of saving, rather then the quality. In former times peat or turf was distinguished by quility and in this area there was at least five kinds, i.e. moin ge, black, brown, white an cellet turf.
In collection: Our Own Place Photographic Project
Format: Photo
Language:English
Published / Created: 23 Sep 1993
Subjects:
Notes:Project sponsored by RTÉ and Fuji Photo Film (Ireland) Ltd.

Film number: 3A ; frame number: 35

Birr Historical Society

Photograph taken at e.g. 16:25, 23 Sep 1993.

Physical description: 1 photograph ; 15 x 10cm.

Geographic Coverage: Birr, Co. Offaly, Province of Leinster, Ireland.

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300 |a 1 photograph ;  |c 15 x 10cm. 
500 |a Project sponsored by RTÉ and Fuji Photo Film (Ireland) Ltd. 
500 |a Film number: 3A ; frame number: 35 
500 |a Birr Historical Society 
518 |a Photograph taken at e.g. 16:25, 23 Sep 1993. 
520 |a This year, we in Ireland experienced some of the wettest months on record. Fortunately however, the mid-autumn fine spell of weather brought reprieve and a scurry to the bogs. Throughout the midlands people worked feverishly to save their winter fuel crops of "machine turf" as it is called to distinguish it from the familiar briquette type milled peat and also from the hand-won turf which is now very rare. Machine-turf is cut by contractors and sold in plots to people who undertake the savings of it themselves. This picture shows the savers buisily at work. Nowadays there are only two kinds of peat, machine or briquette, which refers really to the method of saving, rather then the quality. In former times peat or turf was distinguished by quility and in this area there was at least five kinds, i.e. moin ge, black, brown, white an cellet turf. 
522 |a Birr, Co. Offaly, Province of Leinster, Ireland. 
540 |a Reproduction rights owned by the National Library of Ireland. 
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700 1 |a Cavanagh, Sarah  |e researcher 
710 2 |a Federation of Local History Societies (Ireland) 
710 2 |a Federation for Ulster Local Studies 
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