Cherished Irish tradition of roof thatching is dying out but a new school aims to fix that


A new school in Ireland is training up a fresh generation of thatchers in a bid to save the countryโ€™s disappearing thatched roofs, an iconic feature of the Irish landscape.

In a hall in Portnoo, students at the Donegal Thatching School clamber over practice roofs under the watchful eye of Brian Lafferty, one of Irelandโ€™s last master thatchers.

โ€œThatโ€™s it, start at the eaves and work from there,โ€ says the still sprightly 72-year-old, peering upwards as a student lays and fixes batches of flax straw on top of a purpose-built model house.

โ€œThe tradition has almost died out,โ€ he adds. โ€œIt is crucial to pass it on to the younger ones.โ€

Brian Lafferty is one of Irelandโ€™s last master thatchers. Photo: AFP
Brian Lafferty is one of Irelandโ€™s last master thatchers. Photo: AFP

Lafferty, whose expertise was learned from his father, grew up in County Donegal, the part of Ireland with the highest number of surviving thatched cottages.

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