Lazy bed

Old lazybeds on North Harris
Old lazybeds on Ensay
Lazybeds on Inishglora

Lazy bed is a method of arable cultivation. Rather like cord rig cultivation, parallel banks of ridge and furrow are dug by spade although lazy beds have banks that are bigger, up to 2.5m in width, with narrow drainage channels between them.

Although it is largely extinct, it is still to be found in parts of the Hebrides where lazybeds are known as feannagan (Scottish Gaelic pronunciation: [fjan̪ˠakən]) in Scottish Gaelic, and the west of Ireland, where they were known in Irish as ainneor or iompú. In these places, the method used is normally to lift up sods of peat and apply desalinated seaweed fertiliser to improve the ground. Potatoes were often grown in this way in these regions, until the potato blight Phytophthora infestans caused potato famine in the Highlands and Ireland.

It was used in southern parts of Britain from the post-Roman period until the post-medieval period, and across much of Ireland and Scotland until the 19th century.

See also

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