Heritage Crafts

Highlands and Islands thatching

The thatching of roofs in the Highlands and Islands tradition, using locally available materials such as marram grass, oat straw, heather, bracken and rush.

See also thatching.
CRITICALLY ENDANGERED
Status
Critical
Craft category
Other
Historic area of significance
Scottish Highlands and Islands
Area practiced currently
Western Isles, Northern Isles, Shetland, Scottish Highlands
Current No. of professionals (Main income)
1
Current No. of professionals (Side income)
1-4
Current No. of trainees
1-5
Current total No. of serious amateur makers
Fewer than 10
Current No. of leisure makers
Not known

History

Scotland has a long tradition of using thatch, and it has one of the most diverse ranges of thatching materials and techniques found in Europe. However, the number of traditional thatched buildings is decreasing. A 2018 report into Scotland’s thatched buildings listed 236 buildings in Scotland which were thatched or are recorded as having had been thatched. A number of these were deteriorated at that time, and the number has continued to decrease.

There is a modest revival happening in some parts of Scotland that is being supported by Historic Environment Scotland. Thatching in the Western Isles, and particularly Uist, is also being driven by tourism and second home owners, as many visitors to the Islands are keen to stay in a traditionally thatched building. This contrasts to the Northern Isles, where the tradition is virtually extinct, and extant examples all feature compromised techniques, as is the case in Lewis. In Shetland there were around 50 recorded thatched buildings in the 1980s, and in 2021 there were just three. As the materials used in Highland and Islands thatch are less durable than with English thatch, the loss of thatched roofs has been more rapid.

 

Techniques

Highlands and Islands thatch is a different technique to English thatch and utilised locally available materials including marram grass, heather, broom, bracken and rush. It was less durable than English methods, because of the locally-available plants and wet climate.

When using oat straw or marram grass, the new thatch is installed over the old thatch, which settles and compresses over time. After three to ten years a new layer of thatch is added as the outside layer of thatch breaks down. The thatch is not fixed to the roof and is instead held down with a system of netting and stone weights to withstand the high winds and extreme weather. Other materials, such as heather, are fixed directly to the roof.

The techniques differs across the region. Hebridean and Highland construction typically utilise barley, heather or bracken, with hipped gables, and watershed into the wall-core; Northern Isles featured oat straw, with stone/turf gables, and watershed outside the wall-face.

Local forms

ThatchingInfo.com has a useful series of resources on Highland Thatching traditions:

Sub-crafts

There are an important coupe of skills that a thatcher needs in order to do the craft. These skills stand alone and can be used in other crafts.

  • The use and maintenance of a scythe (for luachar – rush, and mura – marram grass)
  • Cleaving hazel
  • Coppice management

Issues affecting the viability

  • Skills issues: There is a lack of training in heritage building skills and it is difficult to recruit trainees
  • Training issues: there is no financial support available to support training for thatching
  • Market issues: for financial and practical reasons, most home owners will opt for lower maintenance roofing options. Those that do choose thatch are tending to do it to attract tourists to rental properties, or because they are personally committed to preserving heritage building techniques and skills.
  • Lack of raw materials: Some of the traditional materials, such as marram grass, have been overharvested in the past and caused the erosion of sand dunes. Cutting of marram grass is permitted in some areas under tightly controlled conditions but it can still be difficult to source. Coir replaced hand-twisted rope in the late 19 th century; the appropriate grade is no longer available, and making rope by hand uneconomical. Cotton nets replaced hand-made netting in the 19 th century; this too is unavailable. Grain cultivation has markedly decreased, and when oats are grown they are varieties suitable for machine harvest; black oat has virtually vanished from farming.
  • Impermanence of materials: Highland and Islands thatching materials are less durable materials such as reed, which is now widely used for English thatch. It is a long term commitment and expense to manage a thatched roof and so they tend to be replaced with an alternative material.
  • Lack of awareness of traditional thatch: Native thatch styles are at risk by employing Lowland thatch materials and styles, mostly done out of ignorance of the impact of same. Cost is also a factor, where lowland materials are longer lasting and have more practitioners.
  • Growing of black oats: Efforts are being made in Shetland to revive the cultivation of traditional black oats for use in thatching and straw-related crafts.

 

Support organisations

  • Historic Environment Scotland
  • Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB)
  • Shetland Museum and Archive

Training organisations

Vocational training 

A comprehensive N/SVQ (National/Scottish Vocational Qualification) in Heritage Skills has been developed specifically to train craft practitioners in building conservation skills.

Historic Environment Scotland provides a list of opportunities in heritage building skills on their website including apprenticeships and craft fellowships.

Other training options

Craftspeople currently known

Individual craftspeople:

  • Neil Nicholson, North Uist
  • Scot AnSgeulaiche
  • Brian Wilson – recently awarded the Royal Warrant as thatcher to King Charles
  • Troy Holt – Apprenticed to Brian Wilson and undertaking a craft fellowship with Historic Environment Scotland (HES)
  • Samantha Dennis and Eve Eunson are currently learning and researching thatching in Shetland, including the growing of black oats

Thatching knowledge in a museum context:

  • Hannes Schnell – Highland Folk Museum, Newtonmore
  • Ian Tait – Shetland Museum and Archive
  • Auchindrain Township Museum have a trained thatcher who works on museum buildings

Other information

References

  • Tait, Ian, (2012) ‘Shetland Vernacular Buildings 1600-1900’Shetland Times
  • (26 November 2020) ‘The Last Thatcher of the Western Isles’Financial Times,
  • Historic Environment Scotland – Thatching with marram grass on YouTube
  • Hunnisett-Snow, Jessica, (2018) ‘Thatch in Scotland’ 
  • Fenton, A, (1976) Thatch and Thatching’, Building Construction in Scotland: Some Historical and Regional Aspects (Dunbar: SVBWG)
  • Snow, J, (2010) ‘Scottish thatch – a vanishing tradition’, The Victorian, no 34
  • SPAB, (2016) A Survey of Thatched Buildings in Scotland, Edinburgh, 2016
  • Walker, B, McGregor, C, and Stark, G, (1996) Thatch and Thatching Techniques: A Guide to Conserving Scottish Thatching Traditions, Historic Scotland Technical Advice Note 4 (Edinburgh)
  • I Whyte, (1980) ‘The Lewis Blackhouse in 1980: the end of an old tradition’, Northern Studies, no 16
  • John Wilson Associates (1986) Thatched Buildings Survey of Tiree (Oban)

Red List informants 2025

Our thanks go to our 2025 informants:

  • Scot AnSgeulaiche
  • Neil Nicholson
  • Samantha Dennis

We consult with a wide range of practitioners and organisations to review and update the Red List. Some choose to remain anonymous but all feedback is taken into account.

If you would like to suggest any changes or additions to this page please contact us here

National Lottery Heritage Fund
Swire Charitable Trust
The Royal Mint
Pilgrim Trust
Maxwell/Hanrahan Foundation
William Grant Foundation

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