Drystone: A Gathering of Terminology and Technique  

£35.00

**PRE-ORDER NOW**


Drystone: A Gathering of Terminology and Technique  

Nick Aitken – Tippermuir Books Ltd 9781068604690 

 pp372  

This book will be of interest to anyone studying old buildings or vernacular building techniques. Drystone walls are visible evidence of a reorganised agricultural infrastructure, and the social changes which followed. Thousands of miles of stone walls were built 1700 and 1900, all without the benefit of mortar. It was careful work, not just rocks piled up in a heap. English wallers and Scottish dykers had terms for each step in the building process. Two centuries ago, every upland district would have had teams building head dykes, field walls and sheep fanks.  Their accents and dialect words, in the days before standardised spelling, were as varied as the rock they handled, or the walls they built. Skilled men moved across the county or country, even overseas, taking with them a language which was seldom written down. Words sometimes changed subtly when they moved. This book gathers these words together. Drystone walling has been described as a ‘dying art’ since the early 1900s. Should the terminology die with it? Are these ‘old words’ still relevant in a high-tech world? The main emphasis of this book is on the history and construction of drystone walls and (relatively) simple drystone structures. It brings together evidence from Europe, the Americas, Australia, New Zealand, Asia, the Middle East and Africa. Other topics include mortared masonry, geology, working conditions, weights and measures and international comparisons. We are cautioned about walling ‘promiscuously’, and told why a drystone wall is ‘dry’. Overall, it is an entertaining and informative read. The extensive bibliography opens up the possibility for further study. Sources include nineteenth century clergymen, hands-on dykers, historians, geologists and civil engineers. The ‘old words’ are still important. We need them to understand an important part of the agricultural revolution. They can also describe the diversity of drystone construction as it revives in this new century.   

Nick Aitken is a Scottish drystone dyker who has worked and travelled in Scotland, Ireland and North America gathering dry stone building techniques, history, language and knowledge. He is Dry Stone Walling Association of Great Britain Master Craftsman and both an examiner and instructor. Among his peers, he is considered to be one of the best ‘wallers’ in the world. He has been involved with a wide variety of stone structures from burial ground walls, to brochs and blackhouses. He currently lives in the Pacific Northwest of the US and is the author of several and articles books on dry stone walling.  

Praise for Nick Aitken and Drystone Walling: Materials and Techniques:   

‘Anyone interested in drystone walls will find gold in these pages.’  
The Flag Stone, Journal of the Dry Stone Walls Association of Australia  

‘Nick Aitken [is] one of a body of people for whom dry stone walls are the stuff of life.’  
John Wright, author of A Natural History of the Hedgerow  

‘This very informative and well-illustrated book was a pleasure to read; I recommend it to anyone who is interested in the craft of dry stone masonry.’ 
Stoneexus, Magazine of the Stone Foundation 

Categories: , ,

Additional information

Author

Nick Aitken

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

You may also like…