Consulting The Coracle
BBC Countryfile Magazine
|November 2017
In a quest to learn more about Britain’s traditional boats, Mary-Ann Ochota attempts to master an ancient craft on a wild Welsh river
Below the village of Cilgerran in Pembrokeshire, the River Teifi surges noiselessly through a steep, tree-covered valley. It’s a dark night, the moon is yet to rise and the thick sky blankets us. “Look at that,” Mark Dellar murmurs, at the haze forming above the black water. “The old men used to call that ‘Salmon Mist’. It’s a good sign, it means the fish might be running.”

I flick my headtorch on, step gingerly into my coracle, and we push off from the bank into the velvet night. Mark is a Teifi netsman, entitled to fish the river for salmon and sea trout (known as sewin), using handmade nets trawled between two coracles. It’s the way it has been done for generations. Tonight, I’m joining him as a helper, or ‘gwas’, Welsh for ‘servant’.

With the rough net in one hand and a smooth wooden paddle in the other, floating on a dark river waiting for the tug of a fish, I can’t help thinking that I could have travelled in time and wouldn’t know it.

Along with timber log boats, the coracle – a small, rounded craft made from a wooden or wickerwork frame covered with animal hide – is the most ancient type of boat in human history. It’s certainly played a role in Britain since the Bronze Age, around 2,500BC, and probably earlier.
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