Leo Wood lives in Welford, Northamptonshire and makes his living as a self-employed thatcher. He didn't plan a life working with this
traditional craft.
"From school I intended to follow in my father's footsteps as a chemical engineer but preferred working outdoors. I was helping a friend whose farmer father was ill with odd jobs weekends on the farm and working in the
laboratory of a chrome plating plant full time.
Leo Wood's thatched roof
"I had no real intention of changing my job, but by chance while helping on the farm a government agricultural employment agent came to try to arrange for a full time worker on the farm.
"He
literally dropped his paper work and one of the cards was from a thatcher looking for an apprentice." That was the beginning of Leo's career as a thatcher.
"When I started in1963 around 200 full time thatchers were left, this is now around 2000 and has been so for five or six years
So what's the most common comment Leo gets from people who see him thatching? "Easy, and bound to raise a laugh among thatchers; we all get it.... Tap on the
ladder........ 'Not many of you blokes around these days'".
"The basic
technique of thatching apart from better fastening methods have remained
unchanged for hundreds of years and probably thousands. No matter what the material the thick cut end of the bundle is the only part seen outside.
"Starting at the bottom of the roof this is tied parallel onto the
rafters around two thirds up the bundle. If it was left like this you would see a series of steps up the roof from the ends, this is still done in some African countries. In Europe the ends are arranged so that all the end part is re arranged or cut parallel to the
rafter covering the long stalk part of the bundle underneath.
"The distance from the weathering surface to the wood work in Britain is generally not less than 12 inches but with some types of thatching I have seen up to 4 feet, This is due to a practice of not removing the old material back to the timbers but fastening a new one into and over the top of the old one."
"I have no
preference in materials other than the longer life span of Norfolk Reed, they all have a place both economically for the house owner and the style of the area."
So what would Leo say to someone
considering a career as a thatcher?
"Don't ! if you want a reasonable living. It's more of a way of life."
What's Leo's favourite thatched building? He laughs, "An easy question to answer, -MINE- !"
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