Combed wheat reed is no longer a bye product of cereal production.
Thatch wheat straw roof.
Water reed has made inroads into both types of cereal thatch but long straw has suffered at the hands of combed wheat reed as well.
Thatch is a cost effective roofing material that provides ample shade and insulation to your building structure.
Thatching straw was a bye product of cereal production and oat barley rye and wheat are all cereals.
Thatching is the craft of building a roof with dry vegetation such as straw water reed sedge rushes heather or palm branches layering the vegetation so as to shed water away from the inner roof.
All ridge work is constructed using long straw regardless of whether the rest of the thatch is rendered in water reed long straw or combed wheat reed.
The germanic immigrants to this area brought with them the custom of rye straw roof thatching.
Less well known is that the straw which is especially grown for thatching is mainly wheat straw and not of the same variety as now being seen harvested with a combine in the fields in the summer.
Combed wheat reed this material also called devon reed or wheat reed or wheat straw is used for thatching roofs and for the majority of ridging work.
Based on the design thatched model is quite unique in a soft shape.
Either yealming out long straw.
That roofs in long straw do not last as well as the other main thatching materials.
Combed wheat might stand for 20 to 40 years ad long straw will reach 15 to 25 years.
Thatch is still employed by builders in developing countries usually with low.
The leaves that make up the thatched roof allow hot air to flow upward reducing heat and humidity.
A thatch roof is a warm and dry place for pests to live and if it is a straw roof there will almost certainly be some grain left in it which will provide a food source for rodents.
The longest durability for thatched roofing design may reached 65 years.
It is a very old roofing method and has been used in both tropical and temperate climates.
This position has been reached mainly due to a myth.
Aesthetically it would have better design rather than other types of roof.
Rye is a cereal grain similar to wheat but with a habit of growth yielding stalks almost twice as high as wheat.
Or looking for those elusive fine bundles of water reed.
The thatcher can cope with any roof shape without spending hours.
The ridge of a thatched roof bears the brunt of the weather and generally requires attention every 12 15 years.
Which needs to be dispelled.
Nowadays cereal varieties are grown with short straw which would be hopeless for thatching roofs.