Pedantic
Well-Known Member
As Mon said about municipal parks etc, why do we seem to get the **** end of the stick when it comes to being catered for ?
We have a bridleway that partly runs through a farmers field. It had a nice track with a bit of grass down the middle. Last year, when he ploughed, he did the track as well! His answer, when approached, was 'you still have access, just ride over the plough' Fair enough I suppose, but not easy on a recently started youngster, or for kids with ponies accompanied by a walking parent. And a nightmare when it's wet!
Now, he would be rightly peed off if we rode over his crops, so why is it ok for him to obliterate a path designated for our use, as long as he allows access, so remaining within the law?
That is illegal. Contact your local council. I understand that farmers only have a limited time to re-establish a right of way after its been ploughed.
I know of a few "municipal" places to ride in London but these are long established and I can't see the likes being installed now. I used to ride years ago in a sand school on Tooting Bec common, and I think it's still there and I'm sure that was Council owned. Dulwich Park has a fabulous sand ride round part of the park. There's Hyde Park.. I'm sure there are others round London parks too.
But can you imagine the uphill struggle you'd get to have one put in nowadays?
Two reasons, as booboos says in her post, as a group we are rubbish both the ramblers and cycle groups work very hard campaigning for routes etc unfortunately for us, cyclist seem to think its okay to hardcore all public bridleways?? We've just had an amazing canter around our place partly hardcored by the local council so it could be used for wheelchair access???? A group of us petitioned, went to the papers and they actually stopped half way through.
I don't think it is the cyclists actually. Most people who cycle on bridleways are on mountain bikes and prefer it to be a bit rough. I think you will find it is the councils doing their bit for access to all, ie wheelchair and electric buggy users and it has to be in good nick for them. I know what it is like as where I used to keep my horse all the river banks were hardcored, but equally, why should the disabled have to stay indoors? We have far more choices than they do, and we should be very grateful for that.
Earlsfield too, I think.
I'm kind of working on a grand theory that what the horse world needs is more projects like Stepney Bank, Ebony Horse Club (I just posted a thread on them called Horses are Good for Kids) and the Emile Faurie Foundation: showing horses as an asset to the community, helping with kids with problems, getting schools involved, letting non-horsey people understand what's going on, opening up stables.
In my (maybe optimistic) brain this is the key to better bridleways and facilities, to more road safety, to more TV coverage of horse sports, more business for riding schools...
I just cut a pasted this from the other thread. I should have put it here.
I just had to Google this,
the average farm size in the UK is 56ha. France is the same.
There's absolutely no issues with access here. I'd forgotten how closed the UK was. The attitude of farmers and large land owners in the UK are hardening all the time an restricting access more and more, putting pressure on the limited riding available. It's no wonder people end up in conflict. There's a tradition in the UK of 'git orf my laand' and stuff you I'm alright jack,that attitude is not encountered here. I think if there was a right to access the pressure would be reduced and people would become more educated to the ways of the farm. Too many people have no idea how a farm works. Everyone is lumped together be it walkers, cyclists, green laners, quads, trail bikes, carriage drivers and horse riders. If access where opened up the pressure would all but disappear. Myself I have 12ha with a river running through. If someone wants to fish in the river. All they have to do is tell me. I don't see the problem with using a farm track? If a farmer spoke to me the way the OP says he spoke to her, I have have give him verbal tirade to match his own. I certainly wouldn't be kissing his butt. Note the OP was on a track, not destroying the hard working farmers crops as is suggested. I find it bizarre that most people who answered this thread are standing by the very people who are prohibiting there own enjoyment and forcing them to use tarmac??
The main problem in the UK is that 0.6 per cent of the population own 50 per cent of rural land. If there's a chance to open more bridleways/green lanes, why wouldn't you try? The status quo obviously isn't working.
It's unfair, but that's life. If anything I think all footpaths should be open to horses. If we use the unfair rule does that mean its ok for me to just turn up at local yards to use their schools for free when I please? After all, why should I school in a field when someone else had a lovely arena?
You know full well this post is about tracks and lanes, Why bother to post something so ridiculous?
Ditto.That is illegal. Contact your local council. I understand that farmers only have a limited time to re-establish a right of way after its been ploughed.
You know full well this post is about tracks and lanes, Why bother to post something so ridiculous?