pipper
Well-Known Member
Does anyone know the law on Motorbikes using a birdleway please?
I don't know what the law is, but my own view is live and let live. Where I live we get lots of motorbikes and quads on the tracks usually on a Sundays. They are only out enjoying their leisure time the same as I am. I have never had an incident or near miss and find they all slow down or stop. Some even stop their engines. On some of the Endurance rides in Thetford forest we would have a motorbike trail riding club go out and mark the routes for us. Best to all get along. it's becoming harder and harder to find riding places for both groups.However I would have a problem with full blown motocross machines, same as I would with race horses being thrashed down the lanes.
I don't know what the law is, but my own view is live and let live. Where I live we get lots of motorbikes and quads on the tracks usually on a Sundays. They are only out enjoying their leisure time the same as I am. I have never had an incident or near miss and find they all slow down or stop. Some even stop their engines. On some of the Endurance rides in Thetford forest we would have a motorbike trail riding club go out and mark the routes for us. Best to all get along. it's becoming harder and harder to find riding places for both groups.However I would have a problem with full blown motocross machines, same as I would with race horses being thrashed down the lanes.
I don't know what the law is, but my own view is live and let live. Where I live we get lots of motorbikes and quads on the tracks usually on a Sundays. They are only out enjoying their leisure time the same as I am. I have never had an incident or near miss and find they all slow down or stop. Some even stop their engines. On some of the Endurance rides in Thetford forest we would have a motorbike trail riding club go out and mark the routes for us. Best to all get along. it's becoming harder and harder to find riding places for both groups.However I would have a problem with full blown motocross machines, same as I would with race horses being thrashed down the lanes.
Round here, some off road bikes sometimes illigally ride round these woods. It states at all the entrances " NO MOTORBIKES". A few riders have come accross them and one girl broke her arm when horse bolted. We have to either catch them on head cam or make a note of time place and rego and report it to the local police.
Bikes and Horses do not mix!
All my horses will mix, even some I have had to retrain. If a horse bolts from a motorbike I wouldn't class that horse as well trained enough to be out in public.
I don't know what the law is, but my own view is live and let live. Where I live we get lots of motorbikes and quads on the tracks usually on a Sundays. They are only out enjoying their leisure time the same as I am. I have never had an incident or near miss and find they all slow down or stop. Some even stop their engines. On some of the Endurance rides in Thetford forest we would have a motorbike trail riding club go out and mark the routes for us. Best to all get along. it's becoming harder and harder to find riding places for both groups.However I would have a problem with full blown motocross machines, same as I would with race horses being thrashed down the lanes.
All my horses will mix, even some I have had to retrain. If a horse bolts from a motorbike I wouldn't class that horse as well trained enough to be out in public.
A B.O.A.T near me no motorised vehicles allowed on it in winter but regularl see them and some are rude but do authorities do anthing? no what if the caused an accident as horse spooked? if you could identify them as tecnically breaking law and trashing ground conditions
It all comes down to a much greater problem which I have been chewing over for a while. People are being really encouraged to get outside and enjoy the countryside and the increase in all kinds of traffic is huge. The problem is that the money to keep the paths/byways/bridleways etc in some sort of good order is simply not there. The countryside is not a free resource but not many councils are willing to shoulder the burden. I was incredibly surprised when I moved yards to find that local bridlepaths were kept in some sort of order because that never happened where I was previously (Surrey beauty spot, part of the Olympic cycle ride)
If anyone has the answer I would love to hear it. I have no desire to restrict anyone's access but the reason most riders are quite protective of their bridleways is that...we just don't have many of them and having them cut up by illegal traffic is hugely galling. We can't even canter on some of our bridleways in the winter because we will dig it up too much. However, if I enjoyed off road rally biking..would I not have the same right to enjoy the countryside? and if I ended up on bridlepaths, would that perhaps be because there isn't much access? I am not a bike rider, (except in the gym) but am trying to see it from both sides.
I don't have any answers. I don't even think keeping the paths in "good order" is the answer. "Good order" to most councils means "hard". I don't want hard tracks that are worse on unshod hoofs than tarmac. I want dirt/grass tracks that I can canter on. That's one of the reasons for going offroad.