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Recently, I’ve been thinking again about access rights. Previously I was definitely on the side of ‘ride legal, or keep it quiet if you’re not’. Now, I’m not so sure. Increasingly, I’m coming to the conclusion that access is a right, and that the proposals for Wales – lauded as progress by many as opening most of the rights of way network to riders – are just fighting for crumbs. While in the Welsh case these crumbs are perhaps very large and tasty croutons, they perpetuate the structures of access rights being ‘granted’. Increasingly, being told I’m permitted or allowed to do something is jarring, and the irate jangly feeling that gives me under my skin makes me want to get outside with placards. Preferably somewhere I’m not ‘supposed’ to be.

The reasons for this radicalisation are many – a confluence of various influences and events rather than a specific trigger. Being absolutely furious about the political leaders of this country, their financial influences, and shameless cronyism definitely plays a part. Why should I be abiding by access laws that enable a few incredibly privileged and influential landowners to keep the ‘riff-raff’ out? They’re already keeping people out of the most influential positions in the country and perpetuating their control through structures and policies that limit access to the best education and training to those that aren’t part of this influential elite. ‘We the people’ are being kept off the land by laws created by and for the benefit of the elite whose lands have been paid for by the profits often gained by birthright, exploiting low paid workers, slavery, and the environment.
Climbing down off the top step of my soap box, there is yet more land owned by utility companies and the Forestry Commission. These commercial-ish landowners have a mixed record on granting access, with the Forestry Commission doing a better job than many of the utility companies. I’m at something of a loss to explain what is incompatible with riding bikes on land that is more or less just sitting there waiting for the wind or rain to hit it – especially where there are maintenance tracks on the land for actual vehicles with four wheels and a combustion engine. Why can’t I ride my bike here too?
At a slightly less philosophical and more immediate practical level, I’m frustrated that lockdown has shown so many the importance and pleasure of outdoor space and access to it, but by having such limited access there has resulted a narrative of overuse, abuse and damage. The criticism of people for heading to beauty spots and making them too busy seems to me to be pointing the finger of blame in the wrong direction. We live in a world of supply and demand – not enough TV channels for you to find something you like? We’ll give you more to choose from! There’s a queue at the supermarket checkout – so an extra till is opened. When a local population descends on the few spots accessible to them and on which they have been permitted to ride their bikes, walk their dogs, or eat their picnics leads to a feeling of overcrowding, we don’t open up a new woodland, or offer up some extra fields to sit in. Instead we put up a bunch of signs issuing grumpy orders and even adding extra restrictions to what existed before. Don’t park here, don’t take your dog there, no cycling, no music, no swimming, no fishing.

For as long as we talk about ‘granting’ access rights rather than considering access as a right, and granting protection where needed, I think the balance of power is wrong. I’m all for protection of fragile landscapes and vulnerable wildlife, but the current systems make a nonsense of that. When grouse moor owners can build trails for Land Rovers across their land, or burn heather, while simultaneously rejecting access requests on the grounds of protecting fragile peat bogs, I think it’s pretty hard to argue that the law is working in the interests of wildlife or landscape protection. I’d pretty happily have whole protected wildlife wilderness areas declared out of bounds for access in their entirety or on a seasonal basis, providing they were truly out of bounds – to the owners, or anyone trying to make money out of the resources there – and genuinely left as natural and wild habitats.
There has been a good deal of public outcry over the recent case of tax benefits being granted to a landowner in exchange for increased rights of access to the public – but with a good deal of mystery over what rights are supposed to have been given, or indeed if they have, and whether HMRC (who are surely supposed to be acting in the interests of the public, or at least the public purse…) has taken any measures to address it. That outcry seems to have gone beyond the relatively focussed interest groups of cyclists and into the wider public realm. In a similar vein, communities affected by flooding have long been raising some pointed questions about the relationship between Natural England and land owners. There may well be opportunities for campaigners to gain reviews of access and land laws by making an administrative nuisance of themselves, but I can’t help but feel like pen and ink might not get the changes we need.
Trespass is not (yet) a criminal offence, but incitement to trespass is. So I’m definitely not going to be organising any banner making workshops, or flash mob placard waving. Nor will I be encouraging you to ride where you ‘shouldn’t’ be. No. Definitely not. But next time someone tells me I’m not supposed to be somewhere, I’m going to be a little less meek and apologetic. I’ll be nice, I’ll say hi, but I’ll also ask ‘why?’.
Singletrack Merch
Replies (43)
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Mass trespass isn’t the way. Getting in the room is.
Peak District MTB are being tireless in doing this – getting major landowners on side and working to increase provision.
http://peakdistrictmtb.org/project/project-22-campaign/
But we’re a few volunteers working in our spare time. We need more support and more of a push.
Yesterday we were talking to the Chartered Institute of Foresters about wild trails. Putting the MTB viewpoint across. Changing perceptions. Opening the dialogue.
We need more of that. Lots more
Keeper of the Peak bongs on about this stuff all the time too
https://kofthep.com/2020/08/26/ride-and-prejudice/
https://kofthep.com/2020/02/10/rights-are-wrong/
Advocacy is “boring” though, of course. And we could just ride in our little bike parks couldn’t we?
It’s a bit naive (and even disrespectful) to describe the proposed legislative changes in Wales as “fighting for crumbs”. They basically involve parity of access for all users on the existing RoW network.
But don’t let facts get in the way of a soundbite.
I agree with all the sentiments here and in the peak am fond of the ‘cheeky trails’, be them footpaths or new trails not strictly on the map…
But, with this has to come responsibilty as to when we should ride these trails. Riding down Win Hill on a bank holiday weekend is asking for trouble as a lot of bikers sadly are dicks. Access to these more remote trails has become more accesible now with ebikes too. And we all get tarred with the same brush. Big groups make us look like gangs – when in helmets with googles and pads we can be pretty imposing. Equally riding cheeky trails in muddy slop only serves to erode them faster.
So I pick my time and place accordingly. I follow the be nice, say hi sentiment – it’s difficult to be angry with someone smiling at you.
“Mass trespass isn’t the way. Getting in the room is.
Peak District MTB are being tireless in doing this”
I’m in no way knocking the fantastic work of Peak District MTB, but the Peak District itself exists in small part because of mass trespass (and not just the Kinder one, but that is the most famousest)
The ridiculousness doesn’t just exist on land either, get my other started on access to swimming spots…
It does…but I think the mass trespass gets heralded as the one event that led to an overnight change, as opposed to their being a long, long campaign, the mass treapass, then another 20 years of campaigning before the changes.
https://vimeo.com/446303802
*there, tsk.
Extensive trespass *does* work. Or anyway, can work.
In the 1980s a long stretch of the Pembroke coast was closed to the public because it was part of the Castlemartin artillery range (the far SW corner, south of the town of Pembroke). Repeated incursions by rock climbers (including me) keen to explore a new, largely unclimbed area eventually persuaded the army to allow limited access. That evolved to the current situation with fairly easy access whenever the military aren’t flinging high explosive around & the choughs aren’t nesting. Which works well for everyone & has put an end to the illegal incursions. So everyone’s happy…
See? It *can* work, with persistence, patience & reason.
Nice piece, by the way, Hannah. I don’t always agree with everything you write, but can’t argue with a word of this piece.
“Repeated”, “persuaded”.
Nobody’s saying appropriate pressure isn’t needed, I can just see a mass trespass backfiring.
“Patience and reason” too. Its sl about doslogue
How would ‘bike only’ trails such as Surrey hills, or trail centres work under a general right to roam type arrangement I wonder. Would we expect and be happy to share those and see walkers and horse riders coming the other way. What would we say if a walker asked us ‘why’ if we were to tell them off. Safety this and that presumably. Definitely right that this is entrenched in history – goes back to the inclosures acts and people got hung for trespassing after that!
Can I suggest making the article available to non members so we can share it on other platforms.
@gdm4 how will this place stay the world’s largest mountain bike secret society with thinking like that?
Agree hugely. Especially with your second paragraph. Clearly this is a big issue in England or Boris would not even be pretending to tackle it with his “levelling up”. It’s our class system, the Haves vs the Have Nots, and the Haves are going to make damned sure that the Have Nots do not reduce their pile in any way shape or form.
For a quick start we could remove styles and kissing-gates from footpaths – CyclingUK has an article on why its not an offence to cycle on footpaths (specifically not including the pavement besides a road).
Excellent article.
I’ve experienced a lot more confrontation from walkers over the last 12 months or so. This has been on BWs, FPs, towpaths… everywhere!
I’m going to up my response game. I currently rely on the old “I know” or occasionally go full-on Begbie. The Begbie instances are much shorter 🙂
A couple of quotes from the replies:
“just don’t be a dick”
“a lot of bikers sadly are dicks”
When confronted I say ‘are you the landowner, or the landowners agent?’. ‘No’. ‘Well **** off then’
A great article and, as per normal for Hannah, has made me think; I’m sure you can smell the burning. I also discussed this with my riding buddy (the article, not the burning smell). You may have started something here.
One tiny criticism of the article, can we stop using the word ‘cronyism’ and start calling it what it is; corruption!(which is what it would be called extremely vociferously if any other party was doing it!)
Been reading a lot recently about land ownership and access:
The Book of Trespass – Nick Hayes
Who Owns England – Guy Shrubsole
Who Owns Scotland -Andy Wightman (written 1996 so predates the Land Reform Act 2003)
Living in Scotland so not too worried about access but recent experience suggests that many landowners only pay lip service to public access.