Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 177 total)
  • Resolving argument between council and MTBers – Solutions?
  • belgianwaffle1
    Full Member

    So the council have started cracking down on the massive digging activity at my local.

    For context, I live in SW London, and it is a forest owned by the National Trust on loan to Richmond Council. The jumps have been there since 2009 but recently there has been a flurry of activity with lots of peopl building and riding the jumps. These have been great fun and have improved my skills and confidence a lot.

    Now, the not so great part.

    The council has picked up on this and the environmental board is not happy. Last week, all the jumps were knocked down and berms flattened etc. This made a lot of 11-14 year olds not very happy at all. On came yesterday, and 25 people with shovels came down and rebuilt it all within a matter of hours.

    Then a disgruntled older lady who I had never met before but seemed to have a reputation for being unhappy came down to the jumps and started taking pix of all of the jumps and argued that people could fall over them in the dark and that it was very expensive to repair (1000s of pounds).

    The issue is that there will always be a demand for more jumps and a ready supply of boys with shovels geared up to make new jumps. I was wondering if anyone has had a similar situation and managed to resolve it? We are drafting a letter to the council at the mo but doesn’t look super promising.

    TIA.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    Its vandalism pure and simple.

    sillysilly
    Free Member

    Where is that? Never heard of jumps in London.

    It’s a very tough balancing act. If it wasn’t for so called activist trail builders there would be very few trails with features to build skills on in the UK. It’s working out where there is genuine danger and concern vs bored people with no hobbies and too much time on their hands.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    If you do not have the landowners permission its both illegal and stupid. It will end up with the whole area being fenced off.

    they are not “activist trail builders” they are antisocial vandals. Its not just the danger – its the disturbance to wildlife.

    belgianwaffle1
    Full Member

    @tjagain

    I’m not condoning it, just trying to find a solution and save the local


    @sillysilly

    It’s east sheen common.

    It’s working out where there is genuine danger and concern

    Yes unfortunately as with many youths health and safety isn’t at the forfront of their minds. If we do manage to come to an agreement I think there would have to be a scaling down of difficulty.

    nickjb
    Free Member

    Lots of trail builders out there doing a great job. The pandemic has really shown the huge demand there is on our limited spaces, especially in the high population density areas. I can’t help with specifics for dealing with the council but there are plenty of experienced people on here who have done it and can. If you end with a petition stick a link on here and I’ll happily sign it.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    See my edit above – its not just danger the disturbance to wildlife from tree root damage to bluebells to badgers

    the solution is to get landowners permission.

    thegeneralist
    Free Member

    See my edit above – its not just danger the disturbance to wildlife from tree root damage to bluebells to badgers

    the solution is to get landowners permission.

    Eh. That makes no sense at all. It’s either disturbing nature or it’s not. Whether the landowner gives permission has no bearing on that.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    the landowner will ( should?) Know the land and where is OK to build.

    We had this on corstoprhine hill in Edinburgh – there was agreement that two areas could be used for jump building but the builders continued to build in other areas. caused a lot of strife when they built jumps on a badger sett and used concrete to build features. Came close to stopping any trail building

    5plusn8
    Free Member

    There is a great podcast here on the issue of ownership.
    https://www.skeptic.com/eskeptic/21-03-20/?mc_cid=0b35a11523#Michael-Shermer-Show

    National trust/Richmond council, we own it don’t we?
    It is a sign that the council are not considering the local kids needs, all power to them.

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    Yea, kinda have to agree with TJ on this one, if there’s any sort of protection (SSSI etc or just the T&C’s of the lease say it can’t be developed) for the land it might be even harder.

    Local trails to me were flattened last year after local complaints. The (big) kids were grown up about it, got organized, formed a group, negotiated for use of the land, and produced T-shirts and hoodies which were sold to pay for liability insurance.

    Maybe take it as an opportunity to get organized and teach the kids it’s not ok to just take what they want?

    From this:

    To this:

    To this:

    belgianwaffle1
    Full Member

    @thisisnotaspoon

    Is that at Wisley? Looks familiar

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    Is that at Wisley? Looks familiar

    Fox Hill (I had the “>” wrong on the t-shirt image which probably made it harder to tell 🤣).

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    5plusn8
    Free Member

    Quote
    There is a great podcast here on the issue of ownership.
    https://www.skeptic.com/eskeptic/21-03-20/?mc_cid=0b35a11523#Michael-Shermer-Show

    National trust/Richmond council, we own it don’t we?
    It is a sign that the council are not considering the local kids needs, all power to them.

    Will they be applying the Freemen defense too?

    belgianwaffle1
    Full Member

    Yes I didn’t really think about liability insurance aswell – seems like a whole new can of worms.

    sillysilly
    Free Member

    The organisation bit is good if you can make it happen. Gofundme for any planning / liability insurance etc…

    To put it into context:

    This is basically on of the richest residential areas on the verge of central London. Any kids whose parents can afford to live there have a min £1m house with plenty of spare cash to help their kids out with their new hobby.

    There are plenty of other parks and wildlife sanctuaries around for people that want that kind of thing. E.g Richmond, Bushy, London WL centre.

    What the area has zero of is anything MTB related for kids to enjoy instead of sitting at home all day on Netflix.

    greyspoke
    Free Member

    See my edit above – its not just danger the disturbance to wildlife from tree root damage to bluebells to badgers

    the solution is to get landowners permission.

    How can permission solve disturbance to badgers and damage to vegetable matter? Asking for a stripey-faced friend.

    stumpyjon
    Full Member

    there would be very few trails with features to build skills

    What all the FC and private trail center, pump tracks, skate parks and long distance trails across the country, yeah absolutely nowhere to hone skills (do massive jumps count as skills training).

    National trust/Richmond council, we own it don’t we?

    He’ll no, the National Trust is a private organisation independent of government, private land owner like any other, except they have specific bylaws which can make things a criminal offence that would otherwise be civil. Even if the government own the land you only have access rights if they have been granted, same with FC land although the FC are often tenants not the land owner.

    I just don’t get this belief that its acceptable, even morally right to go and destroy someone else’s property. What the 14 year olds want is irrelevant in this context. As for engaging with the council, good luck, the local diggers have already pissed them off and getting something down even when a council is willing is tedious. Are the diggers going to stump up money for insurance, risk assessments etc., thought not. In this case it’s not just the council, it’s the NT as well, they will set the tenancy agreements for the council and haven’t exactly caught the cycling bug.

    If all the above seems a bit harsh, tough, that’s the way the it works in this country. You need to understand it before you go ploughing in head first and destroy any little goodwill there may have originally been.

    PS I’m a long term trail builder, just do it the right way with the FC, our volunteer efforts have significantly increased our local trail centre and resulted in additioanl funding that otherwise wouldnt have been forth coming.

    thols2
    Full Member

    massive digging activity at my local.

    This is the bit that seems the biggest problem to me. Someone furtively clearing a trail is one thing, having a huge crew digging up massive mounds of dirt after being told that they do not have permission is just asking for trouble. How do they think it’s going to end?

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    How can permission solve disturbance to badgers and damage to vegetable matter? Asking for a stripey-faced friend.

    Me: I would like to punch you in the face

    You: I’d rather you didn’t, but there’s a punchbag over there you could punch instead.

    Me: Ok

    Net result – I’m happy, and the badger doesn’t get punched in the face.

    bridges
    Free Member

    “This is basically on of the richest residential areas on the verge of central London. Any kids whose parents can afford to live there have a min £1m house with plenty of spare cash to help their kids out with their new hobby.”

    This is making amassive, and ill-informed assumption about ALL kids who might use a facility in a particular area. I know for a fact, many younger riders travel across London to get to popular skate parks, BMX tracks etc, so to suggest it’s just the ‘rich kids’, is actually quite prejudicial. You haven’t got a clue about the economics of anyone involved.

    All power to the kids, I say. As for those saying ‘it’s vandalism’; get a life, grandad! Stuff like this has far less environmental impact than many things, including roads for people to drive cars on, so they can access the countryside…

    piemonster
    Full Member

    How can permission solve disturbance to badgers and damage to vegetable matter? Asking for a stripey-faced friend.

    TJs point (I think) is that by working with the landowners you would be told not to dig where there is a Badger set and (hopefully) pointed towards a location where no stripey faced barstads are in situ.

    mrlebowski
    Free Member

    Fear of litigation.

    That’s why illegal jumps get knocked down. I fully hear the arguments for but at the end of the day the landowner will be liable for any accidents on their land. Regardless of whether they gave permission or not. If they give permission & they are built with the landowners involvement then insurance can be sought. Everybody is happy.

    But if not? Well, one can hardly blame a landowner for wanting to cover their ass from litigious actions.

    It’s not rocket science.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    How can permission solve disturbance to badgers and damage to vegetable matter? Asking for a stripey-faced friend.

    As in my other post – the landowner will ( should?) know if there are any particularly sensitive areas and thus direct you to OK areas

    sillysilly
    Free Member

    Go to the area, sit in any of the parks for just 10 mins and then tell me this is ill informed.

    This maybe kids travelling from say Chelsea, Richmond, Barnes, it’s certainly not what you are thinking.

    I also don’t get how it’s prejudicial to state that the local kids probably have the resources to help them if needs be?

    Net net my view is this could be turned into something win win for the community that is seriously lacking this kind of thing. I think the closest outside of this is East London Olympics area and say Swinley.

    FunkyDunc
    Free Member

    It’s a difficult one.

    Gives people stuff to do, but then it’s woodland so annoys people near by.

    Increases the workload for local hospitals significantly.

    Even ‘approved’ trail areas significantly increase footfall to hospitals

    tjagain
    Full Member

    All power to the kids, I say. As for those saying ‘it’s vandalism’; get a life, grandad!

    Can I come round to your house redecorate your house and dig up the garden?

    apart from anything else illegal trail building puts peoples backs up

    thols2
    Full Member

    apart from anything else illegal trail building puts peoples backs up

    Exactly.

    colp
    Full Member

    Can I come round to your house redecorate your house and dig up the garden?

    Could you do the downstairs loo first please then a couple of berms and a step down in the garden would be ace.

    bridges
    Free Member

    “Can I come round to your house redecorate your house and dig up the garden?”

    Ooh yes please! Covid has meant we haven’t been able to get anyone in to do the decorating, and it’s well overdue. And the garden’s a mess too, but please; I wouldn’t want you to put your back out, or worse, keel over. That would be awkward explaining to the authorities.

    “apart from anything else illegal trail building puts peoples backs up”

    Are you aware that we have illegal activity (trespass) to thank for why we can now go riding our bikes in the countryside? Plus; graffiti art, the Civil Rights movement, etc. Back to your pipe and slippers and Daily Mail! 😉

    thegeneralist
    Free Member

    apart from anything else illegal trail building people on bicycles puts peoples backs up

    FTFY

    wbo
    Free Member

    Forest isn’t quite the phrase I’d use for East Sheen common.. couple of hundred of square metres of woods on the north edge of Richmond Park slap bang in residential West London. So a bunch of digging is always going to attract negative attention. Subtlety would be your best approach

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Didn’t we have exactly this discussion across several pages like a week ago?

    The argument is simple, the answer slightly more complicated. Do we go what is good, or what is right?

    It’s fantastic that people are coming together as a community to build something cool that kids and adults alike can enjoy. Of course it is.

    But it’s not their land.

    So any arguments to the contrary is just whataboutery. As TJ says, if you’re not using your garden can I plant some cabbages? I’ll park on your driveway of course, you’re not using that either.

    It’s curious how morals go out of the window when it’s in people’s favour. There were arguments last time about people having massive gardens or owning lots of land and it’s ‘not fair’. Which is the same justification people use for keying cars. Cheeky trail in the afternoon, borrow a cheeky BMW to get home.

    All that work, all that time, and not one person involved thought to seek permission first? Why? Because they knew they’d get told ‘no’? There’s your answer, if so. Get permission, you can stick it up the old dear’s nose next time she comes sniffing around with nothing better to do.

    WorldClassAccident
    Free Member

    I spent 7 years trying to work with the Forestry Commission to get some legitimate trails built in Lordswood, Southampton. We eventually got the go ahead from the local ranger but then a couple of weeks in we got told to stop as it is leased land and there is a clause to discourage public access.

    We tried ‘rhododendron clearing’ parties and ‘erosion prevention work’ (Trails and Jumps) but were eventually told to stop everything which is when I went off and created Southampton Bike Park.

    A few years later I discovered it was a lady who lived near Lordswood and regularly walked her dog in the woods who had been sending the letters to the FC legal team in Scotland threatening them about breaching the terms of the lease. The same lady whop had been caught red handed putting sticks across trails at neck height just round blind bends on trails ‘because the riders should slow down anyway for the corners’.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    graffiti art,

    But for every Banksy there’s a hundred like the local artist where I used to live who specialised in anatomically questionable Cock ‘n’ Balls. Which is exactly what I want to see out of my back yard on a neighbour’s wall.

    BearBack
    Free Member

    Best way to resolve? Form a trail association, engage with the stakeholders and put together a proposal for a development.
    Once you’ve got permission, build a risk assessed and risk managed set of jumps that are insurable.

    stumpyjon
    Full Member

    we have illegal activity (trespass)

    More uninformed blather, trespass is not illegal (at the moment) and is a country mile away from digging jumps. If I trespass you wouldn’t know I’d been there when I’d left (which is why no cyclcist has been sued for trespass).

    WCA the lease thing may have some legs even if it was dredged up by some nasty nimby. My local forest has been a bit the same, when the land owner (United Utilities) woke up to the fact the trails had become successful they suddenly started to get awkward with the lease and saw it as an opportunity to make money. It doesn’t help the FC is so spread out, were lucky our local beat forester is very pro trail building and tends to ask for forgiveness later.

    Pook
    Full Member

    Collaborate. This document has opened some doors for us.

    http://peakdistrictmtb.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/22brochure_v4.pdf

    sillysilly
    Free Member

    I’d put my money on this being a single bored NIMBY dog walker from a mile away with too much time on their hands.

    To the OP – Try and get one of the local private schools / Unis to get involved and back it. Would go nicely with the local rowing clubs. Make sure one of the jumps is gravel bike friendly, another kid friendly and you will quickly get local support.

    RichBowman
    Full Member

    Who owns the land with the jumps near Teddington Lock? Wonder if there’s some precedent there..?

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