Even the areas where there are rights of way, private land owners make it as difficult as possible to follow them.
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There certainly are a good number - but not all - who do. It is counter productive though. If you can't easily follow the route, you are far more likely to end up wandering off it and ending up somewhere they don't want you and you don't want to be.
If they mark it clearly, everyone stays on it and there are no problems.
Yeah, I was being a bit unfair and it seems to depend on location. And yes, make it clear and there won't be a problem, but having the problem to complain about gives them credence to the removal of public rights of way.
I have a feeling that the reason these areas are still stunning, is because people have difficulty getting there.
I want to go do doughnuts
This is the best summary I could come up with:
However, new research by the Right to Roam campaign has found that only a tiny fraction of most of these beautiful areas are freely accessible for walking and other forms of outdoor recreation.
Protesters will descend on Cirencester Park in the Cotswolds this weekend for a mass trespass after the owners started charging for entry to the green space.
She said: “Access to nature is vital for both our physical and mental health, so it is unhealthy, unfair and unacceptable that so much of the beautiful British countryside is off limits to the vast majority of people.
“Any government that was serious about improving our national health and wellbeing would act with urgency to ensure everyone has a legal and comprehensive right to roam and enjoy the natural world around us.”
Lewis Winks from the Right to Roam campaign added: “It’s startling that some of our most celebrated landscapes are largely out of bounds, yet this is simply illustrative of our broken access system in England.
“When our so-called ‘nearby countryside’ is inaccessible it acts as a pertinent reminder that access reform must go beyond being defined by land use, and instead focus on connectivity and clarity.
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