FFS no one needs this.

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riderdown
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by riderdown »

The are people in the outdoors world who are vying for attention and to monetise.

I could suggest there is a little bit of the "self appointed" about her messages. A lawyer, a magazine creator (with commendable but lofty aims), a TED talk speaker, and now unpaid advisor to grassroots event organisers......

But I'm being uncharitable, in all likelihood she is trying to help but just comes across poorly. Either that or there will be a police raid to break up of people who might be planning to sleep in ditches......
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NewRetroTom
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by NewRetroTom »

Invite her to write an article for the site on the legalities of wild camping?
riderdown
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by riderdown »

My mind is at rest.
I'm surprised you were even slightly concerned
woodsmith
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by woodsmith »

JackT wrote: Fri Feb 11, 2022 11:34 am
A problem with being stealthy is that it's by its nature nobody sees you doing it. So the only wild camping that gets *seen* is the problem type. Therefore it's assume wild camping is a problem. Some are rightly hesitant about sharing images of their stealthy camping exploits. Continuously emphasising the leave no trace ethos seems the best plan. Maybe start referring to it as 'leave no trace camping' as the term wild camping is becoming muddied.
I've been spotted wild camping on numerous occasions and have yet to have had an issue. It's most often by dopg walkers as anyone else out in the sticks last thing at night or first thing in the morning is either on their way to / from work, a bit bonkers, or as up to no good as I am. A cheery wave and saying how lovely their dog is always seems to do the trick. Lots of people have stopped to chat, asked about my trip, admired my bike ( plus sized tyres are a contant source of wonder to the un initiated) or commented on what I nice spot I'd chosen. I think people see that I'm on my own, not playing loud music, haven't started a campfire or dropped beer cans all over the place and consiously or subconsiousley see that I'm zero threat to their way of life.
Given that we're riding on legal ROW its not that easy to get out of sight without engaging in some actual trespass. If the BW passes through a bit of woodland or the corner of a ( mowed) hayfield I view it as fair game, but I don't jump fences or open gates unless I really am stuck.
I wonder how much the new Police Bill will change things if/when tresspass becomes a criminal rather than a civil offence?
riderdown
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by riderdown »

I wonder how much the new Police Bill will change things if/when tresspass becomes a criminal rather than a civil offence?
If doesn't cover wild camping as we would understand it
woodsmith
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by woodsmith »

riderdown wrote: Sat Feb 12, 2022 12:24 am
I wonder how much the new Police Bill will change things if/when tresspass becomes a criminal rather than a civil offence?
If doesn't cover wild camping as we would understand it
Care to elaborate?
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Bearbonesnorm
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by Bearbonesnorm »

All quiet on the western (Wales) front this morning :-bd
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psling
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by psling »

Bearbonesnorm wrote: Sat Feb 12, 2022 9:57 am All quiet on the western (Wales) front this morning :-bd
Two things:
1/ The legal profession don't do weekends.
2/ Probably out on a #virtuousmicroadventure.

:cool:
We go out into the hills to lose ourselves, not to get lost. You are only lost if you need to be somewhere else and if you really need to be somewhere else then you're probably in the wrong place to begin with.
Lazarus
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by Lazarus »

Care to elaborate
Pretty sure it says camping with motorised vehicles ( or was meant to)
Basically they are not providing travellers with campsites ( as the law says they should ) and then criminalising them when they are forced to improvise.
I also think a copper has to serve the notice etc so the chances of us meeting plod ,wild camping , is basically nil.
Rob S
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by Rob S »

Lazarus wrote: Sat Feb 12, 2022 11:22 am
Care to elaborate
Pretty sure it says camping with motorised vehicles ( or was meant to)
Basically they are not providing travellers with campsites ( as the law says they should ) and then criminalising them when they are forced to improvise.
I also think a copper has to serve the notice etc so the chances of us meeting plod ,wild camping , is basically nil.
So it's aimed at camper vans primarily? What about people camping using a tent, but within ten paces of their car?
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by Lazarus »

Its aimed at travellers[ roma/gypsy] , its not aimed at camper vans.
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by Rob S »

Another curious one for a Friday: "Landowners may give permission to a wildcamper. The tragic problem is that they probably shouldn't. By giving that permission, they are also accepting a 'duty of care' over you, and therefore a degree of responsibility should anything go wrong". I wonder how true that is?
Reg, landowners have a certain level of 'duty of care' whether you are there with their permission or not. I don't know if that 'duty of care' becomes more onerous when permission is granted though.

I used to go climbing with two barristers years ago, maybe I should invite them bikepacking and introduce them to the forum. They may be able to advise us on such matters, probably for a hefty sum though :shock:
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ledburner
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by ledburner »

Rob S wrote: Sun Feb 13, 2022 10:14 pm I used to go climbing with two barristers years ago, maybe I should invite them bikepacking and introduce them to the forum. They may be able to advise us on such matters, probably for a hefty sum though :shock:
or cloud the issue with legalese and acts of double speak :roll:
I hope you think you know, what I might of exactly meant.
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ScotRoutes
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by ScotRoutes »

Rob S wrote: Sun Feb 13, 2022 10:14 pm
Another curious one for a Friday: "Landowners may give permission to a wildcamper. The tragic problem is that they probably shouldn't. By giving that permission, they are also accepting a 'duty of care' over you, and therefore a degree of responsibility should anything go wrong". I wonder how true that is?
Reg, landowners have a certain level of 'duty of care' whether you are there with their permission or not.
This was a hot topic when the Land Reform (Scotland) Act was being debated. There was a fear that landowners would be responsible for everything that happened to anyone on their land.
They aren't.
Leerowe76
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by Leerowe76 »

Can just see the headline now "KAREN GOES BIKEPACKING" :lol:
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thenorthwind
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by thenorthwind »

Lazarus wrote: Sat Feb 12, 2022 1:36 pm Its aimed at travellers[ roma/gypsy] , its not aimed at camper vans.
I've heard this argument before. I think anyone who thinks that those with power (e.g. landowners) won't seek to use the letter of the law to punish someone doing something they don't like one the basis it goes against the original intention of the law, needs to reconsider.
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whitestone
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by whitestone »

ScotRoutes wrote: Mon Feb 14, 2022 12:42 am
Rob S wrote: Sun Feb 13, 2022 10:14 pm
Another curious one for a Friday: "Landowners may give permission to a wildcamper. The tragic problem is that they probably shouldn't. By giving that permission, they are also accepting a 'duty of care' over you, and therefore a degree of responsibility should anything go wrong". I wonder how true that is?
Reg, landowners have a certain level of 'duty of care' whether you are there with their permission or not.
This was a hot topic when the Land Reform (Scotland) Act was being debated. There was a fear that landowners would be responsible for everything that happened to anyone on their land.
They aren't.
A landowner isn't responsible for someone injuring themselves walking along a footpath or cycling on a bridleway on their land provided that they (the landowner) haven't made substantial modifications to the footpath/bridleway. An example might be a stream crossing: if the landowner puts a bridge next to the crossing then they are responsible for any injury resulting from the bridge not being maintained but they wouldn't be responsible for someone getting injured whilst fording the stream. That's why you'll see signs like "Private bridge, not for public use". Care and upkeep of historic bridges/crossings tend to be the responsibility of the local highways agency - we've a couple near us like that.

A completely fanciful example would be a crag - you could climb on the crag and if you got injured then tough luck. If the landowner put up a climbing wall next to the crag then the landowner has a duty of care should you use the climbing wall.
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Lazarus
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by Lazarus »

I've heard this argument before

The may try and they may well want to but
The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill criminalises trespass for the first time in the UK, making it a criminal offence to live on land in a vehicle, including caravans, without consent
See also unlawful encampment ( as that is what they are trying to stop / make criminal

https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/re ... s/sn05116/

create a new offence of “residing on land without consent in or with a vehicle”; and.....The PCSC Bill would not criminalise trespass. Instead, it is designed to criminalise the act of trespassing when making an unauthorised encampment. The Bill’s explanatory notes says “the provisions do not capture ramblers and those who wish to enjoy the countryside” because to commit the offence you must be “residing in or intending to reside in, or with, a vehicle”



Surely we would be taking emergency rest on a trip rather than attempting to reside and we won't be motorised.
I cannot see how it will be applied to us ( though I accept some landowners would like to keep everyone off " their " land
It's a terrible law aimed at a persecuted minority but it won't affect us ( though an ignorant landowner may claim it does but we would all move if asked / challenged )
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PaulB2
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by PaulB2 »

I thought a bike was legally a vehicle in English law at least - not a motorised one but a vehicle none the less.
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fatbikephil
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by fatbikephil »

whitestone wrote: Mon Feb 14, 2022 10:10 am A landowner isn't responsible for someone injuring themselves walking along a footpath or cycling on a bridleway on their land provided that they (the landowner) haven't made substantial modifications to the footpath/bridleway. An example might be a stream crossing: if the landowner puts a bridge next to the crossing then they are responsible for any injury resulting from the bridge not being maintained but they wouldn't be responsible for someone getting injured whilst fording the stream. That's why you'll see signs like "Private bridge, not for public use". Care and upkeep of historic bridges/crossings tend to be the responsibility of the local highways agency - we've a couple near us like that.
Thats actually not the case Bob (says the author of a countryside bridge design guide :grin: ) The reason being that there is no duty or requirement to provide bridges in the countryside and if you do there is no duty or requirement to provide one to a certain standard, or any duty or requirement to maintain it. It's different on the public road as there is a raft of design standards and legislation for anything that gets built on the public road. Away from here or the built environment (i.e. buildings) its basically a free for all. A case came up many years ago when somebody crossed a knackered fence by a cliff top, fell off the cliff and made a claim against Highland Council on the basis that the fence was knackered and so the fall was all the councils fault. The court found that as there was no duty to fence a cliff top, no duty to maintain such a fence and the that the fence, although knackered still provided a barrier / indicator of the cliff edge, it was all the claimants fault.

So if you put a plank bridge across a burn and someone then stands (or in my case rides) across it, slips and falls in the burn, its all your fault. Essentially anything you do in the countryside is at your own risk as you are in an environment that is inherently risky and so by entering it you have knowingly taken on those risks. That said if you arranged the bridge so that it collapsed when the first person crossed it and dumped them into a pool full of spikes, you probably deemed to have been negligent and would maybe get done, if someone could prove it.

The other oft used argument by landowners is that farmyards should all be excluded from ROW's and access rights as they are so dangerous. As a farmyard is a pretty obviously dangerous thing then anyone venturing into one is taking on that inherent risk so the farmer doesn't have any additional liability.
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RIP
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by RIP »

PaulB2 wrote: Mon Feb 14, 2022 10:56 am I thought a bike was legally a vehicle in English law at least - not a motorised one but a vehicle none the less.
Interesting one! I'm often saying that cyclists have the same rights and responsibilities as any other road user, ie. we're moving a 'vehicle' along the highway.

So maybe we are with vehicles and therefore not allowed to stop and 'camp' after all!

A horse is a vehicle in that sense too - a valid user of the highway - so is a horse a vehicle?

Maybe a vehicle must contain a 'power unit' or some prime mover. A car/van obviously does. And a horse. But not a bike, or a caravan for that matter. If a traveller pulls up with a lorry and caravan, then takes the lorry away and parks it somewhere else, then returns to reside in the engineless caravan is that allowed? How far away does the lorry have to be not to be counted as part of the residing situation?

(edit: ignore the lorry/caravan point, a 'vehicle' is a "thing for transporting goods or people... car, lorry, cart...".... but that definition includes a cycle, not excludes it!)

Arg my brain hurts.
Last edited by RIP on Mon Feb 14, 2022 11:44 am, edited 2 times in total.
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whitestone
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by whitestone »

Fair play Phil.

The "not wanting paths/BWs through farmyards" is more about security these days rather than "safety". The trusting nature of the countryside and those who live there is getting exploited by thieves. My brother's had two quad bikes nicked for example.
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Lazarus
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by Lazarus »

Of course our bikes are a vehicle but they are not motorised nor are we attempting to sleep in our vehicle

Still does not apply to us as written and is not intended to apply to us ( presumably walkers also wild camp so lobbied for this exemption )
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RIP
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by RIP »

" in or with a vehicle", and a bike is a vehicle.

:wink:
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thenorthwind
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Re: FFS no one needs this.

Post by thenorthwind »

All I'm trying to say is that
Lazarus wrote: Mon Feb 14, 2022 11:55 am is not intended to apply to us
is not how the law works, and that
Lazarus wrote: Mon Feb 14, 2022 11:55 am does not apply to us as written
is debatable.

The Vagrancy Act 1824 wasn't intended to, say, prevent anti-war demonstrations, but did that stop the establishment from using it as such?
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