Right to roam: the battle to access England's green spaces ( theweek.com )

In 2020, a Right to Roam campaign was founded by the writers Nick Hayes and Guy Shrubsole. Since then, it has organised a series of "mass trespasses": on Dartmoor, in Cumbria, on the South Downs; on the 12,000-acre Berkshire estate of Lord Benyon, who was at the time the minister responsible for access to the countryside.

At the most recent event, at Cirencester Park in Gloucestershire in March, more than 500 people marched in protest at plans by the Bathurst family, which owns the park, to impose an entry charge for the first time in more than 300 years. The campaigners argue that much more privately owned land in England should be open to the public, so that they can have "easy access to open space, and the physical, mental and spiritual health benefits that it brings".

SubArcticTundra ,
@SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml avatar

Could this be a rare campaign promise that Labour actually follow through on?

Jake_Farm ,
@Jake_Farm@sopuli.xyz avatar

Could use this in the US.

randompasta ,

100%! The US has a lot of public lands, but it would be great if people could cross private land to access the public lands more easily. Sweden had the right idea.

xhieron ,
@xhieron@lemmy.world avatar

As an American, I'd be much more receptive to the idea if I knew it would be Swedes, rather than Americans, trespassing on my land.

TheBat ,
@TheBat@lemmy.world avatar

But then you'd have to walk? Like a poor person? 🤢

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • nature@feddit.uk
  • test
  • worldmews
  • mews
  • All magazines