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“Have a bit of this”: Cyclist camping overnight in field sprayed with slurry from tractor by “annoyed” farmer who wanted to teach a “lesson” to trespassing campers

The beef and sheep farmer saw the cyclist camping against the hedge and drove his tractor to spray a wall of manure on him, saying: “You won’t be staying in anyone’s fields ever again”

A cyclist who was camping overnight at a field in Devon was sprayed with slurry for 15 seconds after a farmer who saw the cyclist's tent in his field got in his tractor to teach him “not to stay in anyone’s fields ever again”.

The incident, first reported by The Sun, was captured on video last week by Jack Bellamy, a third generation farmer from Tavistock, Devon with 200 cows and 650 sheep on his farm. 

Bellamy sees the black tent propped against the hedge and gets in his John Deere tractor, before saying: “I’ll tell you what, these *****, they’ll f****** set up anywhere. They do not give a flying f***. They’ll go anywhere.”

He starts driving towards him, blasting slurry out of his tractor, even stopping just past him to get the maximum amount of manure on the cyclist, who seems to be caught completely unaware and is seen ducking behind the tent to shelter himself from the wall of slurry being thrown at him.

“I’ll tell you what chap, have a bit of this,” Bellamy says, while driving past him and filming with a handheld device at the same time.

> How to wild camp responsibly with OS Maps and Cycling UK

Bellamy later told The Sun: “I went out in the morning because I had to get on. When I looked in the field I saw a tent on the freshly cut grass. There was someone camped right up against the hedge.

“I left him covered in slurry. He never said a word — he couldn’t really argue with that. I’m sure he had a nice evening there, but he didn’t have a very nice wake up call.

“He must’ve heard the tractor coming because he was out of his tent. I said ‘You won’t be staying in anyone’s fields ever again’ and then I drove on and carried on with my morning.

“When my dad went back later the tent was gone, there was a white patch where the tent was and the slurry hadn’t been. I would hate to think what he smells like now.

“There is a campsite 400 yards in one direction and 600 yards in the other but they just please themselves these people. We’ve had people from towns walking in the fields.

“There is 50,000 acres of Dartmoor nearby and he chose to camp in my field. They come up from the towns and think they can do what they want. We’ve had loads of trouble with dogs worrying the sheep.

“They wouldn’t like it if I went camping in their garden. They’ve got no knowledge of the countryside at all. They come up from the towns and think they can do what they want. They probably think food grows on a plant or something.”

> Farming community divided over “arrogant, entitled” farmer spraying camping cyclist with slurry in “downright nasty” video

It would be important to point out that wild camping is illegal and a civil offence in England and Wales, with the exception of some parts of Dartmoor. Campers must get permission from the landowner to camp, which includes tents and motorhomes, or risk being charged with trespassing.

Anyone who refuses to move faces fines up to £2,500 if caught breaking the rules, although first time offenders are likely to be charged up to £300. You could even face a prison sentence of up to three months if you refuse to leave when requested to do so by police. Wild camping is legal in Scotland, however, as long as local guidelines are followed.

The reaction to the situation has been mixed, with many anti-cycling views and opinions running rampant on social media. However, farmers themselves have been quite divided about the whole incident, with many calling it a “horrible thing to do” and “pretty grim and quite sad behaviour from the tractor driver” on the Farming Forum.

Meanwhile, environmental lecturer and Right to Roam campaigner Lewis Winks has criticised the farmer’s actions and offered an insight into the cyclist’s perspective, who as of now remains unidentified: “Consider this – you’re on a bike tour, alone but free. Exhausted after many miles on the road, scouting spots to sleep before continuing the next day. After an hour you opt for a discreet field edge.

“You wake up early and begin packing up, then this happens. Truly unjustifiable.”

He added: “Firstly, trespass is a civil offence – despite the best efforts of the dying Tory government. It’s a matter between the landowner and the trespasser, provided there are no aggravating circumstances. Common assault, however, is a criminal offence.”

> Why don't cyclists use the cycle lane? Because a farmer has dumped hundreds of tonnes of sugar beet in it

Winks then shared the Met Police’s stance on “camping without permission”, which recommends that landowners “talk to the people occupying your land and ask them to leave, if you feel safe to do that”, and reminds them that “you could find yourself guilty of several criminal offences if you forcibly attempt to remove them or their property.”

“Dialogue is the best course of action,” says Winks. “The rights of landowners are vast and sacrosanct in the UK – and far outweigh their legal responsibilities to people or nature. Including their own land which too often is also subject to abuse. Crying trespass distracts from the imbalance between rights and responsibilities.

“The rights of people – particularly those wishing to access land – on the other hand, are wildly lacking. Yet, we have a bedrock of historic and customary rights which have not entirely been swept away by property law. The civil attitude to trespass is in part an admission of this. Just west of where this incident took place is Dartmoor, where historic customs were written into bylaws in 1985, protecting wild camping; placing into stark contrast the farmer’s response.

“Secondly, on the notion of planning ‘better’,” he continued, “I’d wager that the majority of those with this view have never undertaken a long-distance expedition. If they had they'd realise that part of what it means ‘to plan’ is to prepare for the unexpected, to expect to change plans.

“I’d also bet that most of these detractors have not experienced wild camping and the feeling of freeing oneself from constraints of expensive, rigid, and scarce campsites in the UK. Elsewhere, such as in France, there are much better – more dependable networks of municipal campsites, but here it’s a nightmare trying to plan a trip based on private campgrounds which require booking ahead – and they’re often expensive and shite.

“Plus, of course, the sheer joy of waking up on your own with the golden light of a solstice sunrise, kettle on the boil, and on the road before the town wakes up, carefully leaving no trace of you being there. As for ‘you should have asked for permission’... just try finding out who owns the land in England while at a desk, let alone while on the road.

“And – to those who say ‘what about litter’. Our crisis is one of disconnection, it’s a lack of access to nature (not the opposite) which is unravelling our ability to know the land.”

> Opening stage of Etoile de Bessèges cancelled – due to protests from Jeremy Clarkson-idolising French farmers

Winks concluded: “This dude was bike touring – camping in a discreet spot, rising early, packing up in the golden opening of the day. And he was assaulted by someone who calls themselves a custodian of the land.”

As unlikely as it may seem, this isn’t the first time cyclists and farmers have locked horns.

Two years ago, a foul-mouthed anti-cyclist rant went viral on a Facebook page, and has been regularly reshared on social media numerous times a year ever since.  i

The post says: “If I’m coming at you in a bloody great big tractor with 20 tons behind me on a single track road, do me and yourself a favour and STOP for one second, either move as far over to your side of the road or just step on to the verge if there is one, so I can pass safely, do not just continue at full speed and then piss and moan as you go past because if it goes wrong you’ll end up being pressure washed off a tractor wheel.

“Unfortunately for you we take all your space and we can’t help it, so unless you want to lend a hand either changing a tyre that’s blown out or shovelling up a spillage, then we’re not dropping our wheels into drainage grips so that you can continue your bicycle ride.

“Cars, horse riders and runners are capable of it, I seem to be missing something with cyclists, I presume either you don’t want to get your special bike dirty, you’re trying to beat your PB or more than likely you’re just a complete cock in general."

Even more worryingly, in 2021, a farmer attacked a cyclist by throwing a billhook at his bike following a road rage incident in which he became enraged because the man was not using a cycle lane. 

The cyclist shouted at the farmer in his VW Transporter that he had passed him too close, to which the farmer replied: “Well get on the cycle path then!”

He decided to follow the driver back to his nearby farm to ask him why he was so rude, when the farmer grabbed a billhook - which is used to trim tree saplings - and hurled it towards the cyclist, striking and damaging his £2,950 carbon framed Specialized Tarmac SL6 Sport Disc Road Bike.

Were you the cyclist involved in this incident? Email us at info [at] road.cc 

Adwitiya joined road.cc in 2023 as a news writer after graduating with a masters in journalism from Cardiff University. His dissertation focused on active travel, which soon threw him into the deep end of covering everything related to the two-wheeled tool, and now cycling is as big a part of his life as guitars and football. He has previously covered local and national politics for Voice Wales, and also likes to writes about science, tech and the environment, if he can find the time. Living right next to the Taff trail in the Welsh capital, you can find him trying to tackle the brutal climbs in the valleys.

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113 comments

Avatar
LeadenSkies replied to danhopgood | 5 months ago
24 likes

Yes, some people trespass and it's annoying, but the first reaction of any normal landowner is to ask them to leave and to politely tell them to make sure they take all their rubbish with them. This farmer did neither, he just went for a bit of out of all proportion assault and criminal damage. What a dickhead. Working long hours for low pay has absolutely nothing to do with it, I work long hours in two jobs but I don't act like a prick in either of them. As for plastic and other waste in fields, much of it is windblown litter from the nearest road.

Avatar
stevemaiden replied to danhopgood | 5 months ago
9 likes

Low pay? That tractor is worth more than your house. And they earn mega bucks judging by the new 4x4's and Range Rovers they all drive. This isn't the 19th Century anymore. And btw we are ALL descended from farmers, industrialisation is a new concept.

Avatar
alchemilla replied to danhopgood | 5 months ago
3 likes

Wild camping was exactly what he was doing.
Just because some people chuck their litter out of car windows doesn't mean everyone out in the countryside does. Cyclists generally tend to have a better attitude towards the rural landscape than townies in their SUVs as they're more connected to it, and not just viewing it from behind a glass window.

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Paul J replied to danhopgood | 5 months ago
2 likes

That may be so, but still doesn't excuse him spraying slurry on the man and his kit. All sympathy for the farmer is out of the window once he starts assaulting people with toxic effluent.

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Mr Hoopdriver | 5 months ago
28 likes

An appeal from me to the camper involved if you are reading this.

Please do not let the farmer get away with this.  You will probably be very uncomfortable and possibly burned and or poisoned by this act and this makes the assault (for that is what it is) more serious.

Get in touch with the police - there is plenty of evidence against the farmer and he will have a hard time pleading not guilty if it gets to court.  I would also recommend contacting Cycling UK and asking their legal team for advice.

You will be entitled to compensation for loss and damages top your equipment and any possible ill effects caused by his actions.

Not pursuing the farmer for this act would be a dis-service, not only to cyclists but to any other person who may be in the same situation be they rambler or wild camper etc.

 

Avatar
andystow replied to Mr Hoopdriver | 5 months ago
11 likes
Mr Hoopdriver wrote:

An appeal from me to the camper involved if you are reading this.

Please do not let the farmer get away with this.  You will probably be very uncomfortable and possibly burned and or poisoned by this act and this makes the assault (for that is what it is) more serious.

Get in touch with the police - there is plenty of evidence against the farmer and he will have a hard time pleading not guilty if it gets to court.  I would also recommend contacting Cycling UK and asking their legal team for advice.

You will be entitled to compensation for loss and damages top your equipment and any possible ill effects caused by his actions.

Not pursuing the farmer for this act would be a dis-service, not only to cyclists but to any other person who may be in the same situation be they rambler or wild camper etc.

This. If I was touring, I'd change my plans to make sure I got some justice for this!

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HoarseMann replied to Mr Hoopdriver | 5 months ago
4 likes

I should think a charge of careless and inconsiderate driving would be on the cards too.

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notMyRealName replied to Mr Hoopdriver | 5 months ago
5 likes

Yes, please. I hope that the Cycling UK Cyclists' Defence Fund would be willing to support the victim in this. 

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Brauchsel | 5 months ago
7 likes

The constant references to people from the towns is giving a strong League Of Gentlemen vibe to the "third-generation farmer." Makes me wonder how many branches there are above him on that family tree. 

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stevemaiden replied to Brauchsel | 5 months ago
17 likes

Whenever I see a farmer in town (Tweed gives them away, plus the crook) I always sneer at them and shout 'get out of my bloody town, you don't understand our ways, our tough low paid jobs on long hours. Do you think our taxes that pay for the Sustainable Farming Incentive grows on trees? These roads are for us not you now piss off out of it country-wa ker.' Inevitably they don't move so I call round Brian, he's got a 12 bore, that gets them skuttling off'.

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levestane | 5 months ago
9 likes

I wonder is HSE would have an interest.

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Jimbo1531 | 5 months ago
21 likes

Assault? That's a biological attack and should be treated the same as throwing acid in someones face.

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ROOTminus1 | 5 months ago
15 likes

If the farmer treats his slurry with acid then he demonstrates knowledge of the corrosive aspect of it, so would be guilty of s.29 of the offences against person act as well as common assault (and GBH if the camper very likely gets sick).

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the little onion | 5 months ago
15 likes

Let's face it, the responses would be totally different if it had been a long-distance walker who had discretely camped on a field margin. Because they were a cyclist, that skews the opinions of far too many people. 

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Clem Fandango replied to the little onion | 5 months ago
25 likes

If one were to say, chuck a banana milkshake at a frog-faced moron herder, one would (objectively) expect to get charged with assault.

So it's strange that wilfully spraying an actual human being with slurry (all natural goodness & no artifical flavouring, so definitely no health hazard) could only lead to a celebration in the tabloid "press" rather than similar action.  The times we live in eh? 

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Rapha Nadal | 5 months ago
14 likes

""They probably think food grows on a plant or something."

I'm quite sure that it does.

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festina replied to Rapha Nadal | 5 months ago
4 likes

Doesn't food grow on a shop shelf? Perhaps it's because he's got cows and sheep so food comes from an animal.

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Rapha Nadal replied to festina | 5 months ago
2 likes

You've got me there 

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Paul J | 5 months ago
22 likes

From reading CPS guidance and the law, it seems _no_ offence - civil or criminal - is possible _until_ the person on the land has been asked to leave and _does not_ leave in reasonable time.

The wild camper in this story was not guilty of _anything_, on the face of this video - given there was no request made for him to leave. Nor even any time given for him to do so, regardless.

The only one guilty of anything here is the farmer, assaulting the camper with slurry - which will be some form of assault, a criminal matter.

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stevemaiden replied to Paul J | 5 months ago
3 likes

Very interesting Info, so would you say you are camping legally unless/until asked to move which you then must? Seems fair enough. But tbh this poor camper in a quiet corner of a field of grass should be legal imo, no damage or harm, in no one's way.

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the little onion replied to stevemaiden | 5 months ago
9 likes

it is legal, in Scotland and in Dartmoor (only a mile or so from the apparent location of this incident). 

 

Plenty of other countries have a right to wild camp if done correctly, across pretty much the whole country. But England retains its weird feudal cap-doffing to large landowners. 

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stevemaiden replied to the little onion | 5 months ago
10 likes

Tory old boys club. And before the Enclosures Act half of England was common land owned by the community and free to use. Population issues aside we should have much more open access - especially so to a tiny edge of a grass field for a few hours.

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Paul J replied to stevemaiden | 5 months ago
6 likes

The crimnal offence in law is preconditioned on having been asked to leave, and not complying. So, yes, if no one has noticed and been bothered enough to ask you to leave, there can be no criminal offence - and thus it follows that you are behaving lawfully.

See: https://www.cps.gov.uk/legal-guidance/trespass-and-nuisance-land

"Trespass is not of itself a criminal offence". It's only an offence in combination with other factors - including not leaving when asked. See the "Tables of offences" for the fine details, as the CPS sees them.

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