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Farmer blocks cycle trail in Cornwall ‘to stop coronavirus’

Police and council looking to resolve issue after van and hay bales placed across path

A farmer in Cornwall has blocked a cycle and walking trail with hay bales and a van, claiming that he wants to stop the spread of coronavirus.

The Engine House Trail, which links Truro to Hayle and forms part of National Cycle Network Route 3 from Land’s End to Bristol, runs across land owned by Nathan Mitchell at Carharrack, Redruth, reports BBC News.

He claims that people using the trail create a risk of spreading coronavirus, including through touching gate posts.

One person who uses the trail to run to work at the Royal Cornwall Hospital in Redruth each day told Cornishstuff.com that he now has to use the road, which adds an extra mile to the journey.

He said: “I found that the farmer had blocked off the Bissoe Trail at three different points – they have parked a van across it at one point and put bales in front of the gates at the others.

“It is completely blocked, you can’t get through there. It is a pain in the neck for me, I work at Treliske and run to work using the trail every day. Now I have to use the road for a mile or more instead of using the trail.

“It is really annoying.”

Cornwall Council has said it is “working with the police to resolve this issue” after a van was parked on the trail at Carharrack, near Redruth, with wrapped hay bales also used to block gates at another location.

Mr Mitchell, a beef farmer, informed the council by email of his intention to close the path and was visited last weekend by council and police officers to discuss the closure.

He told the BBC: “People are walking up and down this path that is not 2m wide. I needed to close the path off to stop coronavirus. It's ludicrous with this virus and people supposed to keep 2 metres apart.”

He added that he plans to reopen the path “when safe to do so.”

However, Cornwall Council has said it is “working with the police to resolve this issue.”

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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33 comments

Avatar
nickW1 | 4 years ago
3 likes

could we have a little bit of sympathy for Poor Mr Mitchell, the fact that some one so stupid and ignorant is looking after a beef herd may in some small part explain the BSE crisis, so a little bit of empathy and sympathy for old farmer Mitchell and just remember to keep paying those taxes to help his industy those range rovers dont buy themselves you know ( especially the ones that run only on red diesel ! but dont tell the tax man ! )

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Chris Hayes | 4 years ago
2 likes

Easy: burn them. 

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Shades | 4 years ago
1 like

This could be a 'permissive path' (ie Sustrans (or other) have 'negotiated' permission for a path to cross the land)?  The landowner could be allowed to close it if he sees fit.  We have a mile stretch of bike path near us that closes for a number of Saturdays in the shooting season; dates are usually advertised on the gates at each end of the section of path (there is a quiet lane alternative route (nasty climb though)).  In the winter it occasionally gets a load of 'sticky' clay mud on it where the farmer has been ploughing a field; as it's 'permissive' there's nothing you can do about it as far as I know.

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eburtthebike replied to Shades | 4 years ago
2 likes

Shades wrote:

This could be a 'permissive path' (ie Sustrans (or other) have 'negotiated' permission for a path to cross the land)?  The landowner could be allowed to close it if he sees fit.  We have a mile stretch of bike path near us that closes for a number of Saturdays in the shooting season; dates are usually advertised on the gates at each end of the section of path (there is a quiet lane alternative route (nasty climb though)).  In the winter it occasionally gets a load of 'sticky' clay mud on it where the farmer has been ploughing a field; as it's 'permissive' there's nothing you can do about it as far as I know.

It could be, but is it?  Some reports say that it is a bridleway, and thus, there is right of way for pedestrians, horses and cyclists.  We need the designation of this path.

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ktache replied to eburtthebike | 4 years ago
1 like

The bbc reported that the farmer believes it to be a bridleway.

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yerbs | 4 years ago
0 likes

Compared with other European countries we are lucky to still be able to go out.
As of this weekend 10,000 have died in this country. People are dying, we should be keeping 2m apart which does question the ability to do this on a 2m wider path.

The farmer is probably also terrifies that he HAS to touch the gates to care for his livestock. If he gets it, no-one cares for the animals with the risk of them dying and his livelihood.

Promoting setting fires is just childish and irresponsible, we are all in this together and have a duty to look after each other.

My partner and in-laws are seriously at risk from the virus. A few weeks of not being able to use a path through a farmer's land when the roads are quiet and adds a mile to a journey... umm.. PERSPECTIVE PLEASE

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Hirsute replied to yerbs | 4 years ago
6 likes

yerbs wrote:

My partner and in-laws are seriously at risk from the virus.

Then your remedy is to stay indoors.

 

Prof John Edmunds, Professor in the Centre for the Mathematical Modelling of Infectious Diseases, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said:

“There are 3 potential routes of transmission: via fomites (contact with an infected surface, such as a door handle); via aerosols (tiny particles that can stay suspended in the air); and droplets (larger particles that rapidly fall to the ground). The first two of these routes would be reduced to virtually zero out of doors, as you are much less likely to touch an infected surface, and suspended particles will be massively diluted by the fresh air and the viral particles that they contain rapidly destroyed by desiccation and UV light. This leaves droplets. As long as you keep a reasonable distance away from others, your risk will also be reduced to extremely low levels. Hence, banning people from exercising out of doors would have a negligible impact on the epidemiology of this disease but a marked impact on peoples’ mental health and wellbeing.”

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yerbs replied to Hirsute | 4 years ago
0 likes

yeah, for months if the idiots continue to go out and not do the sensible thing. 

other reseach says that it can last for 3 days on hard surfaces.

I'm not saying that the bridleways should be closed, I am saying I understand why the farmer is making a point here. 

Are the majority on here saying that it's fine for loads of people to use narrow paths, all touching gates every few seconds ? Where is the limit ? 

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ktache replied to yerbs | 4 years ago
8 likes

On my daily exercise loop I ride through a golf course, on a bridleway, that sometimes gets narrow, with cooperation, sometimes me stopping and moving to the side, sometimes the walkers, we maintain social distancing, occasionally a tiny bit less than 2 metres, but on the whole well.  The golf course has not blocked off this public right of way however, no it has opened up the entire golf course (apart from the greens) to walkers, joggers and dogists.  Not me, the cyclist, fair enough, I get to ride a slightly emptier bridleway.  Seems to me a better response than the farmers.

I am also seeing people out who might very rarely be out enjoying their local areas, it is  a very good thing.  Sometimes surly youths, in nature.

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Hirsute replied to yerbs | 4 years ago
2 likes

Which 'other research' ?

Do you think if we all stay indoors for a few weeks it will all be fine at the end of it?

All that is happening is that the rate of infection is reduced and this buys time for the NHS and scientists. We need a large proportion to get the virus and recover or be locked in for over a year till there is a vaccine.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to Hirsute | 4 years ago
2 likes

Could we not take turns? A national lottery, where the lucky winner gets to go outside that day. The other 60+ million have to stay in and wait till the next day's lottery draw.

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ktache replied to yerbs | 4 years ago
13 likes

A cyclist in his 60s was killed in a collision with a van on this road, near Guidford, yesterday.  Dead at the scene, so I'm guessing quite a violent death.  There is a reason some of us would prefer to be on our nations bridleways and other public rights of way.

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Shades replied to ktache | 4 years ago
8 likes

The speeding during lockdown has got progressively worse; I was enjoying the quiet roads but now I'm not that sure.

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Hirsute replied to ktache | 4 years ago
5 likes

Horrible to read that. I don't know what is wrong with these retarded drivers.

I had my worse journey in a long time in Thursday and it was only a 5 mile trip. 3 close passes (one on a blind bend) and 2 or 3 drivers approaching junctions at speed to then slam the brakes on. One of whom seemed more interested in the passenger's mobile than actually using the roads properly.

It's no wonder people want to use more off road routes, especially with soem of hte speeding I have seen at other times.

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Sriracha replied to yerbs | 4 years ago
2 likes

"The farmer is probably also terrifies that he HAS to touch the gates"
Heads up, it is not transmitted through the skin, you can't catch it by touching something.

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matthewn5 replied to Sriracha | 4 years ago
0 likes

No, but it can be transmitted after touching a surface and then touching your eyes, nose or mouth.

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Chris Hayes replied to yerbs | 4 years ago
1 like

Stay indoors then.  Simple.  

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MrGear | 4 years ago
9 likes

Absolute bell-end. I'm so fed up of this behaviour. So many people have taken this as an opportunity to make up rules that suit their agenda.

If I encountered a van parked like that I can honestly say I'd climb over it and drag my mountain bike over the top of it too. It's just a shame that's not something everybody is able to do.

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brooksby | 4 years ago
11 likes

So this farmer is another person terrified by these bicycle-riding viruses (virii?)?

More likely, as below and following the lead of many politicians around the world, he's just taking advantage of the current crisis to justify doing something he wanted to do anyway.

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yerbs replied to brooksby | 4 years ago
0 likes

missing the point. hundreds of thousand of people have tested positive in this country, it can take weeks for the symptons to appear. Odds are that a large number of people have the virus already (and some cyclist). close proximity spreads it. 

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Sriracha replied to yerbs | 4 years ago
4 likes

Close proximity extended over a period of time. Like 15 minutes stood close to someone, especially whilst indoors. Outdoors, that is already less risky than indoors, and a fleeting passage - the risk is vanishing.

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ktache replied to yerbs | 4 years ago
2 likes

As of today 70 odd thousand mate.  Not hundreds of thousands.

I think I read that testing is only coming up at about 20% positive, meaning that there are a lot of people who "know" they have it and don't.  We are still in the middle of cold and 'flu season, similar symptoms to mild sars cov 2.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to yerbs | 4 years ago
9 likes

Missing what point? There is no point to be missed. The farmer is a selfish idiot, using an excuse that makes no sense to do what he obviously wanted to do for his own selfish reasons.

Personally I think they should be closing many roads to motorised vehicles. When I go out it's a complete pain to try and keep 6 feet away from others because the pavements are barely 6 feet wide (and too many people make no effort to co-operate, including the occasional pavement cyclist).

Using farmer-logic one would therefore block the pavements, but in fact if they closed a lot of roads to motorised vehicles people could walk in them and hence find it easier to maintain distances. We don't need so much car-space now, as there's so much less traffic, but unfortunately the drivers still out there just use that as a pretext to drive like a complete James Hunt.

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spen | 4 years ago
13 likes

I would imagine that a corona virus is the least of the things you could pickup off a gate post on a beef farm, try e coli, botulism, tetanus.....

Part of NR3 and its less than 2m wide, 'nuff said 

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eburtthebike | 4 years ago
21 likes

Great!  So if I block the local roads because of dangerous driving, pollution and global warming, then the council and local police will work together to sort it out?  Eventually.

 

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Legin | 4 years ago
6 likes

And this nicely sums up vigilante Britain; or is it just some land owner who resents anyone using his land even in normal times?

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eburtthebike replied to Legin | 4 years ago
6 likes

Legin wrote:

And this nicely sums up vigilante Britain; or is it just some land owner who resents anyone using his land even in normal times?

Does rather put one in mind of Farmer Giles from Viz "Get orff my land."

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Sriracha | 4 years ago
12 likes

Bales of hay? Got a match?

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eburtthebike replied to Sriracha | 4 years ago
2 likes

Sriracha wrote:

Bales of hay? Got a match?

I don't imagine the van is fireproof either.

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ktache replied to eburtthebike | 4 years ago
0 likes

But that would probably burn down that nice gate too.

Then again, wouldn't that reduce the contamination issue the mad farmer has?

BBC has it the farmer thinking it might be a bridleway, so public right of way, would be different if it were a permissable path, there was one on the Blackwater Valley route that the landowner closed.

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