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West Penwith Bridleways Association Please also visit bhsaccesscornwall |
Our Ridden Paths
Definitive Bridleways only provide approximately half of the paths we ride. Many do not connect from road to road or to another bridleway. Many deliver you onto a farm lane over which there is no recorded right of way. Many deliver you onto a public footpath or mysteriously change into a definitive footpath with no physical indication. Often this is where the path crosses a parish boundary.
Most of us ride many such paths and tracks that are not bridleways. They are essential to complete that circular ride or enable a busy road to be crossed.
On many of these non-definitive
paths and definitive footpaths there undoubtedly unrecorded rights of way.
See
Rights of Way.
Most of these paths are ridden without problem. Unless you look closely at the Ordnance Survey Explorer Map you will not be aware they are not bridleways.
Is there a problem with such paths?
Whilst you are using them without problem there is no problem. However there is a possibility that you may be stopped from using them at any time.
Many properties
and farms are being sold. New owners unaware of the historic use of the paths
will have been assured on purchase that there are no rights of way, or no rights
of way for horses, along the path which is on their property or to which there
property adjoins. Hence when they see you on your horse they will often challenge
you and say that you are not allowed to ride through. Unfortunately they are
often in their rights to do so until you can prove in law that there are unrecorded
rights of way along the path.
See
Rights of Way.
What can be done?
If you are challenged on riding a particular path or track that is not a definitive bridleway, but which you believe has always been ridden without problem:
1. Inform WPBA wpba@btinternet.com
2. Find out if other riders in your area have ridden the path and over how many years.
3. Consider preparing a Modification Order to have the path recorded on the definitive mao as a bridleway. This process does require sufficient evidence to prove that the path has been used without hinderence over a 20 year period.
4.
CROW Act introduced a fast approaching deadline of 2026 after which paths cannot
be claimed by historic evidence -
See Project 2026