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The Cotswold Way - This is England!

Cotswold Way - View day 4

We just finished Day 5 on the Cotswold Way, one of Britain's National Trails.

Cotswold Way - himalayan roseThis is the land that brought us English ivy, honey-suckle rose, multi-flora rose and many other exotics that we're fighting.  So it was good to find the beautiful and invasive Himalayan Rose. It has taken over swamps over here.

 

Cotswold Way - Sheep under treeThe walk is taking us over hills and dales literally. It doesn't take much altitude to get spectacular views. Lenny calls it right when he says that it's a beautiful hike with minimal effort. The land is very open and trees are at a premium. Here, sheep are laying under a tree.

The path, as they call it here, takes us through wooded areas, dominated by oaks and majestic beech trees. Because there are so many sheep and cattle farms, woods are much more precious here than in the U.S. In our part of the country, we want to savor views where here they seem to want to save woods.

Cotswold Way - ThistleFlowers are mostly farm and country road flowers - Queen Anne's lace, chicory, harebells, yarrows and gigantic thistle.

The most different aspect of walking in Great Britain is that almost all the trails are on private land. There is almost no public land, in the way we know it in the United States. The country is too crowded to have taken the land from private owners and put it the public domain. But with the concept of Right of Ways and Right to Roam laws, landowners must allow walkers the right to, well, roam on their property. 

 

 

right to roam

Posted by Matt at 2011-08-23 16:14
It would be great if hikers could be granted more access to privately owned open lands in the states, but my guess is that will never happen. Even Madonna can keep ramblers off her land in Britain. Thoreau: "but possibly the day will come when it will be partitioned off into so-called pleasure grounds, in which a few will take a narrow and exclusive pleasure only --when fences shall be multiplied, and man-traps and other engines invented to confine men to the public road, and walking over the surface of God's earth shall be construed to mean trespassing on some gentleman's grounds. to enjoy a thing exclusively is commonly to exclude yourself from the true enjoyment of it. let us improve our opportunities, then, before the evil days come."


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