Orban Wallace’s documentary avoids big clashes between landowners and campaigners in favour of wide-ranging explorationOrban Wallace’s film about the right-to-roam movement shows us a campaigning group with a simple,...
See moreOrban Wallace’s documentary avoids big clashes between landowners and campaigners in favour of wide-ranging exploration
Orban Wallace’s film about the right-to-roam movement shows us a campaigning group with a simple, reasonable aim: to give walkers in England and Wales the same rights that people have in Scotland, courtesy of the Scottish Outdoor Access Code, brought into being by the Land Reform (Scotland) Act of 2003. There, walkers have the right to temporary, non-motorised access – which is to say walking, cycling and camping, carried out responsibly – to most land, public or private. These rights have now existed for some time without the apocalyptic end to the countryside as we know it.
Whether some in the right-to-roam movement in England want something more than that, or are prepared to protest more vehemently than simply organising peaceful mass trespass events, is another question. The film interviews landowners such as Francis Fulford, who has long been the media’s favourite outspoken reactionary toff, a sort of posh version of Viz Comic’s Farmer Palmer, snarling “Get off my land”. There are other, more thoughtful landowners, including Hugh Inge-Innes-Lillingston, who cheerfully admits how silly his name is, and is open to developing new ideas about managed access. As far as profiteering goes, I found myself thinking of a remark made by Tara Palmer-Tomkinson: “Land doesn’t really bring in a lot of money until they build a motorway through it.”
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Orban Wallace’s documentary avoids big clashes between landowners and campaigners in favour of wide-ranging explorationOrban Wallace’s film about the right-to-roam movement shows us a campaigning group with a simple,...
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