07-07-2025
Shropshire horse riders forced to use unsafe roads as path shut
Horse riders have been left furious after a public road and bridleway - one of the few routes that drivers don't use - was closed without and a "Keep out - private land" sign appeared five weeks ago, blocking the bridleway through Flanders Ford, between Baschurch and Adcote, Evans-Webster said she had documentation showing that the route is an unclassified public county road, and one of the few in the area riders feel safe to use away from vehicles. But the landowner, who did not want to be named, said the bridleway was part of their garden and not an unclassified county road, adding the matter was in the hands of their lawyer. Shropshire Council said it was investigating.
Two post and rail fences were put up at the end of May, blocking the bridleway from Bunny Lane to the River Perry. Branches also cover the is a double-blow to horse riders and walkers, after previously losing another route over the Perry, at Adcote Mill, where a bridge collapsed 11 years ago. Legal arguments have led to that route being shut for more than a Evans-Webster, who is campaigning to get the bridleway reopened, said she was recently nearly hit by a car after being forced to use a road she would not normally have landowner said there was no evidence the route was an unclassified road, and the disturbance of the river by the horses has led to the spread of invasive plants, such as Himalayan balsam.
The bridleway is part of a long distance route called the Humphrey Kynaston Way, which is publicised by Shropshire campaigner Zia Robins said: "The route is shown as an unclassified county road on Shropshire Council's 1929 Handover Map of Highways, from Baschurch to Nibbs Heath".
Coffin route
Jane Barker, appointed MBE for her work with Riding for the Disabled, said she had ridden on it for the last 40 years and "can't believe the mentality" of blocking it. "I am absolutely up in arms about it," she Benyon, chair of Shrewsbury and District Riding Club, said that, in the last 10 years riding on the roads has become "untenable", adding that when she goes out on her horse she "takes her life in her own hands".Another rider, who didn't want to be named, said it was an old coffin route linking Ensdon to Baschurch. She said: "I have rights of way on my land, I can't just close them if I feel like it… everyone here seems to think they're above the law."
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