kellymoe
Expedition Leader
Check this out. Yee Ha!!!
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/7735242.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/7735242.stm
kellymoe said:Check this out. Yee Ha!!!
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/7735242.stm
Richard Harvey from the Welsh Canoeing Association said he could not comment on the group involved, the locality or the legality of their activity but he did say he was aware the slipway had been used by kayakers for about 20 years.
grahamfitter said:This is where I go off on a complete tangent again...
Its illegal, but then so is kayaking almost every other inland (non-tidal) river in England and Wales that isn't in a national forest. The problem is the law gives control of river access to the riparian land owners and since most of them are fishing clubs that don't give a hoot about kayakers they say no to passage.
The Welsh Canoe Association (WCA) and British Canoe Union (BCU) tried unsuccessfully for decades to secure river access and failed. They managed to get a couple of rivers open for a weekend a year for festivals but the events were so busy it was almost possible to walk down the river hopping from boat to boat.
Another organization called Campaign for River Access for Canoes and Kayaks (CRACK) took the alternative approach of recommending trespass, which didn't go down well with the landowners or BCU/WCA. There was a famous mass trespass of the River Seiont in North Wales which got a bit messy with the locals. Stories vary depending on who you talk to but one chap I met had bricks dropped on his head from a bridge.
Anyway, nothing has changed much in the last twenty or so years except the BCU and WCA have given up negotiating with landowners and more people paddle their kayaks.
Cheers,
Graham
kerry said:And I thought we had access problems in Colorado!
teotwaki said:In Orange County (SoCal) we have a nice area called the Newport Back Bay that has similar access problems. The shores of the bay are mostly restricted, private homes and clubs choke off the entry way and a kayaking rental place locks off the bridge underpass as private parking for clients. Coming in from Newport Harbor means competing with squinty-eyed rich folks in huge power boats who'd just as soon run you over as they scream into their Bluetooth headsets. Commando style kayak launches are the order of the day.
Rallyroo said:Oh, I know that place. I haven't had problems (yet) when I brought my own kayak and my friends would rent.
Now days, I take off from that other place in the Newport Backbay portion.