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Access to home via farm track
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<blockquote data-quote="Ffermer Bach" data-source="post: 7602374" data-attributes="member: 51054"><p>A track "open" to the fields is great too when slurry/muck spreading as you can drive onto the field at a different point each time so stopping getting ruts in a gateway (and silaging if the ground is a little wet too), so a fence would be a big disadvantage to the farmer, not even thinking about the hassle of getting a field number for a new parcel and having to change IACS maps when doing single farm payment.</p><p></p><p>I think the first port of call would be, look at the deeds and your correspondence with your solicitor regarding the matter when you bought the house. Rights of access is a legal minefield. Is your access for social, domestic and pleasure? How wide is your right for? Do you have just access or are you allowed to maintain the road?</p><p></p><p>If someone had access through my field and decided to place 100 tons of planings on it unilaterally I would be tamping, big time! </p><p></p><p>I have also read on here not to use planings for cow tracks, as the stones in the planings cause lameness in the cattle.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ffermer Bach, post: 7602374, member: 51054"] A track "open" to the fields is great too when slurry/muck spreading as you can drive onto the field at a different point each time so stopping getting ruts in a gateway (and silaging if the ground is a little wet too), so a fence would be a big disadvantage to the farmer, not even thinking about the hassle of getting a field number for a new parcel and having to change IACS maps when doing single farm payment. I think the first port of call would be, look at the deeds and your correspondence with your solicitor regarding the matter when you bought the house. Rights of access is a legal minefield. Is your access for social, domestic and pleasure? How wide is your right for? Do you have just access or are you allowed to maintain the road? If someone had access through my field and decided to place 100 tons of planings on it unilaterally I would be tamping, big time! I have also read on here not to use planings for cow tracks, as the stones in the planings cause lameness in the cattle. [/QUOTE]
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