Kettlewell Dales Field
Member
Are the fishing rights included?
No idea sorry (I guess its something I should know but nothing mentioned on the listing but I will check the rights)
Are the fishing rights included?
If I simplify it...
What stops me replacing a battered gate with a new (bigger) one?
What stops me replacing a derilict barn with a newer one?
What stops me putting down hardcore on the grass inside the new gate to provide parking base?
I am not building or replacing anything that is not already there...I am making it look better and improving it.
You may think you are improving things, the National Park Authority and the residents of Kettlewell will see it very differently.If I simplify it...
What stops me replacing a battered gate with a new (bigger) one?
What stops me replacing a derilict barn with a newer one?
What stops me putting down hardcore on the grass inside the new gate to provide parking base?
I am not building or replacing anything that is not already there...I am making it look better and improving it.
If I simplify it...
What stops me replacing a battered gate with a new (bigger) one?
What stops me replacing a derilict barn with a newer one?
What stops me putting down hardcore on the grass inside the new gate to provide parking base?
I am not building or replacing anything that is not already there...I am making it look better and improving it.
No idea sorry (I guess its something I should know but nothing mentioned on the listing but I will check the rights)
I was at a careers convention years ago, and chatting to a member of the planning department, and I asked him how they got to know about people contravening planning permission or doing things they don't have permission for and he said always reported to us by members of the public!Ah, so firstly there is a *big* difference between repairing and replacing.
1) gate is easiest. Replacing gate no problem. Adding new gate is problem. Widening gatehole is somewhere in between.
2) repairing barn is easiest. Replacing barn with something different trickiest. Replacing barn with something on the same footprint of the same height somewhere in between.
3) this is on the tricky list.
What stops you is a combination of planning law and zealous members of the public. You have a public RoW so any changes can easily be seen. We live in a country where free enjoyment of your own property is curtailed by a variety of "nosey doo gooders" and sadly the general public in the UK absolutely hate the idea of anything changing, especially in any of the "chocolate box" national parks or areas of natural beauty.
Ive a tumbling down shed. If I repair the roof that's fine. If I repair the walls that's fine. If I take it down, fix it and put it back up then that requires planning.
Not do anything there unnoticed it's right at the side of main road into kettlewellA lot comes down to whether anyone will notice, carefully making small changes that individually won't attract attention over the course of several years might get some things done.
Its the Dales National park, one huge free dog walking fieldDog walking fields charge a bomb?
Or randomly driving past, there is no other mechanismI was at a careers convention years ago, and chatting to a member of the planning department, and I asked him how they got to know about people contravening planning permission or doing things they don't have permission for and he said always reported to us by members of the public!
Posh lot don't walk their dogs do they!Its the Dales National park, one huge free dog walking field
Posh lot don't walk their dogs do they!