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Ordnance Survey Question
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Could anyone please tell me the difference on an Ordenance Survey Map between a dotted line which states, 'Public Footpath', and a faint dashed line which states 'Path'. Do both have the legal right of way for walkers?
I am asking because my daughter was stopped by a landowner who told her she was on private land, even though she had her map with her that showed where she was walking as a 'path'.
I can't find any info on the ordnance survey site.
Many Thanks.
I am asking because my daughter was stopped by a landowner who told her she was on private land, even though she had her map with her that showed where she was walking as a 'path'.
I can't find any info on the ordnance survey site.
Many Thanks.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by AuntPollyGrey. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.// They have to be walked at least once a year to keep them "public". I think, but am Not sure! If they do not have a signpost they are not public//
so what is the short answer path/public ? - one is not public?
very very common for farmers to tear down signs and insist that there is no public footpath across their land. Jesus - hence the need for a map.
need to keep the path open - no not since the 1967 act BUT the path has to registered. and the registration and extinction process was attended by all sorts of perjury
( a brighton case - a 10 y o was seen on the 360th day... etc) - oh no he wasnt etc etc
Landowners come it on a regular basis - and dont stop short of bullying 12 y olds. such as "this is not a public right !" er when it is.
I got this all the time when I ran with a labby.
keep cool
so what is the short answer path/public ? - one is not public?
very very common for farmers to tear down signs and insist that there is no public footpath across their land. Jesus - hence the need for a map.
need to keep the path open - no not since the 1967 act BUT the path has to registered. and the registration and extinction process was attended by all sorts of perjury
( a brighton case - a 10 y o was seen on the 360th day... etc) - oh no he wasnt etc etc
Landowners come it on a regular basis - and dont stop short of bullying 12 y olds. such as "this is not a public right !" er when it is.
I got this all the time when I ran with a labby.
keep cool
This is from a long while ago , when I was still at school (40 years )
We had an abso;utely brilliant geography teacher who would take groups of us on mountain walks . He taught me everything I know about navigating in the mountains .
He always used to say follow the small black and white lines because they were the result of a full survey by the OS whereas the coloured ones were added at the reprint stage based on info sent to the OS by local authorities , and the info was not always accurate .
As I say this was a long while ago ( .... when Carned Gwenllian was still Carnedd Uchaf... )
We had an abso;utely brilliant geography teacher who would take groups of us on mountain walks . He taught me everything I know about navigating in the mountains .
He always used to say follow the small black and white lines because they were the result of a full survey by the OS whereas the coloured ones were added at the reprint stage based on info sent to the OS by local authorities , and the info was not always accurate .
As I say this was a long while ago ( .... when Carned Gwenllian was still Carnedd Uchaf... )
-- answer removed --
Your question has largely been answered by others. (i.e. a 'path' isn't necessarily a public right of way. Indeed, it almost certainly isn't).
However I will point out that the best place to check up on the status of public rights of way (if that's what they actually are) isn't on OS maps but on the website of the relevant council, as it's those councils which are legally responsible for maintaining up-to-date records of such paths, rather than the OS. (In rural areas that's generally a county council. Elsewhere it might be a metropolitan council or a unitary authority). You'll probably then need to work out which parish the relevant path is in before you can consult the map.
To find such maps, google 'definitive map public rights of way', together with the name of the council. For example, if I do that for my home county of Suffolk, I end up here:
https:/ /www.su ffolk.g ov.uk/r oads-an d-trans port/pu blic-ri ghts-of -way-in -suffol k/view- definit ive-map s-of-pu blic-ri ghts-of -way/
Clicking through to my local parish takes me here:
https:/ /www.su ffolk.g ov.uk/a ssets/R oads-an d-trans port/pu blic-ri ghts-of -way/Ne edham-M arket.p df
(One needs to click the 'zoom in' button several times to be able to view the map clearly).
The symbols used on such maps are the same across the whole of the country and are shown here on the Gloucestershire County Council website:
https:/ /www.gl ouceste rshire. gov.uk/ media/1 520494/ mainrec eption- usergui dejun18 .pdf
The definitive maps held by councils don't show permissive footpaths and bridleways though. They only appear on OS maps (or on maps from 'unofficial' sources, such as those drawn up by local walking groups).
The symbols used on OS maps, together with their meanings, are shown here:
https:/ /www.or dnances urvey.c o.uk/ne wsroom/ blog/ri ght-to- roam-pu blic-ri ghts-of -way
However I will point out that the best place to check up on the status of public rights of way (if that's what they actually are) isn't on OS maps but on the website of the relevant council, as it's those councils which are legally responsible for maintaining up-to-date records of such paths, rather than the OS. (In rural areas that's generally a county council. Elsewhere it might be a metropolitan council or a unitary authority). You'll probably then need to work out which parish the relevant path is in before you can consult the map.
To find such maps, google 'definitive map public rights of way', together with the name of the council. For example, if I do that for my home county of Suffolk, I end up here:
https:/
Clicking through to my local parish takes me here:
https:/
(One needs to click the 'zoom in' button several times to be able to view the map clearly).
The symbols used on such maps are the same across the whole of the country and are shown here on the Gloucestershire County Council website:
https:/
The definitive maps held by councils don't show permissive footpaths and bridleways though. They only appear on OS maps (or on maps from 'unofficial' sources, such as those drawn up by local walking groups).
The symbols used on OS maps, together with their meanings, are shown here:
https:/