Is a bridal path the route a newly-wed takes to church? - oh, you meant a BRIDLE path. I see.
Right spelling lesson over, the answer is that you have no right of way to pass and repass along this track because the owner wishes to stop you and the only right of way that exists for all (the public) is that for horses and on foot - not by motor vehicle.
You have 2 options:
negotiate for an easement with the owner of the track. You will have to pay money for this - as much as the owner can extract from you. In return you would get a legal entitlement to pass / repass by motor vehicle.
you could investigate (via a solicitor) whether you can claim an 'easement of necessity'. I am not clear exactly how these work, nor the legal process by which they are claimed. To be able to claim at all, I am pretty sure that your land must not abut any public highway that you could otherwise use to drive a new track through in order to reach the road.