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New version of Countryside Code urges people to be nice to each other when enjoying the outdoors

Message from revised document echoes that of Cycling UK and British Horse Society campaign launched in 2018

Cycling UK has welcomed the publication of a new version of the Countryside Code in England and Wales, which includes advice similar to that in the ‘Be Nice, Say Hi campaign that the charity and the British Horse Society launched in 2018.

Started by Cycle Sheffield, the two organisations partnered to take the campaign which aims to reduce conflict between cyclists, horse riders and walkers national.

The central message of the campaign now forms part of the Countryside Code drawn up by Natural England and Natural Resources Wales, which urges people to “Be nice, say hello, share the space.”

Publication of the revised Countryside Code comes as lockdown restrictions continue to be eased and spring sunshine encourages people to head outdoors.

easing and more people heading outdoors. Cycling UK has recently updated its coronavirus guidance, which sets out the rules for outdoor exercise in groups, both informal and organised, across the four nations of the UK, which can be found at

Sarah Mitchell, Cycling UK’s chief executive, said: “Cycling UK and partners have worked closely with Natural England on the new Countryside Code, and we’re pleased to see the focus of the revision looking at encouraging people to share and enjoy the countryside responsibly.”

The charity also issued the following joint statement with British Cycling: “With more people heading out and enjoying the countryside, especially by bike, British Cycling and Cycling UK welcome this latest update to the Countryside Code.

“The outdoors is for everyone, and we would urge everyone to follow the newly revised code.”

You can find Cycling UK’s advice to cyclists based on the latest Countryside Code here, while its current coronavirus guidance can be found here.

 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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21 comments

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brooksby | 3 years ago
1 like

"Now, you just all be nice to each other, m'kay?"

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belugabob | 3 years ago
3 likes

"people to be nice to each other" should be enough - "when enjoying the outdoors" shouldn't even come into it

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spen | 3 years ago
4 likes

So each ride is basically an excellent adventure yes

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brooksby replied to spen | 3 years ago
4 likes

...unless its a bogus journey.

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Titanus | 3 years ago
0 likes

I am reminded of those "dont drink and drive" signs you see on motorways. Bit late by then because you will already be drunk, and you will already have crashed into it. But where ever you put them, it's like telling the tide not to come in or Trump to shut up.

The point is I don't see how these codes actually work in practice. A country code is not gonna make a fly tipper suddenly develop a conscience and go dispose of the rubbish legitimately. At least the highway code is something that needs to be tought in order to get a license to drive. This will be even less effective.

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Awavey | 3 years ago
4 likes

shame they dont highlight the when walking on a countryside road,walk on the right side & face the oncoming traffic bit

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2Loose replied to Awavey | 3 years ago
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Having driven around a tight left blind bend to find a runner heading towards me 2 foot out from the left verge with an oncoming car in the far lane,  I'm not sure this is the best advice for pedestrians in all cases.   

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belugabob replied to 2Loose | 3 years ago
11 likes

Slow down on blind bends, then

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tdw replied to 2Loose | 3 years ago
1 like

It's not the advice in all cases  3
"It may be safer to cross the road well before a sharp right-hand bend so that oncoming traffic has a better chance of seeing you." (Highway Code)
Although you might have got lucky I've seen a couple of near misses while out running. I cross the road to go round a corner and get overtaken by a driver who is now going round a blind bend on the wrong side of the road, and very surprised to find it occupied by someone driving the other way.

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Bungle_52 replied to Awavey | 3 years ago
1 like

Unless you are on a bend in which case you should walk on the outside of the bend.

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kil0ran replied to Awavey | 3 years ago
3 likes

You know when some cyclists get annoyed about people saying that they should wear helmets and hi-viz and not ride with earphones? That's effectively what you're doing in relation to pedestrians. The HC is very clear - pedestrians in the carriageway have priority. It's not always safest to walk facing the oncoming traffic. And regardless of safety, its for other road users to take into account, particularly in rural areas, that you might encounter walkers in the road and drive/cycle appropriately. 

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Awavey replied to kil0ran | 3 years ago
2 likes

then its awkard that it is rule 2 of the HC which is also very clear that if there is no pavement, keep to the right-hand side of the road so that you can see oncoming traffic, be prepared to walk single file would be a nice one for people to follow as well.

or do we only follow the HC rules you approve of ?

that rule isnt there btw to make other road users less responsible for how they use those roads, its there because if you walk with your back to traffic, you are only relying on your ears, if you face traffic you have your eyes and ears and that allows you to be far more aware of your surroundings and the dangers present.

Some roads absolutely it might be less safe to stick to the right side, so you cross the road,but you stay vigilant whilst you do it, and cross immediately back again as soon as the right side is less dangerous again.

you dont as has been the most frequent encounterance of the past year walk 3-4 abreast with your back to traffic wandering around like youre in some traffic free park completely oblivious to everything, and get the hump when a cyclist rings their bell at you not as a you must get out of the way, but as much just to say hey heads up Im here & please dont suddenly jump towards me when I pass you, which wouldnt need to be information I had to pass on anyway if you were just walking on the right side of the flipping road !!!

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kil0ran replied to Awavey | 3 years ago
3 likes

Rule 2 is advisory for pedestrians (as is most of the pedestrian section apart from motorways and slip roads). It's for the driver to drive to the conditions

I do a lot of walking on country lanes and much like cycling in primary I've noticed it's actually safer to walk in the carriageway rather than on verges. I tend to walk side by side with my child (with me on the outside) because it forces drivers to slow down and acknowledge your presence. You have to create a visual cue, otherwise they buzz past at undiminished speed with wing mirrors inches from your head. 

Drivers getting it in their head that "oh, what an idiot, he's walking with his back to traffic" is just the same as "should have been on the cycle path mush". There are a bunch of reasons why I do that (walk on the left) including knowledge of traffic flow, availability of a refuge, upcoming bends, etc. For example, there's a road near me with a grass verge on only one side of the road. I'll always walk that side regardless of which direction I'm walking, because I have somewhere to step out of the carriageway when a vehicle approaches. 

Be nice, share the space.

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nikkispoke replied to kil0ran | 3 years ago
2 likes

Sadly holding some walking poles (those with sharp pointy ends) seem to be the only item which I find a minority of car drivers provide sufficent room when passing along country lanes. They seem the value of not getting their car scratched far higher than that of hitting or causing dis-comfort to a pedestrian or a child. This is not all car driver but a depressing significant minority who either through attitude or inepitude think wrongly roads are only for them.

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kil0ran replied to nikkispoke | 3 years ago
0 likes

It's a good point about poles. My son and I go birdwatching, which often involves standing on verges or in gateways alongside roads. We tend to be dressed in dark colours (refuse to go full camo). I make a point of standing in the road on straights and ideally eyeballing the driver on approach and usually they pass wide. If I stand on the verge more often than not they'll whizz past at undiminshed speed. When walking I carry the camera/scope/tripod over the shoulder nearest the roadway. Cyclists usually move way out into primary, I'm guessing because the thought process is "oh, that tripod with that expensive camera on it might fall under my wheels"

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lesterama replied to Awavey | 3 years ago
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Turns out they actually do. 

I have seen far, far more people walking on the left of country roads since the first lockdown a year ago. I absolutely agree that vehicles need to drive to conditions, but it does make vehicle/ pedestrian conflict inherently more risky when walkers don't follow HC principles. 

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hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
2 likes

There's a paragraph there that could do with being edited/removed.

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HarrogateSpa | 3 years ago
8 likes

I think most of us are patient and polite on shared paths already. I'm not sure changing the Code will make a big difference, as the people who cause problems probably don't read it.

Sustrans still take the view that shared space is better than separate paths. Apparently with separate paths they fear they will get more complaints about people or dogs being on the wrong bit.

Personally, I believe a more relevant question is 'would I prefer to ride a shared path, or a segregated path?' Then it's no contest.

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the little onion replied to HarrogateSpa | 3 years ago
2 likes

I thought this wasn't true. I though Sustrans couldn't possibly be as bad as that. Then I did some googling. And yes, Sustrans genuinely prefer shared cyclist/pedestrian space over segregation. 

 

Sustrans are an abomination - #abolishsustrans. No organisation has done more to harm the cause of cycling over the last 20 years.

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oceandweller replied to the little onion | 3 years ago
1 like

the little onion wrote:

Sustrans are an abomination - #abolishsustrans. No organisation has done more to harm the cause of cycling over the last 20 years.

Hmmm, slight exaggeration perhaps? Yes to Sustrans not always thinking things through, but can't say I'd agree no other organisation has been worse. Quite a few parish/town/city/county/what-have-you councils & their ideas about "cycling provision" might qualify, for a start...

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the little onion replied to oceandweller | 3 years ago
1 like

My point is that you'd expect those various other organisations to often be against cycling - you aren't surprised when they do something bad for cyclists. You aren't surprised when 'the enemy' harm cycling.

 

The problem with Sustrans is that they claim to be pro-cycling, but their efforts cause more harm than good. They would literally sign off any old crap as cycliing infrastructure if you can stick a small blue sign next to it, and call it part of the national cycling network. There are sections near me that actually have huge flights of stairs on it. They condone and indeed encourage bad infrastructure and bad laws. If you see nonsense infrastructure and someone claims that it has the support of a cycling organisation, you can bet your mortgage that it is Sustrans who provide the seal of approval.

 

I understand they also opposed CTC/Cycling UK's legal case (the Daniel Cadden case) that gives cyclists the legal right to not use cycle lanes. 

Sustrans should go. Now.

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