To be absolutely honest, I'm not sure I really want to bother going back on the land. After peeling the chestnuts this evening and getting painful shell splinters under my thumbnail, I'm wondering for yet another year if they are really worth the effort.
However, I like to gather some each year because it is part of a tradition that goes back close on 2000 years, since when the Romans introduced the tree to Britain. Unlike a cash crop (I would no more take a carrot from a farmer's field than I would take his tractor) chestnuts are like blackberries, part of the hedgerow harvest that has been gathered by native Britons for many hundreds of years. It will be (is now?) a sad day when land owners enforce their rights so strictly that ancient traditions like this are compelled to stop.
I simply reported what had happened as a mild warning to others here of the consequences of crossing a gate. Unlike one interpretation of my original posting I don't need to "cut the sob story", because the introductory line (and intended message) of my posting was
toadflax said:
Although what happened this morning was a tiny, trivial incident, it does go to show that if you don't have permission, don't do it, because it can spoil it for everyone.
Lesson learned.
I don't want this thread to degenerate into a dispute of land rights - if you want to discuss such issues then I suggest that you start another thread.
I made an assumption based on an invitation last year to gather chestnuts from someone's land, and that assumption was incorrect. I was in error in going onto the land this year, I left when asked, and that is that as far as I am concerned.
Thank you to those who have offered sensible comments, but remember that I only made the original posting. If the thread digresses onto other issues, that is not my doing.
Geoff