Spent a few hours yesterday in the local woodland and was shocked at just how much litter I came across. Empty cans (alcohol) wrappers, bottles and left over disposable bbqs. So many trees had been attempted to be cut/chopped down without reason as there's an abundance of fallen firewood available. Camp fires setup on most of the clearings. Dog mess in plastic bags thrown in bushes and trees/hung on fences.
I for one would like to see an introduction of woodland rangers or some kind of power that can issue fines of some sort for idiotic behaviour.
Even came across a tree that had been set alight and was still smouldering when I saw it
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I own a small plot of woodland with a public bridle path and small river (more a stream but it's officially called a river) it's also listed as a Special Area of Conservation (SAC) due to the fact it's part of the home/habitat of UK's rarest and largest bats, the Greater Horseshoe Bat.
I've liaised with the local wildlife trust and even received a small amount of funding to implement conservation measures, for not just the bats but dormice and ground nesting birds. One section of the woods borders the farmers field and it's evident there was an old outgrown hedge along the border. The farmer and I both agreed and got RPA funding to re-introduce the hedgerow.
There have been numerous incidents where the newly planted, hedgerow has been uprooted or the pleached trees bent and torn, effectively killing them. The conservation signs torn down or pulled out and people tramping over newly seeded glades and ground nesting areas, one woodland owner coppiced his sweet chestnuts and had abusive notes left, saying how they hoped he and his family get cancer for chopping down the trees.
Unfortunately many people feel entitled to ignore genuine conservation measures, and some others don't realise that coppicing is a very old tradition that can actually prolong some species of trees and increase biodiversity.
As for rangers most woodland are privately owned so as such who would fund these rangers? Also mine is actually within a national park, which has rangers, but as it's still privately owned they can't enforce anything with the woodland.
Unfortunately within the national park I've seen increased human activity which has not followed the cardinal rule of leave no trace. To the point the cheap pop up tents have even been left, and every thing strewn about the place.
I fear it's never going to be easy to 'police'