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Posted

Hi all,

 

Fairly new to the industry I have been climbing around 6 months. I am looking to do some climbing out of work to practise different limb walks etc.. 

However I am struggling to find places to go climb as in without permission from landowner. 
Can anybody point me in the right direction on how to obtain permission to climb or has anyone “practised” outside of work themselves in the past? 
Many thanks, 

Lee.

 

North/West Yorkshire based. 

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Posted

Rec climbing is certainly a “thing”

Perhaps try the FB groups. I’m sure you’ll find some contemporaries there (usually the younger ones) who will point you in the right direction or organise group climbs. 
Always best if there’s a couple of you for safety reasons. 

Posted

If you know a local farmer or someone who has a patch of woodland, drop them a message/give them a call.

 

It's what I did and haven't had a no yet, just make it clear that you won't be cutting anything and it's purely for practice/recreation.

 

Oh, and if you do get in with a farmer or the like, Number one rule is always shut the gate, you don't want to be responsible for a randy bull to get out!

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Posted
5 hours ago, Lee54321 said:

I will have a look,thank you.

appreciate the reply,

Lee 

If you were in Sussex, I would have said you can use the woods on the estate I manage. But Yorkshire is a bit of a drive for you. sorry. 👍

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Posted
23 hours ago, Lee54321 said:

Hi all,

 

Fairly new to the industry I have been climbing around 6 months. I am looking to do some climbing out of work to practise different limb walks etc.. 

However I am struggling to find places to go climb as in without permission from landowner. 
Can anybody point me in the right direction on how to obtain permission to climb or has anyone “practised” outside of work themselves in the past? 
Many thanks, 

Lee.

 

North/West Yorkshire based. 

deadwooding?

 

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Posted

Local park woodland, might be hard to find a decent tree for limb walks thats away from paths and busy areas.

 

No saws etc just climbing kit, no one had any issue with it. The park was a conservation area. Never asked permission - leave it tidy and no damage, no spikes and be aware of people nearby.

 

A few roaming walkers didnt look up, didnt see me, and started nosing through what they thought was an abandoned bag until I shouted down !

I'd suggest taking any excess kit in a backpack and bring your rope up well out of reach, if your on your own.

 

A friend owns a large oak so I was playing on that, and it needed deadwooding, so I dropped that for her whilst I was in there.

 

I would not climb any trees overlooking houses or gardens without permission, sadly most of the decent oaks in my area are in residential green spaces.

 

Or drive until you see a nice domestic garden oak.

I dare say most owners might allow it if asked nicely and you can inspect/deadwood/light prune for them if they want it.

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Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
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