From: JNugent73@mail.com
On 21/08/2025 04:57 PM, Roger Hayter wrote:
> "Jethro_uk" wrote:
>> Les. Hayward wrote:
>>> On 21/08/2025 15:24, brian wrote:
>>>> [quoted text muted]
>>> Well it would only be illegal if the landowner was against it and since
>>> it has been there for years without objection, I doubt that they are.
That would be trespass at most. Not a criminal offence. People move
around on the land at the top of the Great Orme without hindrance.
>>> I
>>> can't see how moving a chunk of rock a few feet is harming the
>>> environment,
>
>> It can be criminal damage in England.
>
> If the owner of the land does not value any particular arrangement of the
> rocks above any other then it would be impossible to establish damage.
Long established custom and practice.
I first saw it nearly sixty-five years ago while on holiday and it was
long-established then.
CoPilot says:
QUOTE:
The summit of the Great Orme in Llandudno is largely occupied by Parc
Farm, a 140-acre site that was purchased by the National Trust in 2015
for €€1 million. This acquisition was part of a conservation effort to
protect the area's rich wildlife, archaeology, and geology.
While the summit itself is not designated as common land in the legal
sense, it is managed for public enjoyment and conservation.
ENDQUOTE
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