Mud on roads
Author
Discussion

refoman2

Original Poster:

266 posts

207 months

Friday 26th October 2012
quotequote all
can someone tell me if farmers etc are liable for cleaning the road when they have completely covered the road in mud outside their farms/fields?

EvoBarry

1,903 posts

281 months

Friday 26th October 2012
quotequote all
I'm guessing not as its happening all over my local area lately, and as I ride a bike to work and back I can tell you, its bloody lethal. frown

Allyc85

7,225 posts

202 months

Saturday 27th October 2012
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I thnk they have to warn you andthen after that you have to drive to the conditions and what you can see wink

ChrisBMW

328 posts

164 months

Saturday 27th October 2012
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I'm pretty sure they are responsible for cleaning the road if they made a mess of it, they certainly are in Northern Ireland.

Craikeybaby

11,520 posts

241 months

Monday 29th October 2012
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There was a farmer cleaning the road (with a road sweeper type attachment on his tractor) round here a few weekends back.

ETA: Here = Warwickshire

Edited by Craikeybaby on Monday 29th October 13:48

Marlin45

1,334 posts

180 months

Monday 29th October 2012
quotequote all
ChrisBMW said:
I'm pretty sure they are responsible for cleaning the road if they made a mess of it, they certainly are in Northern Ireland.
That is probably technically the case as this applies to construction sites etc. but I have never seen a farmer cleaning the highway....and I live in a very rural area. It's Winter and time to lay down Winter wheat etc. so most of us just allow for it and drive/ride accordingly.

P_J_R

252 posts

221 months

Cyder

7,166 posts

236 months

Monday 29th October 2012
quotequote all
Marlin45 said:
ChrisBMW said:
I'm pretty sure they are responsible for cleaning the road if they made a mess of it, they certainly are in Northern Ireland.
That is probably technically the case as this applies to construction sites etc. but I have never seen a farmer cleaning the highway....and I live in a very rural area. It's Winter and time to lay down Winter wheat etc. so most of us just allow for it and drive/ride accordingly.
This ^

Most (sensible) countryside dwellers accept that mud on the road is a fact of life and drive sensibly to account for it.
The problems tend to come from the minority of dheads who live in the sticks and the townies who enjoy visiting the countryside theme park once or twice a year and drive like tts in the lanes not anticipating anything.

agent006

12,058 posts

280 months

Tuesday 30th October 2012
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You must be able to stop in the distance you can see to be clear. If you can't stop for mud on the road then who's to say you can stop for the tractor coming back the other way.

gothatway

6,204 posts

186 months

Thursday 1st November 2012
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agent006 said:
If you can't stop for mud on the road then
... you shouldn't have been driving so fast.

ericvauxsuffolk

24 posts

163 months

Saturday 24th November 2012
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Yeah,I had to stop riding my bike because I almost came off 3 times on Monday because of the muddy roads
EvoBarry said:
I'm guessing not as its happening all over my local area lately, and as I ride a bike to work and back I can tell you, its bloody lethal. frown