“Luckily I saw it in time”: Cyclist narrowly avoids rope and bramble trap on popular bridleway

by AnselaJonla

7 comments
  1. A cyclist riding on a popular bridle path in Berkshire narrowly avoided disaster this week, stopping just in time to avoid a booby trap made up of rope and brambles strung across the path.

    The act of sabotage was spotted by cyclist John on the Knowl Hill Bridleway Circuit, a roughly 30 mile loop around Maidenhead, Hurley, and the surrounding villages, which is popular with horse riders and off-road cyclists.

    John told road.cc that he was riding his gravel bike on a part of the route just south of the Broadmoor Road, near Waltham Saint Lawrence, when he spotted the act of deliberate sabotage.

    “This bit is a fairly smooth, flowy section and I was up to about 30kph,” he says. “Luckily I saw it in time to stop, but I easily could’ve hit it as it was a sunny day and this bit was in the shade.”

    Thanks to a knife from his repair kit (a benefit, he noted, of riding tubeless), John was able to cut through the rope and dismantle the trap.

    He continued: “From what I could figure it was possibly in some way linked to the adjacent field as there was similar rope within that. I think it may be occupied by cattle or horses, so it may be a disgruntled landowner?”

    John added that he has reported the trap to the local authority, the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead, who confirmed that the matter has been passed on to their Highways and Public Rights of Way departments.

    Unfortunately, John’s near miss on the Knowl Hill Bridleway isn’t the first time this year that cyclist have encountered Machiavellian acts of sabotage of popular trails and bike paths.

    In February, police in Staffordshire issued a warning after a cyclist found a wire stretched across a trail at Brocton Coppice, in the popular Cannock Chase forest in Staffordshire.

    Officers said they received a report from a cyclist riding in Cannock Chase, a popular haunt for mountain bikers just north of Birmingham, concerning a wire that had been tied between a tree and a post, at “adult waist height”, across one of the forest’s paths.

    Staffordshire Police said the apparent attempt at sabotage “could cause serious injury to walkers, cyclists, children, horse riders, or wildlife”.

    Later that month, a cyclist from North Wales was seriously injured after he crashed into a similar length of wire stretched across a cycle path.

    41-year-old Ian Davies was knocked out as a result of the crash, which saw him being thrown over the handlebars on his bike, hitting the ground head-first. The impact left him concussed, and he also sustained a broken collarbone and three fractured ribs in the incident, which happened on the Chester Millennium Greenway near Deeside Industrial Park.

    The trap, which was at waist height, was made from wire from an adjacent fence and according to Mr Davies followed a similar hazard in the same location three weeks before, with no-one injured on that occasion.

    This unsettling phenomena of cyclists being targeted by locals unhappy at them using forest trails or paths rose sharply during the initial stages of the Covid-19 pandemic.

    In June 2021, a nine-year-old boy sustained a neck injury after cycling into a rope stretched across a path in woodlands in Kent, causing him to fall off his bike, while a year earlier a mountain biker suffered a nasty wrist injury after riding into a metal wire strung across a West Yorkshire trail.

    In May 2020, a cyclist riding in woods in Cleveland had both his tyres punctured after he rode across a wooden board with nails hammered into it that had been left as a trap for cyclists.

    And later that month, two women in their sixties were spoken to by police after admitting placing rocks and branches on a path in North Yorkshire to stop cyclists from using it.

  2. What the hell, who goes out of their way to try and injure people like this?

  3. > “This bit is a fairly smooth, flowy section and I was up to about 30kph,” he says

    That’s 18.64mph, is that a suitable speed to go at on what looks like no more than half a meter of usable width? Don’t think a horse rider would attempt that speed there, and a pedestrian will be marching 5mph at best

  4. Is this a possible case of ramblers, or horse riders being unhappy with cyclists riding too fast on shared routes? I don’t know, but it possible, it seems strange to me that the cyclist involved in this one immediately blamed “landowners”, what possible interest does a landowner have in disrupting cyclists on a well used bridlepath might I ask? Also who owns the land this incident took place on?

    Saying there was a possibility of there being animals in an adjacent field: “I think it may be occupied by cattle or horses”, seems like a complete red herring to me as I don’t see how the animals could get onto the bridlepath, or how users of the bridlepath could adversely affect the animals. Seems like a very “clickbaity” comment to have a go at “landowners”, which seems prevalent on Unsocial Media these days….

    More likely, however, it was just mindless hooligans who think this kind of thing is funny….. Also, if the picture is from the incident, I would say riding at 18 to 19mph was too fast to show consideration to walkers, or horse riders.

  5. I am a survivor from a length of fencing wire placed between two trees. Whoever did it was trying to stop trail bike riders. I was on a mountain bike so roughly the same height. I was moving pretty fast along the trail. It hit me across the arms, giving me flesh wounds and scars that I can still see today. My brother was behind me and riding a smaller bike. If he had been first, it would have hit him neck hign, and could have killed him.

  6. As someone who’s almost been knocked down by illegal offroad bikes and cyclists, I CAN understand why people do this.

  7. Seems like half the people in this thread could have been responsible for setting up this trap.

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