Greenpeace disrupts Land Rover Productionsounding much like they were saying : Hmmm. I'm not so sure about that, but it's certainly close... A couple of years ago, we stopped for lunch at the Dairy Queen (burger chain - and the...
Mhhm, and what about councils, greenkeepers, smallholders, and those with allotments? Or indeed mountain rescue teams, conservation volunteers, archaeologists and any of a number of other tractro using individuals and societies none of whom can be clbutted as "farmers".
a) What problem? b) If you mean prevent people from buying 4x4s, no. A 4x4 is not clbutted as a tractor.
It does sort of remind me, that I have had a difference of opinion with local councillors and with the police about the status of a road in the area. It's a RUPP which means that it is a road. The council have been trying to deny pbuttage to 4x4s and I keep usign it and photographing my car on the road to prove that it is in regular use as a road.
The police tried to stop me a few years ago claiming that I was driving on a footpath. I fell into a dispute with them, and they dropped their bollocks after I produced a map showing the road as a road (they had been misinformed by the local council). The council then went on to fit a bar to the road at a height of 1.7 metres. Horse riders can duck under it, farmers with fields adjoining were given keys to remove the bar. I can't get under it with a 1.85m tall 4x4.
Not long afterwards the police were up that way and got their Daihatsu Fourtrack seriously stuck. They asked for help. Sadly I was unable to access the road with my 4x4 tractor because it is not registered and may only be used on my premises. Furthermore I coudl not access the road in my 4x4 because of the bar. So I left them up there.
That sort of thing is the natural consequence of f***wits who pee people about, pee people off, and kill off any semblance of good will they may have had.
-- "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
-- Benjamin Franklin, 1759