12,433m footpaths repaired thanks to Mend Our Mountains in 2024

Mend Our Mountains Articles
23 Rhag
8 min read

A huge thank you to everyone who has supported the Mend Our Mountains campaign from the BMC's Access & Conservation Trust (ACT) - here are the 2024 highlights! 

The BMC's Access & Conservation Trust (ACT) has funded seven Mend Our Mountains projects across England and Wales in 2024, repairing eroded footpaths and improving access to crags, countryside and mountains for all.

This year, £191,000 of Mend Our Mountains funding has supported the repair of 12,433m of footpath overall, that's the equivalent of 1,130 double decker buses parked end to end. Highlights include the new 20m bridge made from from 26,000 plastic bottles at Cressbrook Mill in the Peak District, 200 tonnes of local stone used to repair footpaths at Haytor Rocks, Dartmoor, and 200 helicopter bags of materials flown in to restore heavily eroded footpaths on Roseberry Topping in North Yorkshire.

Mend Our Mountains has directly funded BMC Get Stuck In events, enabling volunteers to carry out 1,576 hours of arduous path work, including hauling 187 stepping stones into place in Eryri and planting 49,900 carbon-locking sphagnum moss plugs in the Peak District.

Joining the BMC and/or taking out BMC Travel Insurance, as well as donating to Mend Our Mountains helps to fund important access and conservation projects like these. Here are the most interesting stats from all seven projects this year:

GET STUCK IN

GET STUCK IN

£5,000

Funding assigned for tools, accommodation and t-shirts.

1

Incredible person masterminded this fantastic volunteer initiative - BMC Hill Walking Rep Steve Charles, winner of the Lord Greaves Award 2024 for Voluntary Contribution to the BMC Access & Conservation Trust. Well done Steve! He’s always on the hunt for more volunteer Get Stuck In event leaders, email Summit if you’re interested.

49,900

Sphagnum moss plugs planted by BMC volunteers and staff with Moors for the Future Partnership in the Peak District over seven separate, day-long Get Stuck In events, mainly led by BMC Local Area Volunteer Peter Judd. This water-loving, spongey, green moss is vital in restoring the peatlands as a carbon-sink, re-wetting the moors, reducing flood risk lower down and helping to preserve upland habitats and biodiversity.

1,576

Total hours worked by an impressive 203 BMC volunteers on Get Stuck In events, from repairing footpaths with Fix the Fells in the Lake District to hauling stepping stones across the bogs in Eryri (Snowdonia) and clearing invasive rhododendron and sitka spruce in the Peak District.

80m

Total length of the peat hags reprofiled in Eryri (Snowdonia) by Get Stuck In volunteers over four events. They worked on bare, exposed, mini-cliffs of peat with overhanging vegetation, re-shaping them into gentler slopes with the delicate peat fully covered with vegetation to prevent further erosion.

187

Stepping stones placed by Get Stuck In volunteers below Bochlwyd Buttress, Eryri (Snowdonia) to make a sustainable path through this boggy ground.

9

Number of helicopter bags filled with redundant plastic tree guards, taking polluting waste out of the mountain environment, five from Eryri (Snowdonia) and four from Hayfield, Peak District.

CRESSBROOK MILL BRIDGE

CRESSBROOK MILL BRIDGE

£10,000

Funding given, part of the total cost of £190,000. The rest was sourced from Farming in Protected Landscapes (FiPL), the Peak District Foundation, Peak District National Park Authority and a public crowdfunder.

1980s

Original bridge was constructed across the River Wye by the military as an exercise for the Royal Engineers and became a popular access point for the local community and visitors, connecting Cressbrook with the Monsal Trail.

26,000

Plastic bottles were recycled to make the 20m span of the new bridge at Cressbrook Mill, constructed from Fibre Reinforced Polymer (FRP) with hardwood handrails.

120

Lifespan of the new, state-of-the-art bridge with relatively minimal regular maintenance.

4

Years climbers have been waiting for the new bridge to be installed to access some of the best climbing crags in the area, like Water-cum-Jolly Cornice and Moat Buttress.

1

Swan spotted zooming down the steep weir and over the subsequent white water before the bridge opening ceremony in December. Extreme!

FIX THE FELLS

FIX THE FELLS

£50,000

Funding allocated to a ranger team.

50%

Of the Fix the Fells North Ranger Team’s time was funded by Mend Our Mountains during the 2024 footpath repair season, 1 April to 31 October.

1,570m

Footpath repaired by dedicated Fix the Fells Rangers in the Lake District

90 mins

Walk in to the most remote Fix the Fells site, Calf Cove, Lake District (4.5km, 675m ascent) before any work even gets done by their skilled ranger team. Then there’s the return trip!

0

Heavy machinery or helicopters used by Fix the Fells Rangers in the Lakes. All footpath repair equipment was carried in on foot and work was carried out by hand - great work guys!

HAYTOR ROCKS

HAYTOR ROCKS

£10,000

Given towards total project cost of £25,000, the remainder funded by the Dartmoor National Park Authority and Farming in Protected Landscapes (FiPL).

1,880m

Footpath repaired around Haytor Rocks and the nearby Rippon and Saddle Tors, Dartmoor National Park.

200

Tonnes of local growan stone used to fill in eroded holes in the paths.

7

Vehicles used in total for the Haytor Rocks path repair project, including two mini diggers, one dumper, one tractor and trailer, two 6-wheeler lorries for transporting the growan (granite gravel) and a Land Rover.

23

Volunteers and one ranger re-turfed eroded areas, filled holes in the path with growan and created gorse ‘dams’ to divert foot traffic from the eroded area and cut alternative route in the Haytor Rocks project.

1

Solitary bee that had to be carefully worked around during the Haytor Rocks path erosion repair project in Dartmoor.

XXL

Amount of cow manure used to heal the ground, fill small gullies, slow the flow of water and keep people off eroded areas around Haytor Rocks, Dartmoor. It also contains grass seed which helps with revegetation too.

ROSEBERRY TOPPING

ROSEBERRY TOPPING

£50,000

Funding given, forming part of £700,000 project including funding from the National Grid's Landscape Enhancement Initiative, Defra’s Farming in Protected Landscapes Scheme, the HF Holidays Pathways Fund, a generous National Trust legacy donation and a grant from the North York Moors National Park Authority.

416m

Footpath repaired at Roseberry Topping, the first of ten path repair sections, from Newton Woods to the summit. Funding has been secured for the remaining nine paths over the next few years, totalling approximately 2,620m in length, ensuring improved access to nature for local residents and visitors.

200

Approximate number of bags flown in by helicopter for Path One, Newton Woods to Roseberry Toping summit. Roughly 120 bags of new material and 80 bags of existing material were moved around, split across two separate airlifts.

4,000

Hours of manual labour has been carried out on Path One at Roseberry Topping by 4-8 people at a time. In the steeper areas, the path was constructed by hand, using stone pitching techniques that are similar to those used by the Romans.

0

No archeological finds! Despite Roseberry Topping having a long history of use, the visiting archaeologist found nothing at all prior to the excavation works. This was actually good as it means nothing has been disturbed by the path repairs.

COTSWOLDS NATIONAL LANDSCAPE

COTSWOLDS NATIONAL LANDSCAPE

£41,000

Funding for an Access & Grants Officer for the Cotswolds National Landscape, to allocate Defra grants across a multitude of vitally important, local projects.

25

Local Cotswolds projects activated by Access & Grants Officer 2024, Nina Stubbington.

7,197m

Total estimated length of footpath repaired across all projects in the Cotswolds National Landscape, including boardwalks over muddy ground through the woods in Nailsworth, mobility scooter accessible routes at Eastleach Downs Organic Farm and bridge restoration at Eastleach Turville.

10

Benches have been installed on popular Cotswolds walking routes, along with three two-way gates and two gaps created, removing unnecessary gates or stiles, to improve access for all.

1

All-terrain mobility scooter available to hire for free at Eastleach Downs Organic Farm (between Oxford and Cirencester), and a 4-mile route to use it on around the beautiful farmland.

CHANCTONBURY RING

CHANCTONBURY RING

£25,000

Funding apportioned for the eroded section of the South Downs Way near Chanctonbury Ring.

800m

Total length of footpath repaired on the main path leading up to Chanctonbury Ring prehistoric fort atop the eponymous hill in the South Downs.

400

Hours worked by the team of four, using three diggers, two dumpers and two rollers to repair the deep ruts and blocked drainage ditches, using natural materials - local chalk and flint.

7

Times you must run naked around Chanctonbury Ring on a moonless night in order to summon the devil who will offer you a bowl of soup, milk or porridge, or chase you nine miles to the Devil’s Dyke.

Support Mend Our Mountains now!

Mend Our Mountains is an award-winning campaign from the BMC’s Access & Conservation Trust (ACT) which has raised a total of £1.4 million since its creation in 2016 to repair Britain’s hills and mountains. Since then over 50 miles of fragile footpath has been restored for future generations and 544 miles of upland has been repaired - the equivalent length of over 67,000 double decker buses!

Support Mend Our Mountains

Path repair is a surprisingly costly business. Working in remote locations with complex equipment and adverse weather conditions makes rebuilding trails an enormous and expensive challenge.

£5 buys a pair of work gloves

£50 buys five garden skips for moving soil

£250 fixes approximately one metre of footpath

£1000 flies ten bags of stone to an inaccessible mountain location

Did you know?

Simply becoming a BMC member supports BMC Access & Conservation Trust projects like this, plus you get all the benefits that membership offers, including these and many more:

£15 million Worldwide Combined Liability Insurance

£10,000 Personal Accident Insurance

Quarterly member-only magazine, Summit

15% off Cotswold Outdoor, Snow+Rock and Runners Need

BMC Travel Insurance

Join the BMC

Cotswold Outdoor Discount

Winter Lecture Series

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