NEW Get Stuck In footpath repair & conservation volunteer dates for 2025

Hill Walking News
20 Jan
2 min read

Will you help the BMC repair footpaths and avoid carbon loss in 2025 as part of Mend Our Mountains and The Climate Project?

Our footpaths are seeing more footfall and extreme weather than ever before, leading to erosion, loss of habitat for wildlife, trampled vegetation, decreasing biodiversity and soil washing into waterways which can lead to flooding and an imbalance in ecosystems. So wouldn't it be fantastic if you could do something really meaningful to combat this problem? With the BMC, you can!

We now have new dates for our Get Stuck In volunteer footpath repair and conservation opportunities in 2025, as part of Mend Our Mountains and The Climate Project. These are 1-3 day events that give BMC volunteers a chance to give some love back to the landscapes we love to walk and climb in. There are a range of footpath repair and conservation activities decided on nearer the time of the event according to the National Trust rangers who will teach you new skills and work alongside you.

BMC Hill Walking rep and founder of Get Stuck In, Steve Charles, says, "I've been going into the mountains for quite a long time and it's great to be able to give back and feel that you're helping to preserve this environment for future generations. It is under threat and we need to give it tender loving care. It needs to be nurtured, because if we don't do anything, it's going to be in a much poorer state when we hand it on to future generations.

"Since the Get Stuck In projects started in 2023 we've done well over 2,300 man-hours of work in the hills, fixed over 2,000m of footpath in the Lakes and Eryri and planted over 36,000 sphagnum moss plugs in the Peak District. That's a huge impact in the mountain environment and we hope over time that this movement will grow so we can do more and more work to Mend Our Mountains."

BMC Hill Walking Rep volunteer Steve Charles (top right) leads the Get Stuck In events

What to expect?

Path repair work on a Get Stuck In event can be as physically challenging as you want to make it, with volunteers digging drainage ditches, moving stepping stones into place, making steps, re-shaping eroded peat hags, landscaping paths and scattering cairns. Conservation work on Get Stuck In events involve clearing invasive, biodiversity-reducing species like Molinia grass and rhododendron, collecting plastic tree-guards, clearing bracken to allow newly-planted tree saplings to thrive and planting carbon-sinking sphagnum moss plugs into soft peat bog with Moors for the Future.

Steve says, "The really wonderful thing is that you get 15-17 people meet who don't know each other and after a couple of days we're like a band of brothers because everyone has a common passion for the outdoors and the mountains. So if you're feeling a bit nervous about joining in don't worry about it, because actually you'll meet people who are likeminded and have common interests and I guarantee you'll have fun.

"We are lifting heavy stones so we like people to have steel toe-capped boots, and we can provide those for people who don't have them. You don't want to wear your best kit and your super new Gore-Tex jacket either, so wear old clothes, and the National Trust can provide durable work waterproofs too. Apart from those borrowed items, you just need your normal kit for a day in the hills, and a packed lunch."

Matt Tweed, Fix the Fells Volunteer Development Ranger, says, "For an entry level volunteer you're going to get a lot of supervision. You're going to be paired with experienced volunteers and staff members who are going to guide you through what's required. There's a very friendly, supportive atmosphere to these events and we welcome volunteers from all backgrounds, faiths and ability levels."

Scroll down for previous Get Stuck In reports and volunteer stories.

When and where?

Currently, Get Stuck In volunteering events take place in the Peak District, Lake District and Wales. Basic accommodation, in club huts and bunkhouses with cooking facilities, showers and toilets, is provided on the multi-day day events. You can also borrow steel toe-capped boots and heavy duty waterproof jackets and trousers free of charge if needed.

Can't volunteer?

Get Stuck In also relies on donations to the funding charity, the BMC's Access & Conservation Trust, so if you can't come along on a volunteer project, please do consider making a financial contribution to path repair and upland conservation instead through Mend Our Mountains or The Climate Project.

Watch the video here

Support the BMC ACT Mend Our Mountains campaign

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
  • £10 buys a replacement handle for a mattock
  • £25 buys a shovel or suncream & midge repellent for a ranger team
  • £50 buys five garden skips for moving soil
  • £150 buys protective clothing for path repairers
  • £250 fixes approximately one metre of footpath
  • £1000 flies ten bags of stone to an inaccessible mountain location

Support the BMC's Access & Conservation Trust Mend Our Mountains campaign to help projects like Get Stuck In repair and maintain the landscapes you love to walk and climb in.

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