The organisers of the New Forest 100 Sportive have defended themselves following accusations that they ‘vandalised’ roads by spray painting arrows. UK Cycling Events says it had permission to spray route markings at points where event signage had been removed or tampered with and says the paint used will wash away with rain.
The Advertiser and Times reports that an anonymous local resident was “horrified” to find yellow arrows on New Forest roads following the event on September 14.
“You can’t miss them, they are so fluorescent,” she said. “At first people thought they must be to do with road repairs, but when they found it was for a cycle event they were furious. One local said you can probably see them from outer space. They really are that bright.”
She complained to Hampshire County Council, a spokesperson for whom said: “No permission was sought by the organisers of this event to put these markings on roads. In the past, markings such as these have been biodegradable, so they fade and disappear in a relatively short time.”
The resident added: “What message are we giving to other visitors to the New Forest by allowing events to deface and vandalise our roads with bright orange paints which do not wash off? The markings are an eyesore.
“Leaving such markings in situ clearly sends a message that it is perfectly acceptable to deface the New Forest.”
A spokesperson for UK Cycling Events said that New Forest County Council Safety Advisory Group had given permission for route arrows to be added with temporary paint that would wash away with rain.
“When consulting with the New Forest County Council Safety Advisory Group ahead of the 14th September event, it was agreed with Hampshire Highways that should event signage be vandalised, removed or tampered with, that route markings would be sprayed on the roads at junctions to ensure we could deliver a safe event.
“This is a different approach to previous events where we have used road markings additions to signage as a safety precaution due to the regular interference with signage we were experiencing.
“Unfortunately, at a number of junctions event signage was removed and at some junctions re-directed and therefore we sprayed route markings at these junctions as was agreed, to ensure the safety of the riders.
“The spray used is temporary and will disappear with rainfall; however, as no rain is forecast we will in this instance remove the road markings at those junctions.
“All county councils are advised of our plans before an event, including how we plan to sign the route.”
In 2015, the New Forest Cycle Event Organisers’ Charter was introduced following incidents of sabotage, reports of bad behaviour by some sportive participants and problems caused by date clashes with pony drifts.
A 2017 report by the New Forest National Park Authority concluded the charter had resulted in good local awareness of potential issues and improved communication between organisers and other stakeholders, such as town and parish councils.




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42 thoughts on “New Forest sportive organiser accused of vandalism after spray painting arrows on road”
NIMBY pricks the lot of them.
NIMBY pricks the lot of them. They’re happy for permanent roadwork markings to be sprayed down but not temp cycle ones…that are only there due to the criminal behaviour of these NIMBYs – why aren’t the police and council attacking them??
I’m sure dead ponies, killed
I’m sure dead ponies, killed by speeding motor vehicles are much more of an attractive addition to the new forest roads.
ktache wrote:
The ponies will be ok. Last news story in this area had ponies bouncing off cars.
“At first people thought they
“At first people thought they must be to do with road repairs, [b]but when they found it was for a cycle event[/b] they were furious.”
Hmm. So the issue here is not so much the road markings, but the fact that it was to do with the cycling event. Can’t imagine who vandalised the original signage.
Sriracha wrote:
Hmm. So the issue here is not so much the road markings, but the fact that it was to do with the cycling event. Can’t imagine who vandalised the original signage.— Sriracha
And that’s the thing, isn’t it? Someone opposed to the sportive (probably) vandalised the original signage, (probably) hoping it would get cancelled.
Sounds like the council’s left hand also clearly doesn’t know what its right hand is doing, which doesn’t help matters…
“Horrified” really?
“Horrified” really?
Mildly irritated perhaps.
Just wait till Halloween if you think temporary road markings are horrific.
“At first people thought they
“At first people thought they must be to do with road repairs, but when they found it was for a cycle event they were furious.”
Everything you need to know right there.
Imagine how shit your life
Imagine how shit your life must be to get so het up about a fucking arrow on a road. Jesus wept.
Rapha Nadal wrote:
Not just that, Rapha, but arrows that must have washed off with the last weeks heavy rain.
ktache wrote:
This is probably a blessing as they were visible from space. Apparently.
Rapha Nadal wrote:
They aren’t; it’s the thought that it’s for cyclists that gets them het up.
The typical new forest local
The typical new forest local will deliberately try to run you over. They hate cyclists and it is sport for them to run you off the road. I live just outside it and ride in it regularly. I do hate riding there because of the locals. They moan, they complain. They sabotage signs for sportives and put tacks on the road. In short, they are scum
Pyro Tim wrote:
They also vote for c*nts like this:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2019/09/30/tory-mp-sir-desmond-swayne-pictured-blacked-soul-singer-james/
Some people in the New Forest
Some people in the New Forest will complain about anything cycling related. They tend not to kick off quite so vociferously about the amount of animal deaths caused by shit driving though.
For years they’ve used tiny
For years they’ve used tiny orange arrows painted on the route. A couple of years ago the locals complained about that because they were startling horses.
I guess they should just be thankful they don’t live in Harrogate, given the amount of Mathieu VdP graffiti on the roads.
Meanwhile:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-45763792
Beautiful part of the country
Beautiful part of the country, but Im afraid, it was spoilt by self entitled snobby attitude when we visited last month. Cars pretty ignore the speed limits, drive so close to the animals. We saw a dead cow that had been hit on the side of the road.
The off road riding was far more pleasant
We use this type of “paint”
We use this type of “paint” on events up here in Scotland all the time. It washes off in no time at all. We sometimes write slogans, but I don’t have any to hand, will share one from another event abroad
This one from Australia,
This one from Australia, similar to one we had here in Scotland last year
If lived in different times
If lived in different times and places the same NIMBYs would be objecting nearby Jewish shops or black neighbours.
People like that are a genetic waste that make you question the theory of evolution.
Thanks for that BBB, and they
Thanks for that BBB, and they’d explode if nearby there was planning for a mosque or a gurdwara.
It is Gammon Central. I’ve
It is Gammon Central. I’ve never ridden there, but visit there quite frequently. I see plenty of cyclists, but matched by plenty of gammon driving Range Rover owners, who don’t want to slow down for anyone
maviczap wrote:
Off-topic (mostly) but a chance to point out something that I’ve only recently had pointed-out to me – that the term gammon was used, in much the same sense, by Charles Dickens.
I give you, Nicolas Nickleby:
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/967/967-h/967-h.htm
I’m intrigued to know whether the term has actually quietly been existant ever since, or if someone somewhere read Dickens and decided the time had come to resurrect the usage and it ‘went viral’. Or is there something just intrinsically compelling about the association of gammon and a certain kind of British male, such that the term just got spontaneously reinvented?
Anyway, back to rolling one’s eyes at pampered New Forest snowflakes (I wonder if Dickens used that one as well?)
maviczap wrote:
Forest of Dean is the same. Wankers in 4x4s speeding routinely. Open any local news website and it is full of Gammons whining about having to recycle, denying climate change and moaning about anything that restricts them from driving everywhere. Nice places to visit but it must be fuckimg awful living there.
World champs in the New
World champs in the New Forest next year then?
HoarseMann wrote:
Yay bring it on
New Forest residents should
New Forest residents should not be allowed to travel outside their area. For their own good – on this evidence, if they caught sight of the world outside they’d likely die of shock.
FluffyKittenofTindalos wrote:
A well considered theory, which I feel would benefit from being followed up.
Good Dickens find Fluffy.
Good Dickens find Fluffy.
As a local to the New Forest
As a local to the New Forest the residents never fail to p@@s me off. The organisers of these events must dread thinking what stupid objections only the New Forest Nimby’s can come up with next. They really do think it’s ‘their’ park, not a national park
Imagine how empty your life
Imagine how empty your life has to be for some temporary road markings to horrify you. These people should be offered counselling.
srchar wrote:
They aren’t offended by the arrows; they’re offended because they are for cyclists.
It’s most odd that they don’t
It’s most odd that they don’t seem to object to the Beaulieu auto and boat jumbles, or the New Forest Half Marathon. Or the use of the land for point-to-point horse races that see loads of illegal parking on verges leading to habitat destruction.
Quote:
Some people have no idea of what being “horrified” is.
Snowflakes.
don simon fbpe wrote:
They should count themselves lucky that they didn’t wake up to the Red Arrows blocking the road.
Don, nice to have you back.
Don, nice to have you back.
ktache wrote:
I’m sure you speak for many.
I had to look, there is a
I had to look, there is a Cafe Velo in Ringwood!
ktache wrote:
Which is superb. It’s run by a family of cycling people, for cycling people. However, Ringwood is very much only just bordering the New Forest. It’s within a couple of minutes of the heart of the forest, but not really central forest, like Beaulieu, and Nomansland and Minstead are.
ktache wrote:
Lovely brekkie and coffee there – and they’ll fix your bike. Ringwood is quite the cycling hub with the New Forest and Moors Valley on the doorstep, plus a long-running TT course.
Shout out also to Forge Cycleworks, excellent spannering
ktache wrote:
clearing of throats, blowing of noses, anyone? I also live just outside the New Forest – it’s no better or worse in my experience than anywhere else for the level of consideration afforded to drivers towards cyclists.
The letter-writers complain of litter, the Forest being turned into a “petting zoo” (visitors feeding the commoners’ livestock), and there was recently one about alleged off-trail cycling.
It is “different” though in some respects: in one village, a set of pylons strides across the landscape, “lad, your father and his father before him fought long and hard over them pylons” “you lost, then, dad” “lost? We won, lad.” Serioulsy, biggest no-brainier the electric board could offer, get rid of the pylons, the people didn’t want it.
the Wiggle sportive hysteria takes different forms each time. Maybe someone did spit or wee up a tree one year, but I doubt any resident was actually “a prisoner in their own home” both days. an awful lot of the route is outside the New Forest area anyway. Inguess the sign tampering is slightly less murderous than the tin tacks, that we never seem to get to the bottom of.
The CTC Gridiron in a couple of weeks has 1,000 riders, but no signage, seems to pass off OK. Amazing the difference some baggy shorts, a Mercian or Roberts steel frame and a Carradice saddlebag can make?
I think we’ve officially
“Horrified” by arrows painted on the pavement? I think we’ve officially crossed the threshold from the “information age” into the “age of outrage.”
gary p wrote:
Outrage age; I love it, and will promptly start being outraged by cars, drivers, police, judges, politicians. Well, when I say start…….