Potter wrote: ↑Wed Dec 06, 2023 11:43 am
Count Steer wrote: ↑Wed Dec 06, 2023 7:42 am
We've got a country here full of big 4×4s that the nearest they get to off-road is the house drive
Not to mention camper vans that 'go wild' by making a cup of herbal tea in a National Trust car park.
A couple of my mates are into big camper vans, they have these £100k things that are pretty big and they swear by "wild camping".
Now before I criticise, I will point out that they love it, they seem to have a brilliant time and about 30 weekends of the year both families are off having fun with kids all over the country, it's a real social thing that they enjoy and it does look great.
However, "wild camping" usually means they turn up at a country pub in the late afternoon and ask if they can stay the night in the car park if they drink and eat at the pub all evening - and apparently 99 times out of 100 the landlord is fine with it. They both came and stayed up here and did exactly that at the village pub, the landlord was fine with it as we spent a fair bit between us all.
I don't know how "wild" that is, we sometimes join them and when we go we turn up in the Range Rover and get a room in the same pub, saving the cost of a £100k motorhome
That's about all you're legally allowed to do in England.
In England you're not legally allowed to just park up in a random spot and spend the night unless it's land specifically set aside for the purpose (eg camp-sites, overnight lorry parking etc). Pub car parks are private land so it's down the landowner.
That's not to say that it doesn't happen - but sensible motorhome livers are careful not to leave any mess and not to intrude on any locals.
Scotland
does allow proper "wild camping": ie if it's not private land you can camp over night (it's mostly intended to allow tent campers to overnight while hiking etc).
In Europe it's also dependant on the country, but the whole concept of motorhoming is far more accepted generally and most towns/villages have a set-aside parking area becuase the vast majority of motorhome users bring some business to the area, where in the UK they're generally viewed in the same way as "tinkers/travellers/scum" by councils and locals. (the occasional idiot motorhomer who likes to dump his grey water onto the road, or worse, his black water into storm drains, doesn't help that impression).