I was recently in the Derbyshire Peak District and visited the well known
area of Dovedale. There is a small hill next to the River known as Thorpe
Cloud which we walked up it appear to belong to the National Trust.. We
started walking around the hill in an anti-clockwise direction. We came to
a number of very obvious paths up the hill on which were notices saying
that the paths were closed to prevent erosion.
Eventually we came to one that was not marked like that and used it to go
to the summit. The going was quite difficult - steep and slippery rock and
the path not always clear. The result was  that we accidentally came back
down by path slightly further around the hill. When I got home and looked
at the area on OSM I was surprised to find that the path we used to go up
was the only one shown.
This is the area
https://www.openstreetmap.org/edit?node=600372181#map=15/53.05701/-1.77293

A large number of edits around there have been done by  NTTrailsMEE which
looks as if it is used by a National Trust Employee. The profile started
editing in April this year and has been very active on weekdays since then.
https://www.openstreetmap.org/user/NTTrailsMEE

Whilst I can understand the NT trying to direct walkers away from some
paths, this doesn't seem in accordance with OSM principles that we map what
is on the ground.  I wondered what the group thought about this?

Chris Smith
Allotmentcyclist
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