Help support Bedgebury Forest Bike Park petition
In February 2016, the Forestry Commission ripped down the remaining dirt jumps in the bike park at Bedgebury Forest. The bike park has gone completely and there are no tabletops or jumps anywhere now at Bedgebury. Although the Forestry Commission originally built these jumps they weren't maintaining them themselves and were seemingly unaware of their popularity.
Your support is critical. Please sign this petition asking the Forestry Commission to build a new bike park and add more fun features to the red trail such as tabletops, rollable doubles and infinity landings.
The jumps may have been small and basic, but we all have to start somewhere and they gave many riders the confidence and inspiration to go on to try gap jumps and DH at other venues.
Forestry Commission England do a fantastic job in building trails and providing us mountain bikers with public access to their woodland. But ever since pulling down the northshore at the Bedgebury bike park in 2010, the Forestry Commission have promised to build a new bike park. Now, despite also ripping down the jumps, they say they are still looking to build something but that will only happen through public pressure.
Please sign to support this petition and share with friends on facebook.
THANK YOU so much to the 500+ people who have signed so far. The level of support is fantastic. This petition is by far the biggest source of user feedback regarding the trails at Bedgebury ever received by the Forestry Commission.
Please keep signing this petition until we see some positive changes.
Latest news
British Cycling announces 2025 mountain bike endurance calendarWatch: Rob Williams - The Welsh pedal power
SHIMANO and IMBA Europe Announce New Mountain Biking Partnership
Watch: Christo Gallagher shreds the trails at Glassie Bike Park
Must Watch: Gee Atherton's Kazakhstan Mountain Shredding in Ridgeline VI
Popular news
Review: Shimano Saint PD-MX80 PedalsRockshox Announce 2014 Sid, Revelation, XLoc and updates to the Monarch
Review: Maxxis Ikon 26x2.35 Tyres