The Daily Telegraph

Owners ordered to keep hounds on short leads in Dartmoor

- By Albert Tait

Dog-owners must keep their pets on short leads when walking them in Dartmoor National Park, park rangers have said.

The ruling, which has now come into force, is intended to stop dogs from frightenin­g wildlife on the vast moorland in Devon. It will last until July 31 as the Dartmoor National Park Authority looks to protect nesting birds and grazing livestock.

Park bosses said that dogs could “distress” nesting birds and other animals, in shades of Arthur Conan Doyle’s book The Hound of the Baskervill­es, in which a fearsome hound runs loose on Dartmoor.

The park authority issued a reminder of the ruling, which has come into force each year since 2000.

It follows a weekend of community engagement.

Ella Briens, the deputy head ranger, said: “The weekend of engagement was an important way for us to highlight the breeding season and explain that it’s a particular­ly vulnerable time for Dartmoor’s wildlife. “We found most people were incredibly positive but were surprised to find some people didn’t think the rules applied to them.”

Birds like the meadow pipit and skylark are now building nests on the ground at Dartmoor to incubate their eggs, the park authority said.

They addde that lambs, foals and calves are taking their first steps.

Dog owners were also advised to pick up waste and stick to the paths.

A statement on the authority’s website said: “Keeping your dog on a lead helps protect our birds which nest on the ground, such as skylarks, meadow pipits and curlews.

“A loose dog can easily cause them to abandon their nests, eggs and chicks – a real tragedy for our wonderful wildlife.” The park, which covers an area of 954 square kilometres, was the setting for Conan Doyle’s 1901 book following the famous detective Sherlock Holmes and his sidekick John Watson. Parts of Dartmoor have been used as military firing ranges for more than 200 years, although the public is granted extensive land access rights to the park. Dartmoor National Park Authority is composed of 22 members.

They are drawn from Devon county council, other local district councils and the Government.

The community engagement weekend, in which rangers handed out treats, leads and poo bags to dog walkers, was organised by the park authority alongside the National Trust and Dartmoor Livestock Protection Society.

According to NFU Mutual, an insurance company, farm animals worth an estimated £2.4 million were severely injured or killed by loose and uncontroll­ed dogs in 2023.

This total is an increase from a value of £1.8 million the previous year.

£2.4m

The value of the total number of farm animals that were severely injured or killed by loose dogs in 2023

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