National Trust bans coaches from East Sussex beauty spot to cut visitor numbers | East Sussex

National Trust has banned trainers from one of the most beautiful sites in Britain in an attempt to reduce the increasing numbers of people visiting the site.
Up to 600,000 people per year visit BIRLING GAP, which is part of Seven Sisters Cliffs in East Sussex On the southern coast in England.
Local population hopes that the ban will reduce the numbers of visitors and determine the damage in turn Coastal corrosion To the site, which appeared in movies including atonement and Robin Hood: Prince of thieves.
This procedure, which was said to be the first of its kind, was welcomed by Philip Mercun, who lives nearby, and who told the Daily Mail: “Perling Perling and seven sisters have been insulted by a significant increase in visitors in recent years.
“It is a tsunami and has a really great effect on the small road, shore, herbal lands and paths. Everything is worn.”
“The national confidence wants to welcome people in the gap, but she wants to see it at its best. All coaches banned a good idea because they are often huge, reaching large numbers and considering eyes,” said Dot Squeaking, a former national worker who lives in a hut near the slope.
Visitors who arrive in other means are still welcome in the beauty spot.
On the National Confidences website of BIRLING GAP and Seven Sisters Cliffs it stipulates: “Please note, we no longer allow the trained cars or coach in the parking lot on this site.” Instead, people are directed to “alternative parking for cars in the Estborn region.”
“In BIRLING GAP, we welcome more than 600,000 visitors every year at the small country Clifftop site this is vulnerable to coastal corrosion.”
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The spokesperson said that this step was not a policy of confidence and was in response to a specific problem in the gap in Perling and seven sisters.
The ban comes after a previous warning from the East Sussex County Council about people who deviate near the edge of the abyss.
“The famous white slopes are very popular with visitors, but they are very unstable and can give way at any time without any warning,” a spokesman for the council told Sussexworld: