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FORAGING LAWS

January 29, 2026 1 min read

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What is Legal to Take

Theft Act 1968, Section 4(3):

Legal to pick wild:

  • Mushrooms (for personal use)
  • Flowers, fruit, foliage (for personal use)

FROM:

  • Land where you have legal access (right of way, open access, permission)

Illegal:

  • Commercial picking without permission (selling requires landowner consent)
  • Uprooting ANY plant (including roots) without landowner permission
  • Taking from private gardens (theft)

Protected Species (NEVER Pick)

Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981:

Illegal to pick, uproot, or damage:

  • All wild plants in Schedule 8 (rare/endangered)
  • Examples: Lady’s Slipper Orchid, Snowdon Lily, Oblong Woodsia

Protected fungi:

  • Royal Bolete, Oak Polypore (rare species)

Penalties:

  • Fines up to £5,000
  • Imprisonment (6 months maximum per offense)

How to know if protected:

  • Check JNCC website (Joint Nature Conservation Committee)
  • Field guides note protected species
  • When in doubt, DON’T pick

Sustainable Foraging (Legal but Ethical Considerations)

No law against over-harvesting common species BUT:

Ethical limits:

  • 1/3 rule (leave 2/3 for wildlife, reproduction)
  • 5% rule for roots
  • Rotate sites (don’t concentrate pressure)

Local bylaws may prohibit:

  • Foraging in specific parks
  • Commercial picking
  • Check with land manager

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