>>570942Its not impossible if you live in the lake district like me. Legally wherever you camp you must have the permission of a landowner to camp on their land, though there is a tradition of wild camping in the Lake District.
In the past, camping has often been tolerated as long as people:
>camp above the highest fell wall, well away from towns and villages
>leave no litter - this includes not burying any litter and removing other people's
>don't light any fires, even if there is evidence that fires might have been lit
>stay for only one night
>keep groups very small - only one or two tents
>camp as unobtrusively as possible with inconspicuous tents which blend in
>leave the campsite as you would want to find it
>carry out everything you carried in
>carry out tampons and sanitary towels. Burying them doesn't work as animals dig them up again
>choose a dry pitch rather than digging drainage ditches around a tent or moving boulders
>perform toilet duties at least 30 metres - 100 feet - from water and bury the results with a trowel
>at all times, help protect the environment