This is what I plan to send to the council - any comments gratefully received...
Dear Mr XXXX
I received a letter today regarding the caravan on my land in XXX Wood, XXXXX, advising me that I need to remove it within 28 days, as I do not have planning permission to store it there.
I am under the impression that provided the caravan is not for residential use it does not fall within planning controls.
From http://www.woodlands.co.uk/buying-a-wood/planning-and-woodlands.php "Provided the caravan is not for residential use, it falls completely outside planning controls, and you do not need to ask the planning authority in advance. According to the Caravan Sites Act 1968, the legal definition of a caravan includes mobile homes and self-built structures. Under this definition, there is no necessity for the caravan to have wheels, as long as it is under the size limit (60 feet long, 20 feet wide and 10 feet high), can be delivered in no more than two sections by lorry, and is capable of being moved in one piece along a road when assembled."
I should point out that I have no intention of living in the caravan, but would use it to stay in when I visit my wood in order to manage it. This would be for much less than the permitted 28 nights per year. I live some 150 miles away and so more frequent visits are not practicable.
I have a long familiar relationship with this land and am in the process of writing up the diaries of Mr XXXX a man who lived in this piece of wood for more than 50 years. His hut is still standing. I have enclosed a press cutting about his life.
I have a good relationship with two long-standing neighbours Mr XXXX (XXXX Cottage) and Mrs XXXX (XXXX XXXX Farm) and have their full support in having the caravan there.
The letter also requires me to remove rubbish from the site. There is no rubbish on site. I can only imagine that the person who has reported the caravan to you is referring to the carpets I have laid out in order to kill off the nettles and brambles that are choking the trees. In the spring these covers will be removed to allow plants more advantageous to the ecology of the wood.
I truly appreciate the importance of protecting the woodland and look forward to coming to a solution with you that is in the best interests of the wood and it’s animal inhabitants.