Now permanently closed.
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This has been happening increasingly more and more over the years and eventually the TET, in Spain at least, will disappear altogether.
We really only have ourselves to blame. Perhaps not so much "you" who come over once or twice a year, but the many homegrown idiots (we have a few); weekend scramblers with "tubarro" (straight through) exhausts tearing around and causing clashes with the increasing number of walking public.
Before the 90s you could go anywhere at any time. Scramblers were not uncommon here in Spain before this time. Then came the 4x4, which, for a while, was grudgingly "tolerated" to a certain extent. Walking in the hills didn't really used to be much of a passtime anyway - at least no to the extent it is now. What really did it for motorised fun, though, was the rise of the quad. The mountains around Madrid became a playground for this scourge and the public turned against them. Not content with the tracks available to them, quadbikers would often also go inside the forests and fields, up mountainsides (Clarkson style), and so within about three years of their popularity, they were outright banned and they took every other form of motorised fun with them.
It wasn't long before other areas followed suit, although not all areas have the manpower to police it to the same extent. The authority tasked with policing this activity are called SEPRONA, a branch of the Civil Guard, and many can scramble better than most and know the area better too. They generally ride in pairs.
The "explosion" of pilgrim routes has not helped, causing many clashes of interests. Almost every forest track these days has a clamshell sign on it. For local communities walkers are better for business (and quieter) than the offroading community.
The downside to not allowing ANY form of motorised fun is that many forest routes are overgrown and have become impassable. Many have disappeared altogether. Pilgims and amblers alone cannot hold back nature.
There is an argument, I supose, for there being a "managed" symbiosis with periods in the year when it should be allowed (winter especially). This would keep tracks open by erosion. A system like they used to have for allowing you to use boats on the reservoirs (now mostly defunct, sadly), whereby you can purchase a periodic licence. However, the walkers are legion and self righteous and most people in authority do not understand the draw of offroading.