Rangers have urged Hadrian's Wall visitors not to leave their dog poo bags but to take them home instead. Shameless tourists have been wedging dog poo bags in the cracks of Hadrian's Wall. Hadrian's Wall is a UNESCO World Heritage site in northern England.
It is possibly the best-known Roman structure still visible in Britain. There are only 35 UNESCO World Heritage Sites in the UK and its territories, including Hadrian's Wall, Stonehenge, and the Lake District. Hadrian's Wall was named after Roman Emperor Hadrian and its construction began in AD 122.
It took 15,000 soldiers six years to build Hadrian's Wall. Hadrian's Wall is a 73-mile structure in northern England, running from Wallsend on the River Tyne in Newcastle in the east to Bowness-on-Solway in Cumbria in the west. Hadrian's Wall once featured large ditches in front and behind, soldiers garrisoned in large forts, smaller milecastles, intervening turrets, and gates that also served as customs posts.
There are few, if any, bins along the famous central section of Hadrian's Wall, including at the Steel Rigg car park, which is the gateway to its most visited stretch. People climb on Hadrian's Wall to get selfies, lift their children onto it, or eat picnics on its broad flanks.
