Police dump black dye in a blue lagoon to discourage Instagram selfies

La-GOONS! Police ruin picturesque ‘blue lagoon’ by filling it with BLACK DYE to stop Instagrammers posing for snaps amid coronavirus lockdown

  • Derbyshire Police dumped the dye in the water at Harpur Hill in Buxton to deter visitors from taking selfies
  • The blue lagoon is a popular location and draws in hundreds of thousands of tourists every years 
  • Officers received reports of large numbers of people ignoring the government coronavirus lockdown 
  • People have been urged to remain at home after the Covid-19 death toll in Britain today went past 1,000  
  • Coronavirus symptoms: what are they and should you see a doctor?

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Police have dumped black dye into a lake at a popular beauty spot to stop tourists from taking Instagram selfies.  

Derbyshire Police used the unusual tactic to dye the water at the blue lagoon in Buxton in order to deter visitors from the area. 

In a Facebook post earlier this week, the Buxton safer neighbourhood policing team said officers had been told people were congregating beside the water in Harpur Hill.

Police officers in Derbyshire have put black dye into the blue lagoon in Hupur Hill, Buxton in order to deter visitors to the area

Police received reports that visitors were flocking to the lagoon in Buxton

Police received reports that visitors were flocking to the lagoon in Buxton

Police received reports that visitors were flocking to the lagoon in Buxton to have photographs taken with the dramatic blue backdrop. Officers warned: ‘No doubt this is due to the picturesque location and the lovely weather (for once) in Buxton. However, the location is dangerous and this type of gathering is in contravention of the current instruction of the UK Government. With this in mind, we have attended the location this morning and used water dye to make the water look less appealing’

Two members of the Buxton Safer Neighbourhood Policing Team wore protective equipment while dumping the dye into the lagoon at Harpur Hill in Derbyshire

Two members of the Buxton Safer Neighbourhood Policing Team wore protective equipment while dumping the dye into the lagoon at Harpur Hill in Derbyshire

The post said: ‘No doubt this is due to the picturesque location and the lovely weather (for once) in Buxton.

‘However, the location is dangerous and this type of gathering is in contravention of the current instruction of the UK Government.

‘With this in mind, we have attended the location this morning and used water dye to make the water look less appealing.’  

The force had already come under fire from some quarters for using drone footage to shame people travelling into the Peak District to walk the hills.

And in North Wales, officers criticised a driver who took their child out for a driving lesson because they wanted to make the most of the quiet roads, saying this was not an essential journey.

On the weekend when the clocks go forward, heralding better weather and lighter nights, police kept up the strict message that the countryside was not open to visitors.

Police across Britain are enforcing the strict coronavirus lockdown as the Covid-19 death toll pushed past 1,000

Police across Britain are enforcing the strict coronavirus lockdown as the Covid-19 death toll pushed past 1,000 

Inspector Mark Gee, manning a vehicle check point in Richmondshire, North Yorkshire, said: ‘We have had motorcyclists coming into the Dales claiming they are exercising.

‘We have to remind people, exercise should be done from your home address, on foot unless you’re on a bike.

‘Every time you are on a road there’s an increased chance of a collision and if that happens, it is putting a strain on our local NHS resources which are limited in any case, even without us facing a worldwide crisis.’

He said the quieter traffic could encourage bikers to speed up on open roads, leaving them more at risk of crashing.

Mr Gee said the checkpoint near the Catterick Garrison was being supported with officers from Royal Military Police.

He felt the message was getting through to most people that the countryside was not open, and noted roads were less busy than previous days. 

The number of confirmed cases of Covid-19 in Britain has passed 17,000 while the virus has claimed 1,019 lives since the beginning of the month. Some 260 people died yesterday, which is the highest level in Britain since the crisis broke out, though 400 fewer people were infected compared with Friday's figures

The number of confirmed cases of Covid-19 in Britain has passed 17,000 while the virus has claimed 1,019 lives since the beginning of the month. Some 260 people died yesterday, which is the highest level in Britain since the crisis broke out, though 400 fewer people were infected compared with Friday’s figures