Wheels
Well-Known Member
Your work must be really tough right now MP
I think you are missing the point really that it is not necessarily o do with whether it is a public or private land rather it is about the likelihood of coming into contact with other people. This is of course much more likely in towns and cities than in rural locations. If someone was riding their horse through belfast city centre they might well be sent home but if they are hackng around local quiet roads where they are not likely to be in contact with others then that should not be an issue
I dont really think it is very grey at all
Stay away from other people
Been desperately trying to stay away from this thread but the riding/no riding debate is so interesting. I am firmly in the no riding camp but after reading lots of posts giving an alternative view I can at least understand the reasons why some people are continuing, even if I don’t personally agree.
I do wonder how people are continuing to ride and comply fully with the restrictions that have been imposed, but if they are guidelines and not law do people have to comply?
People who are out and about in towns and cities are being challenged by the police and instructed to go home. Horse riding generally takes place in the countryside so is less visible, but would riders be challenged by the police if they were seen?
It's sad and weird. While some areas have asked us to work as normal up to last week the nurses have been worried about getting enough PPE. Now there's just uncertainty and trying not to think about the consequences of not seeing patients who would normally be a high priority. But we're very much on the periphery really.Your work must be really tough right now MP
Ok so why exactly do you think we are being told to stay home? What is the reasoning behind that message?
I assume it’s because they have to tell everyone to do the same thing regardless of their individual circumstances. You can’t have one rule for some of the population and another rule for the rest. Trying to get this pandemic under control as quickly as possible is the absolute priority at the moment so the government want every single member of society to abide by the rules so that can happen.
So, do you think it’s ok for everyone to carry on riding ?I am very rural and I am riding. After a 12.5 hour shift in A&E, I allow myself this small luxury. I am careful and am only going out for 30/40 mins, and I'll admit I am often crying as I ride due to the state of some of the patients I have cared for at work, but until the government advise us not to ride, I will do so.
I am very rural and I am riding. After a 12.5 hour shift in A&E, I allow myself this small luxury. I am careful and am only going out for 30/40 mins, and I'll admit I am often crying as I ride due to the state of some of the patients I have cared for at work, but until the government advise us not to ride, I will do so.
Don’t be spiteful, that’s hardly attractive either, you are harking back to some other thread which I can’t even remember or care about.Yet again Bonny you show your unattractive side ?
Still trying to wind people up in this time of crisis - disgraceful
As above.....there are more important things to worry about surely !Oh please - don't try & rope me into an argument because I'm not going to engage with you again
Common sense must apply! You are self isolating now anyway so you have no choice. I am also self isolating but seeing my horses does not mean contact with people so I will continue to do that.
Everyone else will do what they do
Definitely, feed shop are getting you to phone order in and they put it in your car, I dont see anyone except OH most days as it is. Yard is the only other place i go. The supermarket made me a bit worried by comparison!Food shopping definitely feels like the biggest risk for transfer.
You see, I think going to the supermarket is far more risky!! My horse is not at livery, so I meet no-one there. I am not taking any unnecessary risks, and I am doing no fast work. I could also fall and injure myself when I go trail running, and cyclists could also fall off their bikes.
I think it boils down to what you consider to be a risk or not. I am quite risk averse, I'm pretty cautious in many aspects of life, I tend towards catastrophising and imagining the worst... the thing I don't consider to be a risk is riding my highly trained horse that I know inside out in a controlled environment doing some dressage training.
Each person will have different experiences and views.
Where do we stand on chocolate?
I understand your pov but to bring the cycling-for-exercise folk back into the conversation , that's not really essential either yet its explicitly permitted.I completely agree but I think the distinction between essential activities which are necessary for survival and chosen leisure activities for enjoyment is important at the moment.
Please don't stand on it -eat it ?Where do we stand on chocolate?
I understand your pov but to bring the cycling-for-exercise folk back into the conversation , that's not really essential either yet its explicitly permitted.
Strictly speaking we could all stay in bed with a supply of soylent green delivered in the mail. If you boil it down to essentials. But the government have so far provided examples of reasons why most of us can leave the house. Examples not stipulations, as the drips and drags of additional guidance show .
Totally agree with this. I would also add that it depends how much you want to argue your pov. Mine are at home and I could ride on my own field, but I don't want to have to make a case for doing it. I'm very lucky to be able to wander up to see them whenever I want to.?I guess its difficult to work out what the issue or risk truly is, specifically: the journey, the time out of doors, the act of sitting on a sensible horse or what, because all of those seem to be justified ,manageable, or negligible and different people raise different issues with their own interpretation of the existing rules ??