gekko
Well-Known Member
Thanks for the consideration guido...It's finding the live ones, before they become dead that makes for night work!....but once the smell starts searching is easy! Day or night!
Thanks for the consideration guido...It's finding the live ones, before they become dead that makes for night work!....but once the smell starts searching is easy! Day or night!
Are you for real?
Am I reading this right? You are telling her it is ok to go out in the dark, on a road, on a horse?
Bloody hell if I met a horse rider on the road, unless they had a sodding floodlight attached to their front and behind I would go ballistic - HOW DANGEROUS. Christ, see some sense girl.
It is all very well for people to exercise their lawful right to be on the road, but the fact is that by taking a horse on the road you are riding a half tonne potentialy lethal weapon. If by driving carefuly round my local contry lanes and I nearly wind up with someone's horse on my bonnet (killing the lot of us), then it is no longer just the riders choice to protect themselves. Riding in public places makes you responsible not only for the safety of yourself and your horse, but for the safety of others who are also entilted to be using those areas. If you dress yourself up like a christmas tree with the white solid light at the front and red at the back then I accept you are riding lawfully - doesn't necessarily mean that just because it is legal it is good safe sense though.
Pedestrians are smaller than horses and much more easily manouvered onto a verge! I do drive very carefully on rural roads, there are many people round here who seem very keen to meet their maker sooner rather than later. I'd rather not be the one helping them on that journey so I drive v carefully. However, as someone who lives in the middle of nowhere, and is a horse owner, cyclist and driver I would imagine that I am particularly aware of the risks of what could be around the corner. I think you can't expect the same of all road users - why would they imagine a horse to be on the road in the dark? I do absolutly agree that those using rural roads should drive more carefully and slowly (the national speed limit is not a challenge!), but many don't so it is safer for all involved to just be aware that those not expecting to come across a horse may well not be driving in such a way that makes it easy or possible to avoid those riding on the road in the dark. It is all very well to point out that horses were on the roads first, but in horse vs car, sadly the car wins.