AshTay
Well-Known Member
So he rides without a hat. Big deal. He's taking a marginal incremental risk. His decision. How about if he gets a new, spooky nutter of a horse. Should he be allowed to ride it? He'd probably put a hat on, so perhaps that's OK.
Occasionally it might be I'm not wearing a hat - for example a while ago when I lent mine to a child who'd forgot theirs rather than abandon the ride. Risk is relative, and sometimes it's OK to choose the wind in your hair.
Does it get tiring being deliberately controversial??
That's a ridiculous argument anyway - everything carries some risk but we each have a responsibility to ourselves and those who depend on us (or on whom we may depend...) to minimise risks where we can and make sensible decisions about our own safety and the safety of those in our care. No one is expected to be H&S conscious all the time but arguing against taking sensible precautions where it's so flippin easy is just daft.