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Covid

Been for a walk...

109 replies

imamearcat · 18/04/2020 17:21

We've driven to some quiet woods 10 mins away.. which I believe is within the law and guidelines. But I've been berated by family for it!

We saw a couple of families in the distance and that's it.. so I'm not exactly worried about spreading covid19 but I don't know, I feel a bit guilty??

Just wondered what other people were thinking about this kind of thing?

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Floatyboat · 19/04/2020 10:46

@Itwasntme1

Yes, how frequently depends on how good the battery is

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userxx · 19/04/2020 10:47

and people need to act with common sense

And that's exactly what the op is doing.

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Hearhoovesthinkzebras · 19/04/2020 10:48

what possible problem can going for a walk cause? And why does making it between 20 mins and 1 hour make it better??

The aim of the lockdown is to create physical distance between people to stop the virus spreading. The more times you are out of the house or the longer you are out of the house the greater the chance you will come into contact with other people and the greater the chances you will either catch it or pass it on.

Logically, the further afield you drive the more chances for interactions you are creating - buying petrol, needing a toilet, breaking down, having an accident, buying food, stopping to sit down, visiting an area you are unfamiliar with and finding that it's busy with.other people.

The longer people are out the busier an area can become. So, if ten people go out for.one hour each it might be that they spread the walk over five hours, meaning at any time there are only two people there. If the same ten people walk for five hours then there are ten people there at any time. That increases the chances of contact.

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Floatyboat · 19/04/2020 10:50

@userxx

How long did op walk for?

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imamearcat · 19/04/2020 10:51

@Itwasntme1 your car should be fine.Smile on older lorries/vans the battery can go flat if not used, especially in the cold, but if you have a normal modern car at this time of year it will be fine.

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user1487194234 · 19/04/2020 10:52

There are enough rules without people making them up

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Itwasntme1 · 19/04/2020 10:55

@imamearcat thank you 😊

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HonestCentrist · 19/04/2020 10:56

It’s allowed. In fact, I do it all the time.

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Wewearpinkonwednesdays · 19/04/2020 10:59

God I hope they open the parks and beaches here. You can still walk into them but they have closed the car parks. Fucking pointless, keeping people all trapped walking along pavements. I went to the beach for a run the other day because I had had enough squeezing past people. An expance of approx 12 miles of beach and I saw 8 people and actually passed 3 of them and they were at least 20 yards or more away from me. Yet on the way home there were countless people, all trying to pass each other on the pavements, having to walk on the road. The lack of common sense is frightening.

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imamearcat · 19/04/2020 11:02

@Floatyboat we were out for about 1.45hrs. (Dawdling kids!). It was a 10/15 min drive. There was 1 other car in the car park and we saw 2 other families while out (a good distance away).

I understand why everyone shouldn't be driving to beauty spots etc. But we know the area, we know these specific woods are quiet, we picked woods because we know some farmers are keen for people to stay away.

We didn't stop of petrol or food or a toilet or anything like that.

Other than potentially having a car accident and having to top up with fuel earlier I can't see how going for a walk is going to spread the virus. I think I am using my common sense? Maybe my common sense isn't very good??

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Deux · 19/04/2020 11:19

Your common sense is excellent OP. Some people are just revelling in lockdown and trying to tell or guilt others into behaving differently. Suddenly they think they have a voice and will be listened to. Ignore them.

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NoMorePoliticsPlease · 19/04/2020 11:21

Yes you ARE now allowed to drive to your walk. The general guidelines ar tht the drive shuld be a shorter time than the walk. It is nonsense to have everyone walking in close proximity. The Police have updated the guidelines

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Hearhoovesthinkzebras · 19/04/2020 11:38

I understand why everyone shouldn't be driving to beauty spots etc. But we know the area, we know these specific woods are quiet, we picked woods because we know some farmers are keen for people to stay away.

We didn't stop of petrol or food or a toilet or anything like that.

But can't you see the reason why the place you drove to us quiet and the car park empty? Now people think it's ok to drive somewhere to go for a walk why shouldn't everyone do it? If you are allowed to drive to those woods then so is everyone else. And you might not have stopped for petrol, food or the toilet but others will do.

This is the.point. On an individual basis doing anything won't make much of a difference to the course of this virus - if I decide to go and visit relatives it won't make a big difference to numbers of infections or hospital admissions, if I decide to go and hug someone it won't make a big difference, I only I decided to stay at home and not work or travel.it won't make a difference, but if we consider any action at a population level it makes a huge difference.

So, no, it isn't a big problem if you go for a long walk, drive for exercise, go shopping every day. But it is a big problem when large numbers of people do it.

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AJPTaylor · 19/04/2020 11:45

I live in a tiny town in East Sussex. I go out with Dd everyday for 2.5 hours late afternoon, early evening. We are surrounded by miles of woods and footpaths and finish up at the enormous empty park where she spends 45 mins practicing her gym moves and dance moves and I sit on a bench enjoying the view/sun. She puts music on her Phone to practice to in the empty park as well. I take a bottle of water as well. Tbf the only limiting factor is my middle aged bladder.

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Mummyoflittledragon · 19/04/2020 11:56

Hearhooves
But they’re not. And we don’t make legislation or the rules. I think I wouldn’t sweat this one tbh.

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pennylane83 · 19/04/2020 12:00

Posters constantly wittering on about all these people out and about who they never normally see and berating them for using their permitted 1 hours exercise a day to go on a bike ride/walk etc with their family when its not something they would have usually done - of course you bloody wouldn't have seen them prior to lockdown - the majority of these people would have been at work, out shopping, at a play centres etc but you know what, everyone is now stuck at home 24/7 with nowhere open and no work to go to. These people now have to fill their time in some way just like you do or do you honestly expect these people just to sit staring at the same four walls 24/7 until a time that normal life resumes because had lockdown not have happened they wouldn't have had the time to be out in the fresh air/exercising. Serioulsy, give your heads a wobble. Whats so special about you that you can take you daily permitted exercise but the rest of society can't.

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imamearcat · 19/04/2020 12:04

It's quiet and empty because it's always quiet and empty? There are plenty of places in the countryside that aren't the usual touristy hotspots. I wouldn't go to that kind of place at the moment, similarly if I got somewhere and it was busy, I would find somewhere else or go home.

More generally speaking, surely walking from home / on the streets means more people in close proximity to each other??

We live in Derbyshire and when lockdown first happened Derbyshire Police had taken drone footage of people walking in the Peak District, they was them and no one else for miles around! I think some people have kinda missed the point of social distancing!

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NuclearWinter · 19/04/2020 12:13

"The majority of viral infections come from prolonged exposures in confined spaces with other infected individuals. Person-to-person and surface contact is by far the most common cause. 78-85% from long term living together, or day to multi-day exposure."

So say the WHO. So, presumably, if we focus on that then that's where we'll get the best reduction results. Not whether to not the OP passes 5 or 10 people outdoors and at a distance of 2m or more.

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puffinandkoala · 19/04/2020 12:15

We do need more spaces open. If they want to keep car parks closed to discourage driving, fine, but don't close the parks and open spaces altogether.

The National Trust went from one extreme to the other. One day it was opening up car parks to non members, the next it was closing everything and telling people in a nannying way to stay at home. We don't have any NT sites close enough to reasonably drive to anyway, but if you only live a 10 min drive away it must be maddening.

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puffinandkoala · 19/04/2020 12:18

Whats so special about you that you can take you daily permitted exercise but the rest of society can't

To be fair it works the other way round though. People going for a walk who went for a walk once a a year moaning about the "joggers" who run 3 times a week, every week and acting as if they shouldn't be out. It doesn't matter how fast your legs move (although I would argue you should be moving fast enough to get your heart rate up a bit, a languid stroll is not exercise), everyone has the same rights to use the paths.

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userxx · 19/04/2020 19:50

@Floatyboat I've no idea but I bet you're dying to tell us the rules and regs on time keeping?

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Floatyboat · 19/04/2020 21:02

@userxx

As stated earlier as long as op walked for between 20 and 60 minutes in a place quieter than her immediate surroundings I don't think any reasonable person would grumble

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Mascarponeandwine · 19/04/2020 22:53

@Wewearpinkonwednesdays I agree it’s madness. I looked out the front of my house today and just couldn’t face “exercising” by walking from the house alongside all the people walking past in family groups - toddlers on trikes, dog walkers, couples etc, it just looked busy.

So i got in the car with the kids, drove less than 10 minutes, and walked round the deserted Cemetary* - zero people there, didn’t touch anything or sit on anything. It was so so much better, and I feel so much better and less stressed than if I had to keep dodging groups of people by crossing the road or veering onto the verge.

  • Cemetary is new so is basically a huge empty field with a few graves in one corner and a nice view / sunset. So nothing to touch anyway.
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Goatymcgoaty · 19/04/2020 22:58

@Itwasntme1 I would use the car to pop out for essentials like milk or a supermarket shop, and perhaps use a supermarket that’s not your nearest. Or to collect a prescription or something.

Driving for the sole reason of charging the battery and keeping the vehicle roadworthy is apparently not essential, according to Which!. But driving for an essential reason with the added bonus that the car is being given a run, seems to be acceptable.

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Goatymcgoaty · 19/04/2020 23:03

@AJPTaylor sit on a bench??Shock. Good grief, in mumsnet world that’s tantamount to killing off half of your town population in cold blood Hmm

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