Ent wrote:I am rather critical of Parks in this area as I cannot see any targeted risk management from the land manager. Sure they do attempt to filter people on the OLT and now given that the season extends further into winter will need to be even stricter.
Strider wrote:"Most riskiest"? Seriously?
north-north-west wrote:Strider wrote:"Most riskiest"? Seriously?
Read more. You'll need a whole packet of red pencils . . .
north-north-west wrote:Ent wrote:I am rather critical of Parks in this area as I cannot see any targeted risk management from the land manager. Sure they do attempt to filter people on the OLT and now given that the season extends further into winter will need to be even stricter.
What are they supposed to do - have razor wire around every reserve, with a guard at the few entrances, checking people's equipment & health? You want a situation where we have to present a medical certificate and proof of experience/training before we can go for a walk?
wayno wrote:some people just dont realise how much sweat can evaporate off on a hot dry day.
Ent wrote:Ok, lets assume another Government Department was tasked with safety of recreational users, say divers. You being older than me may well remember the yearly death toll from diving due to people rushing out buying diving gear and then killing or disabling themselves in ways that were totally avoidable with sensible training. What was the response? First acknowledge that there is a problem and then do something about it. The bureaucracy worked with the industry and instituted training course and legislative power to stop people refilling their tanks without proof of completing the course. From my memory the "accident" rate dropped dramatically. Sure you still have people that bend the rules or simply do stupid things but recreational divers suddenly had to understand the basics of diving, and part of that being you do not need to go very deep to be in deep trouble. I do not believe that the government response was irrational or over the top but given your background you can confirm my belief or explain why I am wrong.
I am simply asking that Parks' show some drive to examine each tragedy and near miss (something that us in private enterprise are at threat of goal terms need to do) and work out what, if anything, they can do. A while back the Police were so annoyed by avoidable "rescues" that they drove the joint meetings to work through the issues, or so was reported in the papers. Has Parks reported back? It would be great to know what are the real risks. It may will be the statistically significant "rescue" is the fat and forty with minor injuries rather than harping on about a comparably rare case of over ambition by the young.
Maybe it is just too much to hope that Parks would consider education rather than curling up in a ball and not talking to anyone apart to mutter their mantra of no money. Sadly it will likely take a dramatic tragedy to drag Parks kicking and screaming into modern risk management responsibility and provide information. Sure, the terminally stupid will not read it, or follow it, but those that do will be better place to enjoy the Parks in sensible safety. The first start is some data. not assumptions or dictatorial decrees from Parks.
I'm reminded of a conversation with my daughter a few years back. She is above average intelligence and she told me that if she had three wishes she'd wish she was the stupidest person on the planet. Meaning that the average IQ would be closer to 140 than the current 100 and thus avoiding the need to associate with stupid people. At the time I didn't bother explaining the obvious weakness in the theory - all she'd achieve is a shift in the bell curve to the right. What I instead said was a quote from Forrest Gump - "stupid is as stupid does".blacksheep wrote:long line Darwinism.
walkinTas wrote:I'm reminded of a conversation with my daughter a few years back. She is above average intelligence and she told me that if she had three wishes she'd wish she was the stupidest person on the planet. Meaning that the average IQ would be closer to 140 than the current 100 and thus avoiding the need to associate with stupid people. At the time I didn't bother explaining the obvious weakness in the theory - all she'd achieve is a shift in the bell curve to the right. What I instead said was a quote from Forrest Gump - "stupid is as stupid does".blacksheep wrote:long line Darwinism.
I not sure that it's a problem evolution can fix, but I'm happy to give natural selection a chance.
Believe me, I make no assumptions about IQ and common sense. I wasn't even really commenting on common sense at all, though, stupidity by definition is a lack of common sense.Taurë-rana wrote:There is an assumption there that IQ and common sense go hand in hand, this is often not the case...
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