Mr Brightside
Whilst thinking that you need to keep the paperwork proportionate, I am with Roundtuit on some of the risks that the "townies" may not understand and where some of the countryfolk are perhaps not as up to speed as they should be.
Children have come to grief thinking that Giant Hogweed is good for use as pea shooters, and if your woodland walks are near any substantial water course, G Hogweed is likely to be there in abundance.
Most people in the UK are largely ignorant of the risks posed by ticks - Lyme Disease in particular, but some even nastier diseases heading across the Channel in greater numbers. Whilst they vary year by year, there is a general increase in the number of ticks even in urban areas, whilst a higher proportion are likely to carry Lyme Borrelia but as with so much in the world of health and safety underreporting of Lyme Disease is a big issue, not least as many GPs are not up to speed.
...and then there are the diseases your walking parties could be spreading to trees and other plants and possibly animals. So you need to take account of the messaging in the Keep it Clean campaign and apply appropriate biosecurity measures.
Keep it clean - Forestry and Land Scotland
I hate to say it, not least as I often didn't do it when I was younger, but keep to the paths.
....and of course you have to cater for the odd idiot. There was the story some years ago of a family holiday on the Isle of Arran so the two brothers decided to climb Goat Fell. One saw a grassnake so decided that his brother should take a picture of him holding it. So, far so good, but then he saw another and picked it up as well. Both bit him and they had to get the air ambulance out to rescue him after his anaphylactic shock.
The comments, including from someone in Australia are worth reading!
Man bitten by snake picked up adder for holiday snap | The Scotsman
I doubt if I was alone in being taught as a child that you leave snakes well alone - mostly for THEIR benefit.
As happens the last recorded fatality from being bitten by a snake in the wild in the UK was in the 1970s. The adders are much more frightened of humans than vice-versa.
But the No 1 issue is an emergency plan for what to do when someone falls over and is immobilised or has a stroke etc etc.
P
Edited by user 02 March 2022 14:42:56(UTC)
| Reason: A few words of clarification