I'm going up my allotment to see to my bees, tend to my veg plot and keep the brambles down and F--k anyone who tries to stop me form spending as long there as I need to.Mean Mr Mustard II wrote:Today, I'll fess up that I breached da rulz.
I was in the outdoors for a whopping 2.5, maybe 3 hours. In that time, a fellow allotmenteer approached (wanting to help) as I was moving the pallets onto my wheelbarrow. But he backed away. Half hour job.
This afternoon, walked the three dogs including a near neighbours who has limited mobility. We've had the distancing routine well sorted on handover for the past six weeks or so. Not least because she's a care home nurse.
First dog needs to run on a training lead in an open park, way too boisterous to walk with the others. While in that park, saw one sat doing nowt (harmless), but others sat on park benches (only the open air gym has been fenced off)
Second walk - the next dog pulls like a train, but is manageable with our friend's spaniel because I use a walker belt and harness. Walked them across dry farmland rather than the beaten track used by others - was unusual to see anyone out unless they have a dog - until now... but eat a hasty retreat on the concrete 6m wide farm track part of the walk when four yoofs abreast approached. They looked like some 80s pop video posers. Advised a guy on a mountain bike (who was mutually avoiding me) to steer clear of them as there was a 5% risk one of them was infected... Really? Cheers then mate...
Then, the last walk with our third dog. Also solitary. Saw someone in the distance open and shut the metal farm gate - but.. there's an unobstructed side entrance.
It's not duration outdoors. It's distance from people. And touching stuff other people use.
To be fair, I can see why they do specify an hour. Because in a city, there would be far too many idiots in close proximity met, even in that time.
My only sadness is that I am a lucky bugger in having an allotment and lots of folks do not.