JohnR wrote:Yes Lophophaps that is the relevant Stay at Home Directions for Victoria.
As I read the Directions you are permitted to leave your residence to exercise provided you:
(1) comply with the restrictions on gathering (which essentially limits your interaction to 1 other person or those that you ordinarily reside with); and
(2) take reasonable steps to maintain a distance of 1.5 metres from all other persons (but not incuding a person you are walking with or those you ordinarily reside with).
There is nothing in the Directions which states you cannot travel by vehicle to your place of exercise, and nor do the Directions limit by distance or time the extent to which you can travel. It is simply the case that the reason for leaving your residence must be to exercise, and at all times you must observe (1) and (2) above.
The above interpretation also supports the intended operation / spirit of the Directions - being to prohibit acts that give rise to a genuine risk of transmission of COVID-19.
neilmny wrote:https://www.parks.vic.gov.au/get-into-nature/safety-in-nature/covid-19-update
Baeng72 wrote:................Still don't get why they let people drive to their holiday homes....
neilmny wrote:Baeng72 wrote:................Still don't get why they let people drive to their holiday homes....
It's a mystery to me Baeng72. I think it is totaly unfair to the locals where ever those holiday homes may be.
So basically we may have people who have continued to work, possibly not isolated for 14 days in the own home and therefore potentially being exposed to several people per day
neilmny wrote:Baeng72 wrote:................Still don't get why they let people drive to their holiday homes....
It's a mystery to me Baeng72. I think it is totaly unfair to the locals where ever those holiday homes may be.
So basically we may have people who have continued to work, possibly not isolated for 14 days in the own home and therefore potentially being exposed to several people per day
of unknown infection status, heading off to country areas that have very low numbers of infections. It is furkin idiocy in my opinion.
Lophophaps wrote:Xplora, valid points. Your closest towns will be used by people for 50-100 kilometres away, some remote like you. Imagine if these towns lead to a ripple of COVID-19 cases, requiring 1-2 hours return for an ambulance to get the patient, overwhelming local hospitals. The only other alternative I can see is the back of a ute, away from the cabin where germs may be acquired.
You are fortunate to have the national park so close and to know places away from tracks where you can walk and camp. Your around the block comment enchants me. Going around your "block" via roads is perhaps 250 kilometres. You could always say that you were going out for some milk.
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-04-09/ ... s/12134464
"Despite clear evidence Australians are flattening the curve, authorities are warning relaxing social distancing and travelling over the Easter weekend could lead to dire consequences.
"Australia has passed 6,000 total coronavirus cases, with states and territories recording a combined total of 105 new cases on Wednesday."
I'm safe at home. there is food for a month. Internet, books, television, household jobs to do. I work from home. The bush has been part of my life for over 50 years, and I miss it. No matter. There's a famous British World War I poster,
https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/ARTV00433/
If someone asks what I did to minimise transmission of COVID-19 I will say that I did nothing except stayed at home.
CraigVIC wrote:I'm pretty confident I could drive to the Otways spend all day walking off track, see absolutely no one, and get home without stopping. I also see hikers on facebook expressing the same confidence about their walking in the Dandenongs or doing the Cathedral ranges loop. Everyone perceives their own actions in the most positive light leading to all sorts of folly.
I could buy a lot of gear with $1600.
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