JumbleDuck
Well-Known Member
A mountain rescue team ... in Norfolk?Disclaimer: I once considered joining the Waveney Valley Mountain Rescue Team, but decided that they were taking it all far too seriously for my liking.
A mountain rescue team ... in Norfolk?Disclaimer: I once considered joining the Waveney Valley Mountain Rescue Team, but decided that they were taking it all far too seriously for my liking.
And long may the RLNI continue with that policy - god bless em.
I can see how it might be considered that their behaviour would put their rescuer in danger too.
However, such a prosecution will also deter people from calling for help when they need it.
No, but some people go out (or up) without giving the slightest thought to avoiding the need for it. In this case it seems that they were poorly equipped and simply got stuck - they were safe and well when the MRT found them.No one ventures out with the intention of needing rescue.
One stalwart member of this forum reported his significant other has a cycling accident requiring the emergency services and (I think) a visit to hospital.
I don't think anybody here has owned up to having a car crash or a significant other mishap.
I know no more than the press reports, which are so similar that I expect they all come from the same stringer or press release, but it seems that the pair are been done for heading up a Munro unprepared and ill-equipped. "Culpable and reckless conduct" seems to be a very wide-ranging charge. It appears to be used regularly to deal with people who throw things off Edinburgh bridges onto the streets below (Culpable and Reckless Conduct) and has also been used against an HIV-positive man who had unprotected sex (ibid). It has also been used against a man who punched through the glass door of a pizza shop in Lossiemouth (Summary decree granted in personal injury action against man convicted of ‘culpable and reckless’ conduct) and it can be used against cyclists who cause injury (https://assets.publishing.service.g...lementary-cycling-walking-report-scotland.pdf). It seems that there is no need to cause harm, just incur a reckless risk of it.Yes it does seem odd (in an otherwise relatively well managed process in Scotland) the bizarre restrictions on being very widely spaced in the outdoors - by far the safest from a Covid-19 perspective - whilst driving to and crowding into garden centres etc is allowed.
To be fair, they are sent to Holland for training.A mountain rescue team ... in Norfolk?
A mountain rescue team ... in Norfolk?
While I'm sure that's true in general, wasn't there a case where a "Captain Calamity" was in the habit of setting off in the full knowledge that he would probably need assistance? Someone who regarded the RNLI as a sort of breakdown service?No one ventures out with the intention of needing rescue. Everyone makes mistakes, with hindsight. So I don't believe anyone should be prosecuted for requiring recue. Also, a rescue that makes the news, is often a lesson for many others, and it's practical exercise for the rescue services.
Norfolk is quite hilly in places, like round Sandringham! If you want flat, try Cambridgeshire or Lincolnshire. And there is a Fenland Mountain Rescue Team...A mountain rescue team ... in Norfolk?
While I'm sure that's true in general, wasn't there a case where a "Captain Calamity" was in the habit of setting off in the full knowledge that he would probably need assistance? Someone who regarded the RNLI as a sort of breakdown service?
I can see how it might be considered that their behaviour would put their rescuer in danger too.
However, such a prosecution will also deter people from calling for help when they need it.
Police said the two people had "not been suitably equipped" for the climb. Beinn A' Chroin rises to 942m (3,090ft) and is one of Scotland's Munros, a mountain more than 914.4m (3,000ft) high.
I've heard anecdotes about RNLI crews giving some quite serious private rollickings, although they be apocryphal.It seems to me - from press reports - that Mountain Rescue Teams are often willing to criticise on the record those they rescue, whil ethe RNLI never seem to do that. Perhaps witnesses from the MRT will add beef to the prosecution case.
There was a feature article in this magazine last year about rescue at sea.A couple who attempted to climb Beinn A' Chroin near Crianlarich have been charged with culpable and reckless conduct after they needed rescued by the local MRT. This is a Scots Common Law offence. I wonder if we might see it used against someone whose idiocy results in a lifeboat call out?
Two charged after 60-mile trip to climb mountain
I've heard anecdotes about RNLI crews giving some quite serious private rollickings, although they be apocryphal.
We don't criticise, that's the CG's job!
In fact very often we will praise a rescuee for having the right safety equipment, a well-maintained boat, wearing a lifejacket etc
Apart from getting a safety message across, it also helps offset the media's default position which is to imply that anyone who needs rescuing is somehow at fault.
Suffolk - That particular group was based on the South side of the river.A mountain rescue team ... in Norfolk?
I'll have you know that some of those dikes are really quite steep.To be fair, they are sent to Holland for training.