Safety: Share The Trail
Camp Safety | Campfires | Trail
Safety | Hunter
Safety | Shooting Safety Tips
Some of the trails you'll visit on the forest are multiple-use, meaning
that hikers, mountain bikers, horseback riders annd ATVers may all share
the same trail. A basic etiquette rule is Wheels
Yield to Heels.
Keep this in mind when approaching other trail users. Bicyclists or ATVers
yield to all other users while hikers, walkers, yield to horseback riders.
During hunting season:
- Hikers should wear at least one article of hunter orange viewable from
all directions such as a hat, jacket, or vest. Cover your backpack with
orange.
- Horseback riders should wear a hunter orange vest and helmet
cover. Use
a hunter orange vest or rump sheet on your horse.
- Dogs should wear hunter
orange or other visible color, like a vest, leash, coat, shirt or bandana.
- Avoid
wearing white or tan during deer season. A glimpse of white clothing
by a hunter in the forest could be easily mistaken for the tail of
a deer.
- Kentucky's Hunter Orange Clothing Law requires ALL HUNTERS
and persons accompanying them, hunting for any species during the modern
gun, muzzle-loading, and youth firearms deer seasons or a firearms
elk season to wear solid, unbroken hunter orange color visible from
all sides on the head, back and chest. Hunter orange garments must
be worn as the outer coverings and must be worn at all times while
in the field hunting.
Safety on the Trail
It is every trail users responsibility and right to ensure their own
safety and expect safe practice from other trail users. Exercise caution
at all times, follow guidelines and rules of the trails. Preventing accidents
or injuries is the first step, acting responsibly if something does happen
is the second. Always think clearly!
Trail Etiquette?
Trail etiquette can be described as the polite way to use trails. It
outlines guidelines for the many users that ride, walk, hike, bike, or
ski trails.
If you have never considered trail etiquette to be one of the more important
aspects of trail use, you may want to reconsider. Trail etiquette should
be a major part of any trail users experience.
Trail use is a privilege that cannot be abused or disrespected, so making
trail etiquette a priority allows everyone to enjoy the outdoors and
have a good time while being safe and courteous. Also remember everyone
is out there for the same reasons, to enjoy nature and to enjoy what
they are doing.
When travelling multi-use trails, you may encounter many different forms
of trail use, such as hikers, bikers, ATVers, horseback riders, etc.
Therefore the user must adjust to different regulations (who passes
first, who slows down, who gets the right of way).
If trail users conduct themselves in an appropriate manner, respect
the environment and the other users, the trail experience will only get
better. Keep safety and etiquette in mind when you are participating
in trail use, this way trails will stay in good condition
and the privilege will remain accessible for everyone.
Basic Trail Etiquette
- Be aware of other trail users.
- Stay to the right of the trail (except when passing).
- Slow down at corners.
- Always clean up after yourselves.
- Obey all the trail rules.
- Give a clear warning signal when passing: call out passing on your
left.
- Always look ahead and behind when passing.
- Travel at reasonable speed.
- Keep pets on a leash.
- Move off the trail when letting others pass.
- Yield to other trail-users
when entering and crossing trail.
- Do not disturb wildlife.
- Stay on the trail (respect the environment, do not venture off the
trails).
- Do not litter.
- Do not drink or contaminate water sources (wash 100 feet away from
any nearby water source).
- Use provided toilet facilities (if you are unable to find a facility,
dig a hole 6 inches deep at least 200 feet from any open water).
- Do not make fires (use picnic areas and grills if provided).
- Respect wildlife. Your surroundings are home to many plants and animals:
you are the visitor.
- Obey all posted signs. These indicate special restrictions that apply
to the trail you are on.
Hiking with Animals
- Clean up after your animals.
- Keep them on a leash or lead.
- Give larger animals right of way.
- Do not let your animal disturb wildlife or others.
- Keep them on the trails.
Basic Trail Etiquette
Hikers, Walkers, Backpackers
- Move off the trail whenever possible for
other trail users.
- When meeting someone riding a horse, step off the trail and speak
calmly.
Mountain Bikers, Bikers
- Know your ability, equipment and the area.
- Move off the trail for less mobile users.
- Do not ride under conditions where you leave evidence of passing,
i.e. after rain or snow.
- Stay on the trail.
- Do not ride through streams.
- Make presence known at corners or blind spots.
- Control your bicycle.
- Always yield trail.
Equestrians
- Practice minimum impact techniques.
- Observe speed limits.
- Always clean up after your horse.
- Avoid campsites used by other trail users.
- Keep horses in campsite only long enough to unpack or pack them.
- Stock
tied to trees ruins trees and turf: do so only for a short time.
Use tie lines.
- Never tie horses within 200 feet of lakes, streams or springs.
ATVs, Four
Wheelers
- Approach pedestrians slowly, pull over and turn off your engine.
- When passing someone, follow at a safe distance until you reach a
safe place to pass: pass slowly.
- Minimize noise with proper care and operation of your vehicle.
- Respect trail closures.
- Stay on the trail.
- Do not ride on areas that are either wet, have loose soil, steep
slopes, meadows or swamps.
- When camping, ride directly to and from your campsite or turn off
your vehicle and push it.
Title: Sharing the Trail
Last Updated:
August 14, 2008
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