Original article can be found at https://nspirement.com/2024/01/22/visitors-australias-national-parks.html
A man was airlifted to hospital last weekend after falling ten meters from a waterfall in Queensland’s Tamborine National Park, which was closed due to storms. Last month, a major safety operation was launched to rescue nine bushwalkers in Wollemi National Park near Sydney after one walker fell from a cliff and suffered a head injury.
These are just the latest in a string of recent incidents that underscore the potential dangers of visiting Australia’s national parks. Visitor numbers to national parks are increasing. This is partly due to providing roads, boardwalks, and other infrastructure that significantly improve accessibility. People can now reach locations that, in many cases, would previously have required more competence, care, and skill to get to.
It means many people are being funneled into potentially dangerous locations for which they may be unprepared. This poses risks to human life and safety, and places a heavy burden on already stretched emergency services called to conduct rescues and retrieve bodies.
An urgent rethink of how we invite and prepare visitors to interact responsibly with these natural environments is needed.
Steel boardwalks in the Snowy Mountains, New South Wales. (Image: via Infrabuild)
Visit national parks, but be prepared
National parks need people. Visitors to national parks are vital to maintaining community, political, and financial support for their existence. Increasing visitor numbers in national parks means more people can experience the physical and mental health benefits of spending time in nature.
Australia’s national parks are generally very accessible. In some popular locations, visitors can drive to a site and explore it via a highly engineered boardwalk. At lookouts, visitors are often protected by barriers and warning signs.
Social media platforms such as Instagram and TikTok play a role in promoting national parks as accessible destinations. In Victoria, national parks authorities have suggested that unprepared visitors are taking unnecessary risks to capture social media images, forcing emergency services to undertake dangerous rescues.
Parks authorities use social media to promote access to picturesque places, but increasingly do so with safety in mind.
We’re lucky to have some great beaches and inland tracks that make exploring our national parks by vehicle pretty spectacular. To keep everyone safe, the same road rules apply on our tracks and beaches as on the rest of roads throughout Queensland.
Driver penalties will soon be increased to be in line with fines imposed by Queensland police with the changes aimed at improving driver behaviour and the safety of visitors and wildlife in our protected areas.
Ranger Mike said these fines might hurt, but they’re a lot less painful than a vehicle rollover or worse. ‘Obey all signage including the speed limit, wear your seatbelt, never drink and drive and never let anyone without a licence behind the wheel,’ he said.
Rangers carry out regular patrols of national parks, State forests and recreation areas and work in partnership with the Queensland Police Service to enforce the road rules which apply to these areas. Penalties for dangerous driving behaviours such as careless driving and failure to wear a seat belt will be increasing from Friday September 15.
We want everyone to have a safe and enjoyable experience on our beautiful parks, and it’s up to all drivers to do the right thing to make this happen. (Image: qldparks via Instagram)
Safety first? Not always
As visitor numbers to national parks increase, so do the number of safety incidents.
In Western Australia, an average of 77 incidents per year occurred between 2011 and 2017. Most were falls or water-related, such as drowning.
In Victoria in the five years to 2020, the State Emergency Service reportedly conducted 365 “high-angle rescues” — complex operations in high, steep locations.
Many incidents in national parks happen repeatedly at the same place. The latest incident at Cedar Creek Falls comes after a teenager drowned there in 2021. At the Babinda Boulders in Far North Queensland, 21 drownings have been recorded. This suggests current mechanisms for enhancing safety or communicating risk at known hazardous locations aren’t working.
It also stands to reason that the infrastructure we build to attract people to national parks, and to guide them and keep them safe, may be propelling them into risky situations.
There is research to suggest signs warning people of legal consequences or fines, rather than risks to their safety, may be more effective at ensuring safe behavior. (Image: PublicCo via Pixabay)
Rethinking access to the wild
So how best do we prevent deaths and injuries in national parks while still encouraging people to venture outdoors?
Many people do not believe national parks are inherently dangerous places to visit. But erecting warning signs to alert them to the risks is not necessarily the answer.
One study focused on beaches in Victoria showed less than half of visitors even saw the signs. The answer is not to plaster an area with signs. People are likely to ignore them.
However, research suggests signs warning people of legal consequences or fines, rather than risks to their personal safety, may be more effective at ensuring safe behavior.
Well-designed infrastructure in national parks can enhance the visitor experience, and protect the environment by directing people away from sensitive areas. But parks authorities should consider whether some infrastructure is encouraging people into dangerous situations, and whether certain areas should be closed off to the the public entirely.
Authorities could devise online training programs that teach people key outdoor skills, such as basic first aid and what to do if they get lost.
Finally, all this raises important questions about personal responsibility. Research conducted at four national parks in Western Australia showed many people viewed safety as a shared responsibility between visitors and parks management — but when things go wrong, place the blame on parks management. The same research showed park visitors can be reluctant to accept the shift of responsibility back onto themselves.
Studies are needed to determine if encouraging visitors to take more responsibility for their actions would lead to fewer safety incidents — and if so, how best to get people to adopt this attitude shift.
Recent tragedies in our national parks highlight the crucial need to reevaluate visitor management strategies. National parks are a public good, and we must ensure they stay that way.
Samuel Cornell, PhD Candidate, School of Population Health, UNSW Sydney and Amy Peden, NHMRC Research Fellow, School of Population Health & co-founder UNSW Beach Safety Research Group, UNSW Sydney
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.