One thing of great beauty is the annual one-day Faversham Open Gardens where people allow strangers to visit and see 30 or so gardens. Participants provide the organizer with a bit of info and a booklet with a map showing the location of the gardens is produced. The organizers charge a fiver for the booklet. All the profits go to 'The Faversham Society', a registered charity (https://favershamsociety.org/).
This year the organizers have been told (by someone - presumably the council) that each householder will need public liability insurance. This means most of us won't be opening our gardens any more, and the whole thing is likely to die.
So....if I have a couple of mates round to dinner, or to sit on my patio, do I need public liability insurance, or would this be the case only if a third party charges them for a booklet, or if they are not really mates but some people I met today down the pub, or someone I have never met before and have invited here via Tinder/Grindr?
This smells like bullshit to me. Anyone know the laws on this?
This year the organizers have been told (by someone - presumably the council) that each householder will need public liability insurance. This means most of us won't be opening our gardens any more, and the whole thing is likely to die.
So....if I have a couple of mates round to dinner, or to sit on my patio, do I need public liability insurance, or would this be the case only if a third party charges them for a booklet, or if they are not really mates but some people I met today down the pub, or someone I have never met before and have invited here via Tinder/Grindr?
This smells like bullshit to me. Anyone know the laws on this?