It’s like asking are cars safe. Yes – as much as they can be but you can still have an accident and die whilst using one.
It’s a calculated riak you take, but if you do everything you can to minimise the risks then personally its safe (enough) for me.
Let me clarify I don’t take my bunny outside for walks with his lead and harness, we only do indoor walks. I Hoover, put away anything that might be on the floor or close to it (you’d be surprised with kids in the house) and I also introduced the concept of wearing a harness and lead incredibly slowly. We are at the point where I can say to him walkies, let him smell the harness and he stays still because he knows what’s coming next. However, the odd time he *doesn’t* stay fully still (or my hands are a bit sweaty and I keep fiddling with trying to get it on and he looses his patience) I will give him a dry herb treat to bribe him.
I am also still learning every single day, our personal limits with inside walkies. My point is this isn’t a relaxing, fun cute little walk I do with him – for me its highly intense! I am on super heightened alert mode (basically I need to be ready to sprint behind him at the drop of a hat – heck faster!). I have ZERO distractions, I have literally told my husband and kids to not talk to me haha when I am doing walkies. For me it’s still a massive type of learning / bonding / socialization session so it’s fully attentive and my brain is always always ticking, learning, observing and watching out for the smallest new signs.
Our walkies start of very calm, no running, and progressively work up to a very excitable (And happy – think binky – yes whilst being in the harness – every 3 steps). So currently I’m trying to work out exactly how long I can have calm walkies for until I need to stop – just before the super excitable stage.
Once he gets there I swiftly take off the lead, block off the rest of the house he only has access to during walkies, and let him do a lap or two then put him back to the playpen. Ending with that freedom to run anywhere in a harness but not a lead, I found really cemented the positivity of walkies. That and also the fact I only give access to the whole house whilst on walkies, purposefully, so he associated that excitement only with walkies time.
He had to learn how to properly walk whilst being restrained, which he did over the course of doing this (maybe I’ve been doing this for around 5 weeks now) and I also had to learn how to hold the harness. That’s NOT as simple as it sounds!