I'd probably just check to see if Drakford has given any guidance on what constitutes an "indoor activity" under these guidelines since I doubt it'll have any impact on me...
Oh, look what I found: "In relation to organised activity, up to 15 people can take part in an indoors activity and up to 30 in outdoors activity, providing all social distancing, hand hygiene and other Covid safety measures are followed.
Mr Drakeford said an organised activity is defined by whether or not it has a body responsible for ensuring all regulations are being followed.
Asked to clarify whether organised activities include sports and local community gatherings, he said: "The essential way we define an organised activity is if there is a body responsible for taking charge of what the regulations require, which is that all reasonable measures have been to limit the risk of coronavirus in that setting.
"In sports, that's often a governing body. In a community centre, that can be the local management committee.
"But it is organised because there is an individual or an organisation who can be held to account for complying with the law, and that's why we will allow – during this winter in community centres – groups of up to 15 people to meet for organised indoor activities.
"I've thought very hard about that. I've agreed to it because during the four months from now until the end of February, we know it will be harder for people to meet outdoors and we need to provide more indoor opportunities.
"But they've got to be organised activities, they've got to be held under the control of an individual or an organisation who takes all the steps that the law requires in Wales to make sure that that activity is run, or that setting is organised, in a way that minimises the risk.
"Activities that take place outside the rules will very likely be in breach of the rules in Wales."
https://www.walesonline.co.uk/sport/...nised-19206512