They know. The worst offenders make sure their dog never goes in their yard. My next door neighbor got a dog and suddenly my front and side yards looked like hell. They used my yard multiple times a day and denied even when I pulled in to my driveway and saw them. I politely asked them to stop and they handled it as you’d expect rude, entitled, selfish, self centered jerks would. |
Wrong. I’d love to show you the spots where the dogs stop on my street. I can not believe the bull shite dog owners come up with to justify their poor behavior. |
Right, but that usually doesn't happen on a walk. Every dog I've had does an initial "big pee" in our yard to start, and then does minor marking during the walk. In my opinion, both sides of the sidewalk are fair game, but only a couple of feet in. As a homeowner, I am purposeful about what I plant right next to the sidewalk. |
+1 |
In the suburban neighborhood where I live these animals dont come thru our yards at all. If they do it’s small potatoes compared to the number of dogs. Everyone got a dog during Covid and there are definitely more people complaining about them. Our HOA is dealing with more complaints. Also if you are a dog owner what makes you think it is reasonable to let your dog go up in someone’s yard? |
Typical rude dog owner. You get to make the rules and the rest of us just have to live with what queen dog owner dictates. Tell me you’re not rude, self centered, and entitled… |
| Too many people have too many dogs. I don’t get that about suburban neighborhoods. |
Dog pee does leave spots. Don’t be disingenuous and think people fall for your nonsense. |
| You don't actually own the grass verge between the sidewalk and the street -- the local jurisdiction does. I don't let my dog go on the actual lawn of other people's property. |
pp here - NOT a dog owner. I don’t have any pets. I didn’t say that dog’s should “go up in someone’s yard”. I just think that in light of nature living naturally in the outdoors (even if part of that outdoors is someone’s property), the dogs wouldn’t seem to make a significant difference. I hadn’t realized your HOA was nature-proof. I fully agree it’s your yard and you can do what you want, whether or not it makes sense to me. Put up a sign, or a dozen signs, or a fence. Maybe your HOA can pass some regulations for dog owners if there are enough complaints. Personally, I think cats are a lot more intrusive. I’ve never found a stray dog in my fenced backyard. Cats (which I’m allergic to), on the other hand, are apparently not deterred by a fence, and their owners don’t even try to keep them on a leash and out of people’s yards, much less try to control/clean up after any waste they leave behind. |
Many HOAs have rules about putting signs up in yards too, lol. |
+1 I walk him only on the verge side (switching sides for a brief moment if someone passes) so he only pees on the curb-side grass. But he does his first big pee in the woods at the start of our walk so by the time we get to the lawns, you might see him lift his leg here and there but very little to nothing is actually coming out. If he could talk I would ask him why he bothers. I respect any and all signs, by the way. Even the ones warning of chemical treatment that are obviously fakes judging by the amount of overgrown weeds. My neighborhood is pretty friendly overall so if someone feels that strongly about not having my dog pretend to mark in the crabgrass next to their mailbox, I’ll heed it. The only one I see regularly is in French (“Non!” with a fancy poodle silhouette) and I particularly like that one since it’s much more interesting than the TruGreen ones. |
Have your eyes checked by an optometrist. My dog has been trained to go in one particular spot in the yard and the grass in that spot is dead. |
| Scarecrow motion activated sprinkler will dissuade both the dogs and dog owners. |
My idiot neighbor thinks this too. Check your plats. In my neighborhood, we own up to the street. I have granted an easement to utility companies but not to your dog. |