Anonymous wrote:We received an anonymous, one-page handwritten note on our door from one of our neighbors letting us know our barking dog was bothering her (I assume it's a woman based on the penmanship). We live in a suburb in NoVA, on 1/4 acre lots so a barking dog can be heard over a several-house radius.
There are certain things our dog will bark at, usually a fox and occasionally one neighbor's dogs (they bark back). She sometimes barks for several mnutes, but we didn't think that much of it. Now, when she's out, especially in the early morning or later at night, we're more of her barking and are working on her recall, which had been lousy but it's getting better.
I appreciate the neighbor letting us know the barking was bothering her and I hope we've been doing a better job. Maybe she'll leave another note complimenting us, but I won't expect one.
Did you mommy not praise you enough? You want a compliment note from your neighbor for doing the job they had to point out was your job?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people do not think continuous barking is a problem. I ran into this problem when I lived in a condo building and my upstairs neighbor would leave dogs alone in their apartment to bark for hours. Not just their dog -- they'd have friends or family visit with dogs and they'd leave the dogs in the unit while they went out to dinner or sightseeing. These dogs were particularly bad because they were being locked up in an unfamiliar apartment with another dog. It was super annoying especially when it would happen on weekdays because I worked from home and I found it very distracting.
But when I approached my neighbor about it (in truly the friendliest, most polite way I could) they told me that's just "what dogs do" and if I didn't like it, I should live in an apartment building that allowed dogs.
Jokes on them because actually barking dogs are considered a noise violation, so I just started calling 311 when they'd leave dogs in their apartment. I also made recordings of the barking to be able to prove it often went on for hours. Magically, they stopped leaving dogs to bark in their apartment.
People are just really selfish. That's it. That's the whole explanation. But check your local regs to see if barking dogs can be reported as a noise violation!
I had a very similar neighbor who also laughed when I mentioned their barking dog to them.
I was friendly with the management staff at my apartment and on one very long & loud barking day after the dog was left along for 9+ hours I asked if one staff member would come up & have a listen.
They couldn't believe how loud that dog was and acted quite appalled when I said it was being left alone all day.
Didn't have any issues after that.
Anonymous wrote:Can't control a sentient life form
Anonymous wrote:Every once in a while my dog barks at a fox if she sees one while out on a walk. I don't "let" her bark, she just does it. If it is early in the morning, I do turn her around toward home to try to stop the barking, and it mostly works, but there isn't much more I can do.
If you don't like being around dogs, or neighbors in general, you are going to need to leave suburbia.
Dogs left outside all day barking their head off are another matter. i would take that up with the neighbor.
Anonymous wrote:Some people do not think continuous barking is a problem. I ran into this problem when I lived in a condo building and my upstairs neighbor would leave dogs alone in their apartment to bark for hours. Not just their dog -- they'd have friends or family visit with dogs and they'd leave the dogs in the unit while they went out to dinner or sightseeing. These dogs were particularly bad because they were being locked up in an unfamiliar apartment with another dog. It was super annoying especially when it would happen on weekdays because I worked from home and I found it very distracting.
But when I approached my neighbor about it (in truly the friendliest, most polite way I could) they told me that's just "what dogs do" and if I didn't like it, I should live in an apartment building that allowed dogs.
Jokes on them because actually barking dogs are considered a noise violation, so I just started calling 311 when they'd leave dogs in their apartment. I also made recordings of the barking to be able to prove it often went on for hours. Magically, they stopped leaving dogs to bark in their apartment.
People are just really selfish. That's it. That's the whole explanation. But check your local regs to see if barking dogs can be reported as a noise violation!
Anonymous wrote:I had major surgery Thanksgiving week and am home from the hospital but still pretty mobility impaired. My husband is taking care of the dogs, and yes, he thinks it’s perfectly ok to leave them barking outside at 10 pm while he gets his stuff ready for the next day.
I don’t agree with him, but when I tried to get up to let the dogs in a couple days ago, I slipped and almost fell on our stairs. So I am really sorry OP, but there’s nothing I can do about it right now.
Anonymous wrote:Every once in a while my dog barks at a fox if she sees one while out on a walk. I don't "let" her bark, she just does it. If it is early in the morning, I do turn her around toward home to try to stop the barking, and it mostly works, but there isn't much more I can do.
If you don't like being around dogs, or neighbors in general, you are going to need to leave suburbia.
Dogs left outside all day barking their head off are another matter. i would take that up with the neighbor.