Err....,no it's not fair game. Your dog has no business being anywhere on my lawn.Anonymous wrote:First 2 feet of your lawn is fair game. Poop, pee
If the owner has to stand on your lawn or driveway, they came in too far and broke the unwritten rule.
Anonymous wrote:First 2 feet of your lawn is fair game. Poop, pee
If the owner has to stand on your lawn or driveway, they came in too far and broke the unwritten rule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you people not understand about not going on other peoples property?
lighten up - who cares if a dog pees a little on your lawn. How is this any different than deer, fox, squirrels, etc running around your property.
Get a life and stop being a curmudgeon. You keep being salty and maybe I'll pee on your lawn!
Except that's not how dogs work and they will keep marking the same spot and make visible patches on the lawn. It's incredibly rude. Post your address and I'll bring my dog to go on your yard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you people not understand about not going on other peoples property?
lighten up - who cares if a dog pees a little on your lawn. How is this any different than deer, fox, squirrels, etc running around your property.
Get a life and stop being a curmudgeon. You keep being salty and maybe I'll pee on your lawn!
Except that's not how dogs work and they will keep marking the same spot and make visible patches on the lawn. It's incredibly rude. Post your address and I'll bring my dog to go on your yard.
Anonymous wrote:1. Most dogs will pee and or poop on walks. The activity stimulates their system. So, people need to expect that the dogs will need to eliminate somewhere.
2. In our neighborhood, we (and most people, it seems) try to keep the dog in the hell strip (the section between the sidewalk and road). If one of those is present, the dog really needs to be guided away from the house side of the yard. If you planted liriope or something else to keep people/animals out of the hell strip, you are more likely to end up with pee on your yard. When the dog has to go, it has to go.
3. The trouble we have is with the number of streets without a sidewalk. Many dogs won't eliminate in the street and want something earthy so they can do their business. When I see the telltale signs, I try to hold her off until we are back in a public grassy space or sidewalk area. However, that's not always possible and could be cruel. Do you really want a stream of dog pee on the street?
Anonymous wrote:The arrogance of dog and cat owners never ceases to amaze me. They all think it's their RIGHT to have that animal, no matter what it costs the neighborhood in terms of their peace and quiet, lack of privacy, effect on their lawn and gardens, spreading of bacteria and disease, etc. It's really disgusting.
The answer, OP, is that the legal rules usually say the dog/cat is technically allowed to pee anywhere it wants where it is legally allowed to go, and it's also allowed to poop as long as the owner "cleans it up" (whatever they interpret that to mean). Of course, an animal is not allowed to go onto private property - and your front lawn is your private property, although the strip between the sidewalk and the road may not be considered private property for this purpose. Usually it is your property but technically an easement for walking and utility maintenance access so a bit of a gray area.
The moral rules for anyone with any level of decency say that everyone needs to keep all of their animals off others' property plus any property that others are responsible to maintain, period. For example, the HOA at our last property certainly considered the strip out the front to be our property, in the sense that if it looked bad, wasn't kept up to the same standard as the other parts of the community then we'd get a citation.
But most dog owners and cat owners don't care much about the law and they couldn't care less about what's morally decent. They only care about themselves, but hide behind the argument of what the right/best way to treat the animal is. They think that any cat they choose to own means the cat can roam where it wants, despite the fact that neighbors might not want it on their property, and that dogs can go on people's yards that are not physically fenced off. It seems to never occur to them that if they actually cared about what's best for the animals, they simply wouldn't get a pet if they don't have a decent sized yard themselves where they can keep it safe and happy and not trample on their neighbors' rights.
It's the age of entitlement, after all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not buying that hoards of wild animals pee and poop (no sign of it) and that makes it ok for your dog to leave a pile or a puddle of urine on my yard. But it’s your special dog friend. I get that. Stay off my yard. You know it’s rude.
The more I think about it, the more I'm starting to wonder about that. You know how some people just have absolutely no class, no self awareness, and can't understand something despite how obvious it may be to others? I think it's like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you people not understand about not going on other peoples property?
lighten up - who cares if a dog pees a little on your lawn. How is this any different than deer, fox, squirrels, etc running around your property.
Get a life and stop being a curmudgeon. You keep being salty and maybe I'll pee on your lawn!