Anonymous wrote:I know you OP and I am familiar with the incident. You have quite a reputation in the community. This is not the first incident of this type. The way you raise your children leaves a lot to desire too.
Stop your costant complaining and attacking people, or please move away.
Anonymous wrote:I would keep playing with my dog and let her call the police. We have an open field near us where a lot of people play with their dogs. One lady moved in across the street and hated dogs and started calling the police every time she saw a dog off leash in the lot. They would come, sometimes, and vaguely ask us to put our dogs on a leash and then go away. This went on for years and no one every got a ticket or in trouble in any way. The police do not care about stuff like this and hate when people use threats of "calling the police" to settle spats between neighbors.
The lady in our case eventually got angry and called in that a dog was attacking someone. When the police came and this wasn't the case they threatened to cite her for making a false report using 911. She stopped calling and we all still play at the lot.
Anonymous wrote:Some people have a genuine phobia of dogs. It may not seem rational to you, but it's very real to them.
Try to start looking at this with a little compassion. If you can't do that, then just obey the leash law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP, your neighbor is batshit crazy and is scaring her family. You might want to keep your distance and ignore her!
OP here, my neighbor is not batshit crazy. She was scared and she had a point. What all of us (five houses around the clearing) have been doing is technically against the leash law. All of our homes have steep slopes in the back yards, so we really don't have backyards, just California type slopes - hers does too. You have to take your kids down into the clearing to find some flat land. Because the closest neighbors have, up till now, sort of designated it as informal play and run area, we didn't really consider that someone would be afraid and go all legal on us.
Of course we'll try to work it out with her, but if she is truly afraid, then the good times will just be over. I'm upset, and I have to be careful to not allow my children, or the other "dog" friendly children blame her kids for it.
How I wish they hadn't moved in.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, the nearest dog park is 40 minutes away by car in traffic - that is not an option for us.
I do feel for people that have dog phobias, that is why we are careful to play and exercise the dogs away from the street and the other homes. My four year old is worried that the police will take the dogs away and kill them (somehow that was his take away from the incident). My daughter was trying, in her bossy way to explain to the new girl that the dogs just like to bring balls to people.
Just feeling sad for my kids, their friends and all of the dog buddies that what used to be a great neighborhood get together is now going to be a source of conflict.
Anonymous wrote:
OP, your neighbor is batshit crazy and is scaring her family. You might want to keep your distance and ignore her!
Anonymous wrote:OP here, the nearest dog park is 40 minutes away by car in traffic - that is not an option for us.
I do feel for people that have dog phobias, that is why we are careful to play and exercise the dogs away from the street and the other homes. My four year old is worried that the police will take the dogs away and kill them (somehow that was his take away from the incident). My daughter was trying, in her bossy way to explain to the new girl that the dogs just like to bring balls to people.
Just feeling sad for my kids, their friends and all of the dog buddies that what used to be a great neighborhood get together is now going to be a source of conflict.