When would you board someone else's boat??
On Wed, 28 Apr 2004 18:00:48 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote:
"Dave Hall" wrote in message
.. .
On Wed, 28 Apr 2004 13:26:40 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote:
"Dave Hall" wrote in message
.. .
Hey....here's a question for little Dave: The law in most towns says
that
if
you have a pool, you must have a fence with a gate that locks. Do you
think
that's nonsense, and that it should be up to the neighbors to keep
their
kids from drowning in your pool?
It's interesting you should bring this up. Using your mindset, parents
should make sure that their kids do not roam on to your lawn. It's
THEIR responsibility to protect the safety of their immature children.
I would tend to agree that it's a parent's responsibility to tend to
the well being of their kids.
For the most part, kids don't **** on your lawn.
You do seem unusually fixated on fecal matter. IS that the only thing
that matters to you?
If you get it in the treads of your boots, where do you take the boots to
clean them off? Let's assume it's a HUGE amount of ****.
Garden hose?
However, it is a dog's sole
purpose while roaming to find places to **** and mark territory.
You don't know much about dogs Doug.
Right. They're out collecting soda cans so they can get the nickles.
Maybe they are. Some even have girlfriends.
When a dog
roams the neighborhood, it's pretty much guaranteed that it's going to
leave
**** someplace.
Really? I used to be able to take my dog for long walks with me (on a
leash), and it never dropped anything until we returned home.
If it did stop to crap on someone's property, would you clean it up?
With what? And where would I put it? I usually walked in the street so
that if a (rare) accidental dropping would occur, it would be in the
street and not in someone's yard.
For the record again Doug, I do not disagree with you that dog owners
should be more responsible with their dogs roaming habits. I just
don't agree that you have the right to kill the dog who gets away more
often than not.
But you said that YOU sometimes let your dog out without chaining it in
your
yard,
When I let the dog out without using the rope, I kept an eye on her to
make sure she didn't roam, and she usually didn't. A 13 year old dog
is not too interested in exploring new ground.
It's a safe bet that you'd let any dog you owned run out the door
unsupervised.
Why would you say that? I have no desire to allow my dog to roam
unsupervised. The only reason I had been letting her out without
restraint, was that she had been advancing in age, and no longer prone
to roam far. For the previous 13 years, she was ALWAYS restrained.
That's why MY yard was a minefield of droppings, not my neighbor's.
Quite frankly, I'm happy to be rid of the mess.
Dave
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