When would you board someone else's boat??
On Thu, 29 Apr 2004 14:46:44 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote:
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?
Ha. Talk about stepping in it.....you just did. I now live in an apartment.
The neighborhood's full of stray dogs. The hose outlet is covered by a
locked box so the entire complex doesn't have a car washing party. Where
would you suggest I clean my shoes? Kitchen sink?
Works for me.
crime has been compounded. Unfortunately, this isn't MY private property, or
I'd settle the issue.
Since it isn't your property, you have no right to complain.
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.
With a tool and a bag, you idiot. The street is shared property. Nobody
wants it on the sidewalks
Which is why it's in the street and not on the sidewalks.
Kids play on the sidewalks. Kids (all kids,
everywhere, throughout recorded history) put their hands near or in their
mouths. Regardless of what the law says, it's your responsibility to clean
it up within seconds of it happening. Period.
Who's responsibility is it to clean up the droppings from the Canadian
Geese, Deer, Squirrels, Chipmunks, Foxes, Wild Turkey, Rabbits,
Occasional bears, Raccoons, Possums, Various species of birds, etc? Do
kids only pick up dog poop? When you come up with a good answer for
that, then maybe I'll entertain your fantasy.
Dave
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