LD1
Epic Contributor
Glad I don't live in your neighborhood.![]()
Looking at your avatar, it looks like you live in the "country". Do you enjoy things like target shooting?? Riding ATV's?? Running your noisy tractor??
My new "city slicker" neighbor doesnt. They apparently moved out into the ountry to "get away" from all of the traffic noise and daily gunshots. They were wrong. I live in the country for the freedoms to do these things. But we certainly dont do it every day though. Maybe once a week wehn the weather is nice.
Most of what you describe is lawful behavior, even if it happens to aggravate someone else. Letting dogs run on someone else's property is, in most places, not. When we moved to the country 25 years ago I expected to have to tolerate some things...after all, that's part of why I moved--to get somewhere where behavior was not as regimented as in the city. But I did not expect to have to tell my neighbors that their animals were not free to roam my property. Now if the neighbor had allowed it because a property was uninhabited previously, that is HIS problem. Shouldn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that your dogs need to stay off my place.
Your post implies (to me at least) that you are doing things intentionally to aggravate this new neighbor who you think was intolerant of country behaviors. So did you do the neighborly thing and go talk with him before starting this policy of intentional aggravation? Did your next door neighbor go and talk with him before responding this way? Or is this something you think only the "new" person in the neighborhood should have to do? I'm just asking.......
The neighbors dogs got out. Things happen. It's the country. Cows sometimes get out. Horses sometimes get out. Dogs sometimes get away. But it is stupid to call the law on the first occurance. The law isnt going to do anything at all except upset the neighbor. I see nothing to be gained.
And no I didn't talk with the neighbor. Especially after they called the sherrif on us 3 times in 3 months for us minding our own business on our OWN property. Nothing like being out back riding the ATV's and stop back at the house for a drink and have a sherrif sitting in the drive
And I certainly wouldn't call it "intentional aggrevation" either. We arent doing anything that we normally wouldn't do anyway. We just now have a reason to do it more often.:thumbsup:
[IMHO]
There is nothing more annoying than a new neighbor expecting that just because they showed up, and they seem to think their poop smells like roses, everybody else that's been there forever had better change their tune to suit them....
In LD1's situation, it sounds like the new neighbor started the aggrivation, by calling the law first.
I agree with the posters that suggest a nice talk, with some humor injected perhaps - maybe even beer, would aid in the 'new guy' becoming a 'neighbor', rather than staying the 'new guy'.
Although it's true, this sounds like the beginning of the Hatfields and the Mcoys...
[/IMHO]
BINGO:thumbsup:
EVERYTHING on this thread is NOTHING but speculation until the OP actually talks to the neighbor.
Exactally.
To the OP: Pease just talk to this guy already and give us some feedback. I am sure this has just been blown WAY out of proportion. The neighbor is probabally a nice and reasonable guy.
Lawyers are expensive to hire if you ever need one. Maybe have a neighbor FRIEND that is a lawyer isnt a bad thing.