</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Stuff like that will build up if it isn't kept after. I don't need my work added to because of the neighbor's dog crapping on my property on his way over to raid the other neighbor's garbage cans. Ever try to clean poop off of a gravel drive from a dog that had corn the night before.)</font>
That is what is so confusing. You're in the country now. Why pick it up? I am not in a very cold area, so I admit that I may not be aware if it really builds up over a winter in a colder climate. If that is the case then I can't comment because I have never seen it. My dog is enclosed in an underground fence that encloses around 2 of my 5 acres (the rest of the land around me is part of a couple hundred acre dairy farm). My dog, my neighbors occassionally visiting dog and all the wildlife all take care of business in my yard. It has never been a problem and doesn't build up. Yes I have clumps of greener grass here or there, but I keep it mowed and looking nice. I'm not trying to impress anyone with my lawn and if stepping in the occasional pile is punishment for living in the country, then I'd roll around in it before living in the city.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I see statements like this written on this forum all the time. They seem a bit upitty to me. Do most people born and raised in the country really think that they have some kind of right to keep their little corner of the world unchanged?)</font>
It isn't uppity. People raised rurally don't have a right to keep their area unchanged, but we have EVERY right to gripe and complain when it changes for the worse. City people that move into rural areas inevitably bring their homeowners associations and their laws designed "protect" people from annoying things. Country folk never needed those laws and defintely don't want them. If a roaming dog did by some outside chance tear something up at a neighbors. There weren't laws to stop him from roaming, the person just called the owner and they took care of it. It was neighborly.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Well I like rap/hip hop or whatever it's called these days I would like to move next door to you I have a 3000 watt stereo and I like to listen to it all night at full volume and my budy just bought a house next to me.We both agree that everyone within a 5 mile area should put up with it.)</font>
Again, rural people didn't need or want these laws. Most people truly raised in a rural setting will get downright angry over the government telling you what you can and can't do on your own property. The old farmer doesn't mind your dog being on his property. He'll pat his head and maybe give him some vittles while he is there (Eat his chickens and its a different story). But tell that same farmer that he can't build his pole barn without some uppity inspection and he'll get downright angry. The oldest rural folk will stand up for your right to do what you want on your own property. Just keep the government out of it (even if they don't like what you are doing personally). It sounds contradictory, but it is far from it.
This has all been hashed over in another thread, this time it just happens to have a "dog" theme.
That is what is so confusing. You're in the country now. Why pick it up? I am not in a very cold area, so I admit that I may not be aware if it really builds up over a winter in a colder climate. If that is the case then I can't comment because I have never seen it. My dog is enclosed in an underground fence that encloses around 2 of my 5 acres (the rest of the land around me is part of a couple hundred acre dairy farm). My dog, my neighbors occassionally visiting dog and all the wildlife all take care of business in my yard. It has never been a problem and doesn't build up. Yes I have clumps of greener grass here or there, but I keep it mowed and looking nice. I'm not trying to impress anyone with my lawn and if stepping in the occasional pile is punishment for living in the country, then I'd roll around in it before living in the city.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I see statements like this written on this forum all the time. They seem a bit upitty to me. Do most people born and raised in the country really think that they have some kind of right to keep their little corner of the world unchanged?)</font>
It isn't uppity. People raised rurally don't have a right to keep their area unchanged, but we have EVERY right to gripe and complain when it changes for the worse. City people that move into rural areas inevitably bring their homeowners associations and their laws designed "protect" people from annoying things. Country folk never needed those laws and defintely don't want them. If a roaming dog did by some outside chance tear something up at a neighbors. There weren't laws to stop him from roaming, the person just called the owner and they took care of it. It was neighborly.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Well I like rap/hip hop or whatever it's called these days I would like to move next door to you I have a 3000 watt stereo and I like to listen to it all night at full volume and my budy just bought a house next to me.We both agree that everyone within a 5 mile area should put up with it.)</font>
Again, rural people didn't need or want these laws. Most people truly raised in a rural setting will get downright angry over the government telling you what you can and can't do on your own property. The old farmer doesn't mind your dog being on his property. He'll pat his head and maybe give him some vittles while he is there (Eat his chickens and its a different story). But tell that same farmer that he can't build his pole barn without some uppity inspection and he'll get downright angry. The oldest rural folk will stand up for your right to do what you want on your own property. Just keep the government out of it (even if they don't like what you are doing personally). It sounds contradictory, but it is far from it.
This has all been hashed over in another thread, this time it just happens to have a "dog" theme.