It was a summer evening and the dogs and I were out for last call. A man and woman at the end of the block were standing next to the waist-high wall that bordered my neighbor’s steep property.
It’s unusual but not alarming to see strangers lingering in our busy beach neighborhood at night. However, I’ve learned street smarts from my terminally friendly but discerning Cavaliers, so I stopped, even though we were fully two lots away from them.
Then I saw that the woman was holding a dog leash above the neighbor’s wall: what the heck? No dog could top that wall: the couple must have lifted their dog over it. Wow. They were literally going out of the way to let their dog loose on private property. When they spotted us, they moved in to restrain their dog.
I stopped, pulling my dogs close.
“Just to let you know,” the woman said. “We have our dog up here.”
Really?
“My dog’s eating grass,” she explained.
What?
So, okay, two things.
First, if you have to warn me that your dog is with you, you mean that you both are a threat to me and my dogs, so stay the hell home. It’s people like you with unsafe dogs who’ve made it necessary for people like me to carry dog deterrent spray. It’s legal, I know how to use it, and I will. So your dog may not be safe, but guess what? Since my youngest dog got mauled, I’m not safe, either. If your dog rushes mine it will get a face full and you’ll get a hefty fine from animal control and a notch on their watch list.
Second, do you understand the terms ‘private property’ and ‘trespassing’?
We’re still civilized in Seattle, which means that you can’t walk your dog on the property holder’s side of the sidewalk. You can’t walk yourself there, either. Or pee, or poop, or trample the landscape, or eat the grass.
It’s called trespassing. It’s illegal. It’s destruction of private property. It’s plain and simple rude.
Not willing to obey the law? Then read up on manners. Did you not have a mother?
I stood there that night, my dogs quietly by my side, and I said to the woman, “You’re on private property.”
“Our dog’s eating grass,” she said, like that was a reasonable explanation.
Unlike many dog walkers, who pay no attention to where their dogs are walking, she was actually lifting hers up so it could forage on my neighbor’s property. She was aiding and abetting.
Un. Be. Lieve. Able.
“It’s called trespassing,” I said, turning my dogs around and heading home.
“He’s just eating grass,” she yelled.
“It’s trespassing,” I said, emphasizing each syllable so the sarcasm and disapproval were clear.
“You give dog owners a bad name,” I said as I left.
Do you? If you let your dog set a foot or a drop of pee on private property, you’re rude. You’re also a criminal. And so is your dog.
The rest of us who are responsible dog owners deserve better. So do our dogs.
The saddest thing? Your dog deserves better. Clearly somebody better than you.
(c) 2011 Robyn M Fritz
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