Is it just me? - using my bin for their dog poo

2

Comments

  • Yertiz
    Yertiz Forum Participant Posts: 324 ✭✭✭
    edited March 2016 #32

     

    I am not sure I would condem the lady in question as clearly the rubbish was out for collection and the course of action had no real negative effect on the person responsible for the bin. Live and let live perhaps?

    David 

     

    David, Normally, that would be my stance, however, it DID have an effect on ME, I don't expect to be insulted on my own drive because someone else has made an error by being too lazy to take their dogs rubbish home with them or even bothering to see that
    the bin had been emptied!

    She walks the dog past every day, what does she do when the bin is not out? Chuck it in someone's garden / hedge??

  • Yertiz
    Yertiz Forum Participant Posts: 324 ✭✭✭
    edited March 2016 #33

    I amended it to give people an idea what the thread was discussing as so many people start a thread with exactly the same title.  Happy

    300 siggy photo 6b161378-22ab-47bd-97dd-22af5e8f67ba_zpsbtkpqljt.jpg

    Write your comments here...Right! Thanks for letting me know.

  • tombar
    tombar Forum Participant Posts: 408
    edited March 2016 #34

    Its called the principle of the thing.  I would not want my bin used for other people's rubbish, whether its outside on the pavement or not.  Your bin is not a Council bin.  Surely she would pass a Council bin (put on footpaths) on her way home.  Just bone
    idleness.  I would rather carry my pet's scoop home rather than use somebody's else's bin.  Would she let her dog pee on other people's property just because its grass and happens to be on her way somewhere with the dog?

  • neveramsure
    neveramsure Forum Participant Posts: 712
    500 Comments
    edited March 2016 #35

    I have not used other people’s dustbin myself but I have seen other dog walkers doing it while on my country walks with the dog. The girl was wrong IMO but I wouldn’t have confronted her, just been thankful she picked it up in the first place.Smile

  • RichardPitman
    RichardPitman Forum Participant Posts: 127
    edited March 2016 #36

    How ridiculous. How can a tied up bag of dog poo be any worse than the bags of rotting food waste that are legitimately discarded into black bins ?

    As for getting all possessive over 'my bin', and stuff that is being discarded in any case ....

  • Rocky 2 buckets
    Rocky 2 buckets Forum Participant Posts: 7,101
    1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #37

    I would have no problem with the action at all. It's a bin, I don't rake around in it, the poop was bagged & binned. The fact it'd been bagged & binned would be good enough for me. My rubbish bins are not that precious to me. Picking up/bagging/binning poop
    isHappy

  • DavidKlyne
    DavidKlyne Club Member Posts: 13,860 ✭✭✭
    5,000 Likes 1000 Comments Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited March 2016 #38

     

    I am not sure I would condem the lady in question as clearly the rubbish was out for collection and the course of action had no real negative effect on the person responsible for the bin. Live and let live perhaps?

    David 

     

    David, Normally, that would be my stance, however, it DID have an effect on ME, I don't expect to be insulted on my own drive because someone else has made an error by being too lazy to take their dogs rubbish home with them or even bothering to see that
    the bin had been emptied!

    She walks the dog past every day, what does she do when the bin is not out? Chuck it in someone's garden / hedge??

    Yertis

    Sorry I didn't mean to imply that she was right to verbally abuse you. Obviously she should accept your request not to use your bin as you had taken the trouble to mention it. On the otherhand I can't see it as being a major problem if the rubbish was out
    for collection. Different matter had she walked into a garden and put it in a bin not being collected for several days.

    David

  • Yertiz
    Yertiz Forum Participant Posts: 324 ✭✭✭
    edited March 2016 #39

    How ridiculous. How can a tied up bag of dog poo be any worse than the bags of rotting food waste that are legitimately discarded into black bins ?

    As for getting all possessive over 'my bin', and stuff that is being discarded in any case ....

     

    Hardly ridiculous Richard, it's the principle and the insults that are ridiculous. Obviously, you have different standards to me.

    If everyone took your stance then we could just have a communal bin in the centre of the street!

    Hope I meet you onsite sometime as I may need use of your waste bin Winking

  • RichardPitman
    RichardPitman Forum Participant Posts: 127
    edited March 2016 #40

    I would suggest that it was your initial approach that provoked the 'insults', not that this excuses them. But a rubbish bin is for putting rubbish in, and is not as if you had put a rubbish skip out in your driveway and awoke to find it full of your neighbours
    rubbish.

    I remember that 'One Foot in the Grave' sketch very well ...

  • Metheven
    Metheven Club Member Posts: 3,987 ✭✭✭
    1,500 Likes 1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #41

    How ridiculous. How can a tied up bag of dog poo be any worse than the bags of rotting food waste that are legitimately discarded into black bins ?

    As for getting all possessive over 'my bin', and stuff that is being discarded in any case ....

    What a sensible response, +1

    As for any insults that's a different matter, uncalled for but probably an escalation.

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
    1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #42

    How ridiculous. How can a tied up bag of dog poo be any worse than the bags of rotting food waste that are legitimately discarded into black bins ?

    As for getting all possessive over 'my bin', and stuff that is being discarded in any case ....

    + a another ..... how can you get so upset over someone using your bin.

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
    1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #43

    I'd much prefer it if people took their litter and dogs bags home with them. On the other hand I would rather they put litter or dog bags in our bin than not pick up, or throw stuff down on the street and in the hedges. 

  • Yertiz
    Yertiz Forum Participant Posts: 324 ✭✭✭
    edited March 2016 #44

    How ridiculous. How can a tied up bag of dog poo be any worse than the bags of rotting food waste that are legitimately discarded into black bins ?

    As for getting all possessive over 'my bin', and stuff that is being discarded in any case ....

    + a another ..... how can you get so upset over someone using your bin.

     

    Quite easily, as it was empty and on my property!

    We'll have to agree to disagree, hey? Sticking Tongue Out

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,427 ✭✭✭
    5,000 Likes 1000 Comments Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited March 2016 #45

    How ridiculous. How can a tied up bag of dog poo be any worse than the bags of rotting food waste that are legitimately discarded into black bins ?

    As for getting all possessive over 'my bin', and stuff that is being discarded in any case ....

    + a another ..... how can you get so upset over someone using your bin.

     

    Quite easily, as it was empty and on my property!

    We'll have to agree to disagree, hey? Sticking Tongue Out

    at the end of the day, it was your bin and your rubbish and strange as it may seem under the law just because someone throws something away, does not mean they don't still own it. You have as much right to be grumpy as you want. I wonder if people would be happy if their bin was used as a toilet?Wink 

  • Metheven
    Metheven Club Member Posts: 3,987 ✭✭✭
    1,500 Likes 1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #46

    How ridiculous. How can a tied up bag of dog poo be any worse than the bags of rotting food waste that are legitimately discarded into black bins ?

    As for getting all possessive over 'my bin', and stuff that is being discarded in any case ....

    + a another ..... how can you get so upset over someone using your bin.

     

    Quite easily, as it was empty and on my property!

    We'll have to agree to disagree, hey? Sticking Tongue Out

    at the end of the day, it was your bin and your rubbish and strange as it may seem under the law just because someone throws something away, does not mean they don't still own it. You have as much right to be grumpy as you want. I wonder if people would be happy if their bin was used as a toilet?Wink 

    There's a difference between someone crouching over a waste bin and a bag being deposited Corners Laughing but at the end of the day, would it change my world, no I don't think so but the OP has a right to his opinion and be grumpy Smile.

  • Navigateur
    Navigateur Club Member Posts: 3,880 ✭✭✭✭✭
    1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #47

    Especially so if the bin is policed by one of the local authorities that are paranoid about what goes into which bin, and that wasn't the dog shit bin. They apparently just don't collect until the householder goes through the contents and gets it right.

  • KjellNN
    KjellNN Club Member Posts: 8,670 ✭✭✭
    2,500 Likes 1000 Comments Name Dropper
    edited March 2016 #48

    Up here, if you buy a brand new house, you actually have to buy your general refuse bin from the council, same if you need to replace one.  So in that case the bin would actually belong to the householder.

    No rotting food in bins here either these days, that has to be placed in the special food waste bin.

    And dog poo bins are provided on selected lamp-posts, and are separately emptied by the council.

    So I would certainly not be happy if anyone used my bin for dog poo.

  • Tammygirl
    Tammygirl Club Member Posts: 7,957 ✭✭✭
    2,500 Likes 1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #49

    No rotting food in bins here either these days, that has to be placed in the special food waste bin.

    Differant in our region Kj, waste food goes in the garden waste bin, doesn't matter if its cooked or not, even doggie and cat poos can go in if you so wish.

  • Metheven
    Metheven Club Member Posts: 3,987 ✭✭✭
    1,500 Likes 1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #50

    Yes its different colours and practices dependent upon what council district you are in. I believe the OP mentioned a black bin and if all of Derbyshire follow the same practice, then that will be non recyclable waste.

    Ours are green for that, how odd.

  • cyberyacht
    cyberyacht Forum Participant Posts: 10,218
    1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #51

    If the bin had been emptied it could be there for a fortnight. Doggy poo bags don't seem the most durable of containers. It is not beyond the realms of possibility that it could burst and the contents being stuck to the inside of "your" bin. Would the 'lady'
    in question have been as sanguine at your old engine oil being dumped in her bin in a leaky container?

  • EmilysDad
    EmilysDad Forum Participant Posts: 8,973
    1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #52

    ....

    And dog poo ins are provided on selected lamp-posts, and are separately emptied by the council......

    Likewise ..... then it all goes to landfill with the contents of the grey bin ..... I asked! Cool

  • tombar
    tombar Forum Participant Posts: 408
    edited March 2016 #53

    The family who live in a house not far from Bugs Towers occasionally put things in our bins if theirs are full. They never actually asked if they could, just started doing it. I don't mind as, with children, they generate more rubbish than we do.

    I must admit though to feeling a bit prickly the day I saw them picking strawberries from the bushes beside the North Lawns.........

    Bugs

    Give an inch and they take a mile...

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,427 ✭✭✭
    5,000 Likes 1000 Comments Name Dropper Photogenic
    edited March 2016 #54

    The family who live in a house not far from Bugs Towers occasionally put things in our bins if theirs are full. They never actually asked if they could, just started doing it. I don't mind as, with children, they generate more rubbish than we do.

    I must admit though to feeling a bit prickly the day I saw them picking strawberries from the bushes beside the North Lawns.........

    Bugs

    Give an inch and they take a mile...

    I think Bugs should sack his gamekeeper

  • IanH
    IanH Forum Participant Posts: 4,708
    1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #55

     

     I wonder if people would be happy if their bin was used as a toilet?Wink 

    There's a difference between someone crouching over a waste bin and a bag being deposited Corners
    Laughing but at the end of the day, would it change my world, no I don't think so but the OP has a right to his opinion and be grumpy
    Smile.

    Well, that would be an interesting sight (so long as it wasn't our bin!) Laughing

  • volvoman9
    volvoman9 Forum Participant Posts: 1,053
    500 Comments
    edited March 2016 #56

    In a scenario like the one described i would have no objection at all.Better in the bin than in the hedge or somewhere else.

    peter.

  • ValDa
    ValDa Forum Participant Posts: 3,004
    1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #57

    My friend has a holiday home in Abersoch, where all rubbish has to  be in large black bin liners.  If there are no bin liners in then the bin isn't emptied.

    People taking their dogs for a walk often use her bin to pop in their 'offerings'.  The problem is that they can sit in the bin, building up, unless someone is using the house and putting in black bin liners.  The number builds up and eventually one bursts
    - and it is a most unpleasant job to remove all the packages, put them in a bin liner, and clean out the bin.  Worst of all is that there is a proper 'doggy bin' just at the end of the lane, about fifty paces away!

    She has written, in large letters, all over the bin - No dog poos please - and yet everytime we've been down there recently there must be twenty or more bags of poo!

  • DORMAN12Q
    DORMAN12Q Forum Participant Posts: 90
    edited March 2016 #58

    A friend of mine had the same problem until he pop rivited a hasp and staple to his wheelie bin and padlocked it shut.

     

  • IanH
    IanH Forum Participant Posts: 4,708
    1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #59

    Lazy devils.....

  • nelliethehooker
    nelliethehooker Club Member Posts: 13,644 ✭✭✭
    5,000 Likes 1000 Comments Name Dropper
    edited March 2016 #60

    A friend of mine had the same problem until he pop rivited a hasp and staple to his wheelie bin and padlocked it shut.

     

    Bet the bin men were happy with that!!Wink

  • ValDa
    ValDa Forum Participant Posts: 3,004
    1000 Comments
    edited March 2016 #61

    A friend of mine had the same problem until he pop rivited a hasp and staple to his wheelie bin and padlocked it shut.

     

    A good idea in theory, but not in a holiday home, where you might leave after a  weekend and not be there when the bin men arrive to empty the bin.  However, a combination padlock with the number given to the bin men team could work!