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Dog poo - again! This time I want to fight back...

(80 Posts)
Wheniwasyourage Mon 20-Jan-20 14:59:47

The other day we were leaving the house early, so that it wasn't light, and guess what I stepped in! angry Some clown has been going about letting his/her dog leave little piles, very often just outside people's gates, which makes me wonder if it is being done on purpose.

I know that spraying the piles with something bright both warns innocent pedestrians and has a shaming effect on the half-witted dog owners, but I don't know what to use. Ideally it should be something which will wash away before too long, so not paint. Can you get spray-on fluorescent hair-dye, or something like that? Any ideas welcome, and thank you in advance.

Chestnut Tue 21-Jan-20 21:51:25

Keep up the good work Grans! Shame them at every opportunity!

Newquay Wed 22-Jan-20 07:40:56

We’ve had same problem here with dog poo but it’s mostly ok now but (lovely but eccentric) neighbour now has 5 cats and 3 dogs. We have a lovely garden. There were 7 cat deposits in front garden recently. Am forever putting out netting, holly etc especially on veg patch! Yuk! It’s going to stink when we finally get some nice weather. We have young DGC who love to run in our lovely garden but we have to try to inspect it first!

timetogo2016 Wed 22-Jan-20 08:48:13

Next time it`s left see if you can find out who the owner is and post it through the letter box.
I did that around 33 years ago it never happened again.

love0c Wed 22-Jan-20 09:12:57

I am glad it is not only me who is sick and [sad?) of seeing dog dirt on the street and in parks. We tend to go for a walk in the evening. As it is dark you are forever having to watch out for what you might walk in. I am amazed at just how long the dirt stays in the same place!!! Even after large amounts of rain. I have decided to buy a water based spray pain and spray the offending piles. At least it will light up the dirt for us until it rains again. So annoying having to look at your feet all the time when out walking!

chocolatepudding Wed 22-Jan-20 09:24:16

We have a public footpath running along a river bank on our land - I could go on for hours about dog pooh and fishermen!! But we buy bright yellow Line Marking Spray paint ( from Toolstation for under a fiver a can) and DH liberally sprays offending piles.

Many years ago when I did not have such a strong backbone the old mill next door was modernised into flats. The builder's boss from London (we are in rural Suffolk) delighted in letting his collie dog run eveywhere all day. Several times I asked him to keep his dog out of my garden as it perfomed regularly. One day I lost my composure and using a spade removed the offensive pile and marched onto the building site. The door to the old toilet was wide open and I aimed the **directly at the toilet.........from that day on the dog was always called back onto the site by the boss and the workmen.

4allweknow Wed 22-Jan-20 09:52:47

So annoying when out and the plastic poo bags are left lying on paths or on branches. Out o, Sunday for a walk round a lake and the numbers of those bags was disgraceful. Don't have a dog now but I did notice there were bins scattered round the route. My problem is with cats. Poo on my front grass drives me mad and in the back garden grass and borders are both targets.

Rosina Wed 22-Jan-20 09:55:48

My neighbourhood was completely free of poo until recently, when I have noticed a lot of mess on the pavements both around my house and in the town. The worst incident was two large deposits on the sloping area at the zebra crossing, left there about half past eight in the morning, for dozens of school children and mums with prams to negotiate. What a moron to leave that. We even had mess on our driveway one day - I so wish I had seen that happen.

NotSpaghetti Wed 22-Jan-20 10:05:24

We have a garden used by local cats who crap all over it.
I have tried bottles of water, sonic gadgets, chillipepper and other proprietary anti-cat products,a row of fishing wire on the top of fences etc but sadly they love it here.
One even climbs up and into my large pots and craps in the microscopic gap between plant and earth. I think that one must have "issues"!

Oldwoman70 Wed 22-Jan-20 10:16:27

I took care of a friend's dog a little while ago and noticed that whilst most owners picked up after their dogs in the local park, several did not.

The park has a fenced off play area for children and one morning I saw a woman allowing her dog to poo right by the gate and then walked away without picking it up. I approached her and offered her a bag and pointed out that children could be stepping in it if she didn't pick it up. Her reply was that she never picked it up because it made her feel sick!

We all know it isn't a pleasant job but it has to be done (I actually picked it up and disposed of it in the nearby bin!)

dirgni Wed 22-Jan-20 10:19:02

I’ve noticed that in the winter/dark evenings there is more dog poo on our pavement. The street is very dark with few street lights so On the positive side I would suggest that owners can’t see what their dog has done! However being negative I would suggest that when nobody else can see its a good reason not to bother to pick it up!!

jennilin Wed 22-Jan-20 10:22:57

Someone put a sign up near me saying NO MORE F...... DOG SHIT .. I think they had had enough I 'm not suggesting anything as crude as that, but it's so dangerous to children and extremely unpleasant for the rest of us.

Calendargirl Wed 22-Jan-20 10:27:23

People on mobility scooters with little dogs trotting along at the side. Wonder how many of them get off and pick up the poo. Saw one letting her dog mess outside my neighbour’s hedge and scoot off speedily before I reached her (I was some distance away but could see what had happened).
If they’re not mobile enough to clean up, they shouldn’t have a dog.

Calendargirl Wed 22-Jan-20 10:31:32

jennilyn

On the main road to a seaside town near us, one house has a sign telling motorists not to p..s in their garden, but to go to the service station further up the road! Not just dogs are a problem it seems.

NanaSuzy Wed 22-Jan-20 10:37:48

I'm going to call down the wrath of the gods, but I'll say it anyway. I am sick to the teeth with dogs, and am starting to think that they should be banned. Yes, we had a lovely little terrier who lived for 16 years. No, she did not bark, she did not leave her poo all over the local area and she did not jump up at strangers when she'd been in the mud. Where I live there is a local 'Next Door' internet group for the neighbourhood, and it has been full lately of complaints about dog poo. 40 years ago we were driven out of our first house by a barking dog next door. Now we are lucky enough to live in a detached house - it is just as well because the dog next door barks all day long in the house, you can hear it when passing the front drive but thank goodness not in our house, otherwise the situation would again be intolerable. Can the planet any longer afford to feed these useless animals? Yes I know they can be very good company etc etc but they are overall a total nuisance, and I would ban them if I was in power. OK, retreating to my bunker now so you can all start shooting at me lol

magshard20 Wed 22-Jan-20 10:39:44

I know someone (no names, or identifing details!) who was so mad at a dog walker letting his dog foul outside their house on a regular basis, that they one day followed at a distance to see where the dog and owner lived. A few days later, with a carrier bag full of the dogs poo, (collected and stored!), at night unde darkness, went to the house (which was a good distance away, across main roads and down a couple of streets) and deposited the bag full of poo on the driveway, so that occupants would habe a nice surprise in the morning. Needless to say said owner and dog never walked by our house again, probably still trying to work out who from the row of houses had done this.....

Kaggi60 Wed 22-Jan-20 10:40:21

One of my neighbour put the mess in a tin and gave it back to her neighbour who would not pick it up there was a awful row after that.

Blinko Wed 22-Jan-20 10:49:30

Are the dog poo bags biodegradable? Cos of course, dog poo itself is. If people won't pick it up, why can't they chuck it in the undergrowth where it will eventually be broken down...

Madmaggie Wed 22-Jan-20 10:57:36

We live in a road frequented by dog walkers all day long as theres a park entrance at the end. Many times the dogs are on those extra long retractable leads & wander into gardens/drives to squat or, they are let off the lead because they're almost at the park. Some pick up, many don't. We're don't have walls or fences as its open plan estate. The local cats use my flower beds too angry have tried the thin green coloured cheap garden stakes broken in half and pushed into the earth to deter squatting. Intend buying a super soaker water gun but its catching the offenders. The bushes & paths of the park are festooned with bags of poo too despite warning signs from the council.

Blossom66 Wed 22-Jan-20 11:17:59

I have had dogs for years and use poo bags only if there is no other way of clearing poo out of the way. If in the countryside my dog will almost always go off into a rough area as she has been trained to do and if she doesn’t then I kick it or use a stick to clear from the walkway.. The reason for this is that I am getting increasingly concerned about the insects that rely on poo for eating and breeding. They in turn provide food for the birds which are becoming fewer and fewer. Also I don’t like to use plastic if it can be avoided although I appreciate that biodegradable poo bags are becoming more widely available. However as long as it is not where people walk or children play then I don’t have a problem with it. If I see some that someone else’s dog has left some I kick it into the bushes - sorted! Obviously in the town there is no option but to pick up and bin it.

inishowen Wed 22-Jan-20 11:20:45

My elderly aunt scooped dog poo up on a shovel and threw it in the garden of the dog owner!

Lizbethann55 Wed 22-Jan-20 11:30:27

It's not only dogs and cats that are responsible for pooh. Hedgehogs and urban foxes are as much to blame. So if you are finding pooh in the mornings they may be the cause.

lizzypopbottle Wed 22-Jan-20 11:40:52

If you can afford it, get a camera with infra red night vision. Set it up and hopefully it will spot the perpetrator and you'll know what sort of time they are walking their dog. You can then decide what to do about it. Challenge them yourself or report them to the local authority. A fine of £1000 for dog fouling might deter them!

SirChenjin Wed 22-Jan-20 11:41:32

What size are the hedgehogs that live round your way Liz?!

Nanastomant Wed 22-Jan-20 11:47:37

We have a local Councillor live near us and we saw them letting their dog mess outside our house. They didn't pick it up so on their return up the street my husband challenged them. He deighed it was them but after my dh cleaned it up he came back. He's very nice to us these days. When we had 3 dogs we never left it.

sandelf Wed 22-Jan-20 12:24:13

Report it to your council. If you use spray make sure it will wash away with rain. You may enjoy this. www.worcesternews.co.uk/news/15096863.school-run-mum-reveals-she-is-battenhalls-dog-poo-fairy/