yeah... let's make our point without calling people "morons." -M
From the other side of the fence(heh), as far as I know with OKC there's no warning system. You file a complaint, they get a ticket.
At least that's what happened to me. No contact attempt by the neighbors, no warning notice, just a ticket. There's also no time window the dog noise ordinance. The citation I got was for 11 AM. It was fairly hefty, too. Like $175 or $200.
I genuinely wasn't. We would leave them out during the day while we were at work(When the weather was nice enough, anyway). Our previous neighbors never had any issue with it, but at the time we didn't live adjacent to any other dogs. There are some yappers across the storm drain from us that seem to get our dogs going.
I've had problems with nuisance dogs at other places I've lived, so I certainly understand where my neighbor was coming from(Well, sort of. He mentioned he'd put in complaints about all the surrounding dogs, none of which bother me or bark excessively in my opinion). But I did feel that I was in an unfair spot, as it was entirely his word against mine(Per the animal control guy) and pretty slighted that he didn't try to talk to my wife or myself about it. I did talk to him after the ticket, he agreed to not show up to court but I ended up being unable to take time off work and just paid the ticket.
What city and what agency issued the ticket (police, City Action, nuisance abatement, etc.)?
Like I said before, we went through this with City Action and they never issued an actual ticket. When we went through OCPD they would. I've even seen people arrested over a barking dog complaint if the owner got too lippy.
I've seen a few small claims actions in OKC over barking dogs too.
What was the basis for asking for a monetary award? Was it "mental duress"? And how much were they seeking? I've got the big "tundra dog" to the north trained not to bark (all I have to do is show it the Sonic Egg and it shuts up and slinks off) but the yapper the other side of the yard next door to the south seems to be deaf to it. (Much as the dog's owner seems to be deaf to its occasional, incessant barking.)
Can you tell that this audio trespassing on my personal space is one of my pet peeves?
I get a DVD with all court cases filed each week for several counties and I've seen civil actions for dogs maybe half a dozen times. If I recall, the amount sought was always just a couple hundred dollars (just enough to get the owner's attention I assume).
I never pulled the cases up to see the final disposition. But if i get I chance I'll see if I can locate a DVD with one of the cases on it and look it up.
I thought you could go to small claims court for things other than monetary awards, restraining orders, that sort of thing. Maybe rulings about a barking dog?
C. T.
I didn't charge him anything.
I went out, voluntarily, after a bit of internet research on alternatives to chocolate-coated chicken bones (silent, but deadly, to barking dogs with the threat of malicious mischief lurking in the background) and bought one of those Sunbeam Sonic Eggs at PetSmart.
It worked exactly--actually, even better--than it was advertised. On the Tundra Dog.
For the mini-yapper yet to be stilled, I'm considering buying an eagle or a hawk to spirit it away.
Is it still legal to own an owl? Or to train it for nefarious porpoises?
I guess I was guilty of vigilantism.
(mea culpa)
Edited to Add: In case you missed it on the first "go 'round":
Another Reason I Don't Keep a Gun in the House
by Billy Collins, former Poet Laureate of the United States
The neighbors' dog will not stop barking.
He is barking the same high, rhythmic bark
that he barks every time they leave the house.
They must switch him on on their way out.
The neighbors' dog will not stop barking.
I close all the windows in the house
and put on a Beethoven symphony full blast
but I can still hear him muffled under the music,
barking, barking, barking,
and now I can see him sitting in the orchestra,
his head raised confidently as if Beethoven
had included a part for barking dog.
When the record finally ends he is still barking,
sitting there in the oboe section barking,
his eyes fixed on the conductor who is
entreating him with his baton
while the other musicians listen in respectful
silence to the famous barking dog solo,
that endless coda that first established
Beethoven as an innovative genius.
(apologies to the author for reparagraphization of the message, intended =)i
Yes I do. We emailed them and got a notice that the city was sending them a notice. After I typed all of this up, I went over to talk to the neighbor and I told them I had contacted the city action center about it. We are not trying to be rude or bad neighbors, we just want to sleep. The adult daughter told me the mother looked for a specific bark collar the previous day but couldn't find it at a particular Petsmart. She said she was going to call her and tell her I talked to her and what I said so they can get it taken care of. The issue we are having now is the other dog that we never heard is barking again since the other one stopped. I think I am going to end up going out and getting one of those eggs to try to keep them quiet. I am not trying to be a d!$k, I just want to be able to sleep and when I am a little awake in the middle of the night, if the dog is not barking, I am worried it will start barking and keep me awake. And that doesn't help me sleep either.
You, Warren, are approaching the situation like a mature adult. Apparently your neighbors are also trying to be reasonable. I honestly hope that the Sonic Egg works as well for you as it did for me. I still don't understand why incessantly barking dogs don't bother their owners as much as they bother other people. Is it like living next to Tinker Field (the jets landing) or next to a railroad track?
Anyway . . . I hope this problem is resolved soon.
Please let me know if my product suggestion worked for you.
Thanks for the compliment, I like to think I am being mature about this. If it was up to my wife, she would have gone over and knocked on their door in the middle of the night to wake them up since the dog was waking us up.
I have actually asked them if they hear it and they say no. The couple that lives there are heavy sleepers and their bedroom is on the front of the house. The adult daughter is a bartender so when she gets home at 2:30 or 3:00am and the dog is barking at 6:00am, she is fast asleep and doesn't hear it. My wife and I are very light sleepers and our bedroom is on the back of the house. So, if the dog is barking for more than a few minutes, it will wake us up and keep us awake. We have a fan on in the room and that drowns out a little of the noise but not enough to make a difference. I have heard about the egg thing prior to posting this here and it seems like it gets great reviews. I will let you know how it goes.
Might want to look at this.
https://www.grc.com/tqc/TheQuietCanine.htm
Warren, I also live in Crestwood and have dogs. I bought a citronella bark collar for my dog, and it works well on her. But I never leave her outside, so it hasn't gotten used in about 2 years. I would be willing to give it to a fellow Crestwood neighbor. Send me a PM if you are interested in it and giving it to your neighbor...
I know someone up in Grand Rapids who is part of a pit bull rescue group. They steal dogs from negligent owners and it includes a whole network of like minded individuals. People come in from out of town (harder to trace and they take the dog from the area). It is like a swat team. These are law abiding citizens, typically, engaging in what they see as worthy of civil disobedience.
I'm in Crestwood too - on 19th. I have a yapper behind me - if you try something that works, let me know!
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