There’s a poop fight in a nearby neighborhood. I could be more delicate (subtle) but
the fight amongst the homeowners is about the neighbors that pick up their dog’s
poop versus the neighbors with dogs who don’t pick up their dog’s poop. As an
intellectual [dog] and lover of history, this ‘war’ reminds of the Hatfield and
McCoy feud; the Bolshevik have and have not revolution; the Belushi-fraternity food
fight in Animal House. … But I
digress.
As a dog, I understand the concept of eating dog poop but I don’t
understand the purpose of picking it up.
I asked my foster mom Jet, who rescued me from a Texas kill shelter, to
explain the issue to me.
“Essentially,” she began, “some neighborhoods or gated
communities have a homeowners’ association or HOA which has a book of rules
that people must follow if they live in that area.” Jet continued, “In order to
keep the lawns more pristine, an HOA (or their city ordinance) will dictate that residents bag their
dog’s poop and discard it in a trash can. My friend’s neighborhood has a
scoop-your-dog-poop rule but some dog owners have chosen to ignore it, causing
some frustration for those that comply with it.”
In dog terms, it would be like all the dogs in a public dog park agreeing to use
the same water bowl and, therefore, also agreeing not to poop in the water.
However, a select few of the dogs ignore the rule and leave their business in
the water, ruining it for the other canines. (Yes, dogs may eat their poop but
even a dog prefers to drink poop-free water.)
What would a dog do in such a situation? Probably gang up
and bite the dogs that poop in the water. What would a human do? Jet says,
“Always give a human the benefit of the doubt… once. Which means you assume they don't know the rule and you take the time to tell them. After that, expect compliance.”
I can relate to this approach. Even dogs have playground protocol that a puppy or
non-socialized mill dog would need to be taught. So perhaps someone is new to
the neighborhood or is a renter (not a buyer) and the owner of the property
hasn’t given them a copy of the HOA rules to read. So should all dwellers
(owners and renters alike) turn in a signed document, along with their
contract, that they have read and will agree to HOA and/or city rules? It makes sense. If
you do this, you can’t plead ignorance. On the other hand, doing so sounds a
bit like over-legislation of something that really just requires better
communication.
Jet, who writes and designs an HOA newsletter once added a
reminder in an issue to remind everyone to pick up their dog’s poop. She must
have pissed someone off because she found bagged poop on her doorstep the
morning after the newsletter was distributed. (The dirty dog.) I found this
perplexing and sad. Even a dog would be more civil.
So here’s my advice for the week: humans, though more
intellectually advanced than dogs,
could clearly learn some lessons about how to behave better than dogs whenever they
disagree. If you don’t want to scoop your dog’s poop in a neighborhood (or city) that
requires it then move, otherwise, shut the bark up and pick it up.