[nagdu] No Rest for Pooper Scoopers

Tami Kinney tamara.8024 at comcast.net
Sat Dec 10 03:07:28 UTC 2011


OMG! Well, as a guide dog user, I have had to ask for help finding a 
stray deposit from passersby... Although I work hard to make sure I 
don't have to embarrass myself that way. Isn't it my responsibility to 
pay attention so I can grab the handy bag out of my purse or pocket and 
clean up?

So I get real mad when I'm harrassed about other dogs' poop! And it does 
happenI've never tried getting in someone's face and screaming "psycho!" 
though... Then again, in our weirdly friendly culture here, that 
wouldn't be as much fun. I have got to go to New York where you can yell 
at crazies and be cheered! /lol/

Tami


On 12/09/2011 06:04 AM, Ginger Kutsch wrote:
> No Rest for Pooper Scoopers
>
> by Dorri Olds
>
> Petside.com
>
> http://www.petside.com/article/no-rest-pooper-scoopers
>
>
>
> Despite some perceptions from the "dogless", not every dog owner is
> irresponsible with their canine's poop.
>
>
>
> "Who's going to pick that up?" My sunny stroll down West 23rd Street was
> interrupted by shrieking. A woman in a polyester pantsuit raged over a
> curbside poop deposit left by a German Shepherd guide dog.
>
> "Lady, what do you want me to do?" the owner whimpered in defense. He tapped
> on his dark glasses. "I can't see it."
>
> "Humph" snorted Ms. Pantsuit and stomped past the Chelsea blind center. I
> felt sorry for the guy-but not enough to clean it up.
>
> I've been yelled at more times than I can recall for poop that didn't belong
> to my dog.
>
> One sunny afternoon my Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, Buddy James, and I
> were enjoying our afternoon jaunt. My iPhone rang. It was a client. No
> sooner had I picked up when a middle-aged man came charging at me, sweat
> flying off his brow.
>
> "Hey lady, clean up your dog's crap!" The man's arms flailed about as he
> gestured toward a spot on the sidewalk. "AND GET OFF YOUR PHONE."
>
> I said to my client loud enough for him to hear, "Sorry, gotta go, ran into
> a crazy." That client, a fellow New Yorker, understood my shorthand-no
> questions asked.
>
> I looked at him with distaste and in my best schoolmarm tone said, "What
> happened to, 'Excuse me, Miss?'"
>
> He yelled louder and that's when I lost it. I jutted my face into his,
> nose-tip to nose-tip and screamed, "You psycho." He seemed frightened and
> backed away. As he scurried off I heard him mumbling, "People always on
> their goddamn cell phones."
>
> My loss of composure rattled me. I yell once, maybe twice, per year. A woman
> with a child hurried by eyeing me as if I were the lunatic. Two workmen
> across the street burst out laughing and into applause. They'd obviously
> witnessed the exchange and grinned at me with approval. As they clapped the
> men shouted, "Psycho! Psycho!" An elderly woman in curlers leaned out of her
> apartment window and chuckled, "Yup, he had that coming."
>
> After Mr. Psycho had scurried away, I retraced my steps and found the
> sidewalk poop pile-evidence of my alleged crime. Upon inspection, it became
> clear Buddy was not the culprit who'd left this mess. A mother can discern
> these things.
>
> If Buddy spritzes on a tree, nature preservationists bark at me. If he lets
> loose on a curbside trash bag, sanitation workers chew me out. Other dog
> owners allow their little darlings to lift legs onto flower beds but not me.
> My code of ethics also requires Buddy to steer clear of parked cars and
> bikes. The only socially acceptable options left are fire hydrants and rare
> bare patches of unoccupied street.
>
> During a walk to Madison Park's dog run, Buddy stopped to tinkle at an empty
> bus stop on Fifth Avenue. A man with neck veins a-popping, drove right up
> next to us and yelled, "That's nasty!" Not knowing how to respond I said,
> "I'm sure when you go, it's nasty too."
>
> I'm more courteous than most. Carrying a water bottle during walks, I splash
> untidy spots left by my Bud. My environmental conscientiousness makes me buy
> biodegradable bags. In addition, I carry my empty soda bottles and cans
> outside to leave for the homeless to collect five-cent refunds. After
> lovingly placing my bottles into a trash can, I reuse the bag I carried them
> in for my next scoop. Unlike others, I never let my dog pull me willy-nilly
> zigzagging down the street. No, I religiously follow Manhattan's unspoken
> sidewalk law of sticking to the right "lane" so as not to clog pedestrian
> traffic.
>
> And yet, Buddy and I are often harassed. I can only wonder if the city's
> dogless will ever realize that not every dog owner is irresponsible with
> their best Bud's "deposits."
>
>
>
> Dorri Olds I work with my muse, Buddy James, at my feet. From A.M. till P.M.
> I write and design, or think..
>
>
>
> Filed Under: Etiquette, Training&  Behavior
>
>
>
> Tags: Dogs, cleaning, Dog Poop Pickup, poop, responsibility, responsible dog
> owners
>
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