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Does your neighbor’s pet cost you?

Posted Jul 27 2009, 09:56 AM by Karen Datko
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This guest post comes from "vh" at Funny about Money.

How much do you figure your neighbor's dog (cat, parrot, boa constrictor, tame alligator) costs you? I have to say, I expect my own pets to be destructive and figure the repair bills to be part of the cost of doing business. But one thing we tend not to budget for is the depredations of other people's critters.

While M'hijito's roommate was in Singapore visiting his relatives and hustling for a job, he left his brand-new Infiniti parked in the driveway (Roommate is the scion of a ridiculously wealthy family).

Quick backstory: Some time back, Roommate became enamored of a cat belonging to the old guy who lives in the house behind M'hijito's place. He took to feeding and watering the beast, much to M'hijito's disgust (it uses the vegetable garden as its litter box), and he has thought of it as "his" cat. In his absence, the cat has taken up residence on top of the Infiniti, where it sleeps at night, out of reach of hunting coyotes and stray pit bulls.

So the other day as M'hijito was headed out to work, he noticed a couple of brown mounds on top of the Infiniti. On closer inspection ... oops! Cat mounds!

The cat had deposited two large piles of cat poop on the brand-new silver Infiniti's roof. Unknown how long they'd been there, but in 115-degree heat, it doesn't take long for such a substance to bake to perfection. With Roommate due to surface soon, M'hijito drove the car to a commercial car wash. This removed the mound, but, well, the paint beneath it was etched and permanently stained.

So, that brand-new car is going to need a paint job. Hope Roommate's insurance will cover it. Meow!

As I write this, Inez and Carlos the Knife's demented dog is running loose in their front yard, once again threatening to eviscerate all comers. I see that their new next-door neighbors, the present and blessed occupants of the former Dave's Used Car Lot, Marina, and Weed Arboretum, managed to dodge inside the house before the dog could catch them between their car and their front door.

Carlos, who is coming onto 90, has a little senility problem. Whenever Inez, who still has all her marbles, turns her back, Carlos sneaks over to the front door and lets the dog out. Once free, it lurks around their front yard but refuses to be caught -- reasonably so, because Carlos is given to whacking it with his belt. From the front yard, it chases young children, bicyclists, and postal carriers up and down the street. Fortunately, the mail came before this afternoon's fugue.

This antic, too, has its expenses. In addition to the potential for medical bills and lawsuits, the last time the hound got out, the post office declared our entire block terra incognita. They refused to deliver the mail to anyone until the dog was locked up or hauled off to the pound (whence it came). And they challenged us all to call the county animal control officers. It took about a week to get our mail delivery restarted, by which time my AmEx bill was running late. I had to pay American Express for the privilege of paying my bill electronically, something that made me stabby, very stabby.

But maybe I have no sense of humor.

One of my students suffered permanent injuries when an idiot's dog, allowed to run free by the idiot, attacked her as she was jogging down the street in front of her house. She managed to fight it off with several hard, well-aimed kicks (she was a tall, athletic young woman), but it ripped a tendon in her leg and damaged a nerve, which never healed properly. 

And neighbor Al carries a shillelagh around with him when he walks his little dog, after one of the "pets" of the moron 125-pound lady who owns three pit bulls and a retrieveroid dug out from under her fence and attacked him and his little pooch. She paid the vet bill occasioned by sewing the small dog's throat back together. Generous of her, eh? Same cur gives Cassie the evil eye every time we encounter the woman and her Iditarod team dragging her down the road.

Sometimes I wonder what possesses people who think their animals are their kiddies, and who imagine the rest of us don't mind dodging their free-roaming dogs and having their cats defecate and urinate all over our yards (and cars).

How much has your neighbor's pet cost you? Can you beat a new automotive paint job?

Related reading at Funny about Money:

Pit bulls, dog fights, and real estate

How I spent $48,346.36 on my dogs

How much is that doggie in the window?

Comments

 

too many idiots own pets as an accesorie instead of as a family member, and do not take the time to train and raise their pets. The pets are just there, no training, no people skills. Its sad, for the people that have to put up with it, and for the animal when it gets killed by a car or put down simply because it wasnt trained and let instinct take over.

The top of a car would be a very unusual spot for a cat to choose to defecate.  They prefer to put it where they can cover it up when they are done.  The story is highly suspect.

Cats also don't like to sleep or eat where they defecate: they are very clean animals. It sounds like a prank!

I'm not buying this. I've owned cats for most of my life and they NEVER do it out in the open and leave it there. They like to bury their ***.

I will buy that a cat sleeps on a car roof. My last cat was an outdoor beast. She loved sleeping on the roof of my old Z (280, not the Chevy thing). Aside from occasional footprints on the hood and a stray black hair on the roof there weren't even clawmarks. Never once in 13 years did she leave any surprises for me.

Neighbor's cat leaves me "surprises" all the time.  Your animals are your responsibility!

That's likely not cat ***.  Cats don't defecate on hard slick surfaces, given a choice.  The only reason that a cat would go on the top of the car is if there's a coyote or similar animal around that would go for the cat if it descends from the car and the cat just can't wait any longer.

Those are most likely raccoon ***.  Raccoons like to go above ground.  A smooth, flat surface is an ideal raccoon latrine.  Garage or shed roofs, childrens' playsets, decks, fountains...they might as well have a sign up saying "Raccoon Powder Room Here".

Roomie is not going to like this news -- especially since raccoons return to the same spot over and over again.  

And since roomie is going to have to pay the deductible for what will be covered under comprehensive auto physical damage insurance, that's one pricey poop.

Why did a scientific word for excrement (5 letters, begins with f) get censored?  I deliberately did NOT use a common Saxon noun beginning with s.

Who CARES what attendant costs come with pets, when your prescious little monsters - er, KIDS, steal and vandalize and scream away, and not one doting patent cares to tell the miscreants to come inside and stop bothering the neighborhood. Idiot pet owners are just as bad as lax parents.And I too do strongly disbelieve cat poo on car. Bet it was invented to make a case for a story.Any why would their pet cost YOU? You can have dog owners pay if it is their dogs' fault.With cats, prove squirrels, raccoons, etc. aren't doing more damage. Mainly it is people who hate cats that look for some reason to crab about them.

The mounds may have been fur balls. Sometimes they look like cat p**p.

Yes, I suggested to M'hijito that the (ahem) mounds might not have come from a cat, and that some chucklehead might have thought it was hilarious to put a couple of dog mounds on top of Roommate's car. It does seem like strange behavior for a cat -- having hosted quite a few pet cats over my lifetime, I will agree they don't usually deposit their scat on top of things in open places. On the other hand, they were pretty loose, and so it's possible that the cat was sick and experienced a moment of embarrassing urgency.

Whatever: it definitely was...uhm...you know what -- not furballs. Whether they were kitty mounds or dog mounds that a passing comic picked up off the ground, the product itself was not inside the pet owner's yard. One way or another, it ended up on the young man's new car, where it ruined the paint.

Other people's pets cost us all a great deal when the Other People are too irresponsible to take care of their friends. In an urban setting such as the one where we live, cats are at risk of being run over, captured and tortured by nut cases, used as bait in training dogs for dog fighting, drinking leaked antifreeze (a particularly horrible way to die), and being caught and eaten by the many urban coyotes that live in all parts of our city. Dogs are at risk of being hit by cars, drinking antifreeze, and being engaged in full-on fights with denning coyotes. Because the county has to deal with these neglected animals, all of us who own pets get to pay a tax on our animals (in the form of licensing) to cover the costs of shelters, veterinary bills, and euthanasia. Dogs and cats need the 24/7 protection of their human companions, and everyone benefits when they get that caring, rather than being left to run free in neighborhoods.

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