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Dog poo etiquette
 

[Closed] Dog poo etiquette

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[#11813007]

Morning all,

We have a field out the back of our house that the local farmer doesn’t seem to mind us and our neighbours walking around.

If your dog pooed in the field would you pick it up or not?

It’s a big field with a sort of path around the edge. Are there some times when you’d pick it up, would you always pick it up or never pick it up?


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 10:55 am
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Yes. Always.

...and then take it home with you and put it in a bin. Not in a tree.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 10:56 am
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If its an agricultural field, always. I think there are rules about not leaving that kind of thing on land where produce for consumption is cultivated as there can be long lived pathogens in the waste


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 10:58 am
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Yes, always pick up in that situation.

Don't be like the person local to me who picks it up, bags it, then slings it over my fence. The wildlife camera will catch her in the act (I know who it is, just need proof)


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:00 am
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I'm utterly sick of dogs using my local area as a toilet. Aside from motorists, I can't think of a more entitled bunch.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:03 am
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The field that belongs to a School behind me, the practice is either to not pick it up, or pick it up and sling the bag in a pile on the way out of the field. No-one is available to clear your dog's poo. The dumping the bag seems to have stopped after someone put a sign up asking dog owners to take it back - the field is used by children to play on as the school rarely uses it (it's 10 minutes walk from the School). The council does cut the grass once in a blue moon.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:03 am
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Don’t be like the person local to me who picks it up, bags it, then slings it over my fence. The wildlife camera will catch her in the act (I know who it is, just need proof)

Almost as bad as the dog-owners who bag it then leave the bagged shit on the side of the path. Utter morons.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:04 am
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Don't buy a dog unless you're prepared to carry a big of shit home in your pocket!


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:08 am
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Good. Not just me then. It's a sheep field (very occasionally) but mostly left fallow.

To be honest if the shit was left in the middle of the field where nobody (including dogs really) should be walking then less of a problem. But it's the shits around the perimeter and more specifically so close to our fence that I can smell them, that I have an issue with.

Funnily enough we do now have one caught on camera as we had a wildlife camera pointing into the filed hoping to spot deer. Next question is how to confront said neighbour. He seems like a decent enough bloke who I had thought might be a potential new mate (we've recently moved to the area) so don't want to come across all arsey etc....


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:08 am
 DezB
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You do realise that everyone [i]says[/i] they pick up their dog's poo...


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:13 am
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when you have picked it up and bagged it...you take it home... but then what?

or you put in in a bin with a lot of other plastic bags full of poo, but what happens to it then?


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:21 am
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You do realise that everyone says they pick up their dog’s poo…

It's really not hard.
Dog's are pretty simple minded creatures and pretty easy to train to do what you want.

90% of my little dogs poos are produced within 10 yards of either of the 2 council provided dog poo bins near my house. I don't think I've ever had to carry a full poo pag more than 100 yards or so. Feed them at the same time, walk them at the same time and they'll produce at the same time.
If I'm taking the dog somewhere new or unfamiliar to her, i'll walk her round the block first, past both bins and she'll produce before we go.

If a dog is shitting in an unwanted place, it's 100% the owners failing and they should be clearing it up responsibly.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:22 am
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Yeh, always pick up. And not just in that scenario.

Tbh, we just trained our dog to go within the first few hundred meters of any walk/run starting and make sure there is a bin. They’re creatures of habit.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:22 am
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This bin is in my local park.
It's like this very regularly.
There's quite a few bins about.
Being full doesn't seem to stop more being added.

Still, being dumped in one place is preferable to not at all or hung in trees.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:25 am
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when you have picked it up and bagged it…you take it home… but then what?

or you put in in a bin with a lot of other plastic bags full of poo, but what happens to it then?

id have thought the answer to that was fairly obvious.

Youre other options is a composting hole in the ground at home, the biodegradable bags don’t last all that long in the right conditions.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:28 am
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You do realise that everyone says they pick up their dog’s poo…

I don't. If walking around in the forest the poo gets flicked out of the way into the undergrowth to naturally decompose. Much better than using a plastic bag and sending it off with the rubbish.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:31 am
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SNH lets folk walk their dogs in a field that's part of one of its properties.

The hay they harvested had to be discarded due to contamination from dog s***.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:32 am
 Rio
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I noticed on my ride yesterday that the etiquette round here is to leave it in a bag by the path embellished by a used face mask or two. I expect they’re being considerate and using the face mask to make it easier to see so no one treads on it before they “come back to collect it”.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:37 am
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Like others have said, I leave my house and walk 100m through woods to arrive at a bin. She always dumps before getting to the bin. Its a rare occurrence that I have to carry a full bag for more than 1 min.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:38 am
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As well as spoiling crops and silage crops, dog muck in field with stock can pass on parasites and diseases. Can't remember the name, but it can cause sheep to abort lambs.

Pick it up, bag it and take it home unless there is a suitable bin available.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:39 am
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If you see your dog take a dump, you pick it up right? T & C's for pet ownership is that you clean up after the things. I don't have a dog. reason being I don't want to walk around with bags of dog turd in my pocket.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:50 am
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We walk ours down a public footpath alongside a field. Very popular route locally and has a council bin at the entrance. Yet still there is an unreal amount of poo lining the sides of the path.
It must be mostly used by regular dog walkers, so what I can't understand is how the same people who left it one day can walk past the same massive turd the next day and not feel any pangs of guilt about what they have left there? Some people just don't deserve dogs.
What makes it worse is that the majority of people enter and exit through the same point so they are passing the bin on the way out again!


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:54 am
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I think the main thing is to run/cycle at a decent pace with your 'trail dog', so when it craps you don't see it and it doesn't count. In fact it probably didn't crap and where's the proof anyway?

5 pages?


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:54 am
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I’m utterly sick of dogs using my local area as a toilet. Aside from motorists, I can’t think of a more entitled bunch.

So much this. Every single patch of green space around here is primarily a dog toilet. And any hint that someone might want to use the land for some other purpose prompts letters to the paper, organised campaigns on social media and a level of entitled outrage that is truly sickening.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 11:57 am
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you put in in a bin with a lot of other plastic bags full of poo, but what happens to it then?

Heads to landfill, which is not where most people go for a walk.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:00 pm
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Youre other options is a composting hole in the ground at home, the biodegradable bags don’t last all that long in the right conditions.

yeah, recall my dad dug a few of those over the years, didnt really do the job - be that down to soil conditions or shear volume of great dane poop.

so everyone else is quite happy with tonnes of plastic bagged dog poop going into landfill?


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:04 pm
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If walking around in the forest the poo gets flicked out of the way into the undergrowth to naturally decompose. Much better than using a plastic bag and sending it off with the rubbish.

Not always

https://www.surreywildlifetrust.org/act-wildlife/wildlife-advice/dog-walking-reserves

A mate is a ranger at one of the London parks and also on the SWT advisory board, and leaving dog poo to degrade on low nutrient habitats like the SWT typical sandy loam is gradually adjusting the indigenous plant life which in turn is changing it for the indigenous animal life.

Sometimes stick and flick is OK. Bagging and disposing properly is never wrong.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:06 pm
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so everyone else is quite happy with tonnes of plastic bagged dog poop going into landfill?

Biodegradable poop in biodegradable bags?

Yep. I'm fine with that.
It's probably the most eco friendly thing in most peoples bins.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:07 pm
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Always pick up.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:07 pm
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ads678

carry a big of shit home in your pocket

haha! That only goes wrong once 😄
Prefer to swing the bag merrily around on my finger


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:07 pm
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I have a dog that likes to poo as much as any other. I clean it up, there was an exception to this when she went down the side of a water run off from a field, steep sided and muddy, getting to was likely to end up in a swim for me and it was highly unlikely anyone else would get to it.

She's currently back at the vets getting treatment for an autoimmune problem spurred by eating an infected cat poo, I don't see any entitled cat owner messages on here, but they go all over the place and most often not in the own gardens.

While we are at it, foxes and badgers, stinks and is a favourite to roll in or eat, our local dog field is covered in it, but no one is calling for a cull of the ****ers are they?
I will also often clean up other people's dog's crap from our local field as I would prefer that than leaving it there to cause a problem for others. Then it always go into a council provided bin after.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:09 pm
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so everyone else is quite happy with tonnes of plastic bagged dog poop going into landfill?

Yep, I'm pretty down with that TBH - far better than on my shoe's sole, my bike's tyre, a kids shoe or clothes, in a sheep's stomach or hung in a tree 👌

I say this as an adopted dog owner (the GF has one...).


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:10 pm
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I am revolted by the amount of dog shit that's left on streets, paths, fields etc.

If I took a crap at the side of the street I'd be arrested, but for some reason dogs are allowed to do it everyday. Yes I know its technically not allowed but the sheer quantity means it happens very frequently.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:13 pm
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Pick it up please & bin it. Cleaning kids shoes with poo on them is not fun. Seeing it is pretty grim too. I'm fed up with lazy/inconsiderate people.

Here are the diseases linked to leaving dog poo in fields.

ps You can report full bins quite easily on fixmystreet


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:20 pm
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. I’m fed up with lazy/inconsiderate people.

Yeah, you're probably going to have to live with that. They're literally all over the planet and their numbers are only increasing.

Every single patch of green space around here is primarily a dog toilet. And any hint that someone might want to use the land for some other purpose prompts letters to the paper, organised campaigns on social media and a level of entitled outrage that is truly sickening.

Yeah, we're currently trying to support a scheme in Leamington Spa for some fairly small bike trails in a large local park.
The dog walkers (of which I am one in addition to being a cyclist) are all rallying together and putting out misinformation to gather angry opposition to it.
Seemingly they're not happy with a small part of a large former golf course being used for something other than what they're interested in 😕


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:32 pm
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Always bag and remove wherever. I use biodegradable bags. I’m a do-gooder who treats the outdoors as if it was not just my own garden, but one that others enjoy sharing.

I did one extra-long wildlife-starving winter see a crow swoop and pick up my dog’s poo from the snow with it’s beak, before I could get to it. It flew off with the prize and disappeared into the freezing fog. Was one of the most melancholy things I ever saw.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:36 pm
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I pick up our dogs poo 95%+ of the time. If it's in the middle of nowhere and somewhere where people aren't likely to go, like the middle of a bush on very steep slope, then it stays and degrades. If it anywhere likely to be stepped in then it's picked up.

I buy bright dog poo bags and often leave them behind trees or signposts if I know I'm walking back down that path on my way home and there isn't a bin in the direction I'm traveling in as I'd rather no carry a bag of poo around. I've never forgotten to pick up a used dog poo bag.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:39 pm
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Bag it and put in your pocket, makes a great hand warmer in the winter


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:42 pm
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Sometimes stick and flick is OK

Yes, that will be in the scenario's I do it and it remains a better option in those scenario's that using a plastic bag. Even if the bag is bio-degradable it still has to be produced, shipped etc,..


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:46 pm
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Pick it up, bag it and bin it 95% of the time. If it is appropriate to flick or kick it into the undergrowth then i/we will.
If it's a warm day and we've driven somewhere to walk them (pre C19), then i tend to hang the bags off the towbar ball of the car rather than inside.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:51 pm
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hang the bags off the towbar ball of the car rather than inside.

That could go one of two ways for the car following you.
Although probably a better option than the time my wife stuck two bags of it in the front passenger footwell of my car after a walk then promptly forgot about it until I couldn't work out what the crippling smell was in the car when I got in a few days later!


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:59 pm
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OK what about down the toilet ?

We got a Puppy coming Sunday week and for back garen jobs do you bag n bin or down the toilet.

Now carrying the mutt's biz through the house isn't great obvs.... but what about if I've got access to the soil pipe outside ??


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:59 pm
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I won't claim to pick up every poo my does does, but I do pick up every one I see her do. I then carry the bag to the next bin. On some walks that's several miles but I can't guarantee that I'll return the way I came so leaving it for later isn't an option.

She's freaking useless as a trail dog (strong prey instinct, so she's off at the first scent, sometimes for far longer than I'm comfortable with) so stick and flick doesn't apply.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:59 pm
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Biodegradable poop in biodegradable bags?

Yep. I’m fine with that.
It’s probably the most eco friendly thing in most peoples bins.

Our dogs poop is not anything-friendly.

Quite the opposite.


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 12:59 pm
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If a dog poops in the woods with no-one to hear it, is it still poop?


 
Posted : 23/03/2021 1:00 pm
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