Cat poop or wild animal droppings? Warning; pile picture!

  • Erstellt am 2018-07-10 13:03:02

haydee

2018-07-11 15:20:34
  • #1


In the end, it's the neighbor in person. At my aunt's place, it was the newspaper delivery person who regularly lifted his leg on the tree.
 

Steven

2018-07-11 15:22:49
  • #2
No!!!! What do people use a crossbow for today? For sport, to place arrows or bolts as centrally as possible on a target. Of course, it was developed for another purpose. Like your knife, for example. At some point the ultimate tool to kill the opponent. Today, like the crossbow, these former weapons are no longer used in a confrontation. There are simply better means to eliminate your opponent. Steven
 

Steven

2018-07-11 15:24:18
  • #3
Hello sounds really strange. But according to the definition in the Weapons Act, a crossbow is not a firearm because no projectile is propelled through a barrel. Steven
 

apokolok

2018-07-11 15:25:05
  • #4
Nice discussion.
If a cat regularly poops in my garden, I will do everything to prevent that.

What has not been considered here is the fact that cats do not fall from the sky or simply appear (like, for example, the already discussed marten, badger, etc.) but that someone has acquired the animal for personal amusement.

THAT is the crucial point that also has a massive influence on the legal perspective.
In principle, §833 of the Building Code applies here.
The uses of my garden are restricted, at least temporarily one could speak of damage.
The owner would now have the duty to remedy this damage.
If they fail to do so, I consider appropriate measures justified, increasing in severity until success is achieved.

Why should I have my property restricted because someone else enjoys keeping a cat? Someone could also enjoy revving their motorcycle at full throttle for 10 minutes every night at two o’clock, and there would be no discussion for anyone.

Just because the means of disturbance is alive and regarded as cute by some people does not, in my opinion, mean it has to be accepted.
 

haydee

2018-07-11 15:25:55
  • #5
Steven
My outdoor cats might manage 4 pieces in their lifetime. Birds are really very rare, and then it is mostly magpies.

I think feral cats plunder the nests. A few chicks are easy prey.
 

Steven

2018-07-11 15:40:24
  • #6


Hello haydee

if your cats actually manage to catch magpies, then you have some very, very bad killers. Corvids are among the most intelligent birds in the animal kingdom. They are actually only surpassed by the Kea.
So, if they can catch crows, they will kill dozens of the "normal" birds. You probably don't notice it. But exactly such cats urgently need to be controlled. They destroy nature.

Steven
 
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