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Neighbor dumping his grass clippings (2 Viewers)

JohnnyU

Footballguy
Not sure why this bothers me, but it does. My property backs up against a city park and my neighbor dumps his grass clippings along the wooded edge. He bags instead of mulching. Several seasons worth are now piled up along a 20 foot edge of the woods. It’s city property. He does the same thing with his leaves. I know this isn’t good for the environment. A year ago I went over to tell him that in the past the city sent a letter to everyone on the street not to dump clippings or leaves on the park property. He had just bought the property, so I thought I would warn him that the city doesn’t think kindly of doing this. He’s 20 something and was a first time home owner. He obviously doesn’t care. Part of me wants to rat him out, but I haven’t.
 
Not sure why this bothers me, but it does. My property backs up against a city park and my neighbor dumps his grass clippings along the wooded edge. He bags instead of mulching. Several seasons worth are now piled up along a 20 foot edge of the woods. It’s city property. He does the same thing with his leaves. I know this isn’t good for the environment. A year ago I went over to tell him that in the past the city sent a letter to everyone on the street not to dump clippings or leaves on the park property. He had just bought the property, so I thought I would warn him that the city doesn’t think kindly of doing this. He’s 20 something and was a first time home owner. He obviously doesn’t care. Part of me wants to rat him out, but I haven’t.
Get off his lawn?
 
Not sure why this bothers me, but it does. My property backs up against a city park and my neighbor dumps his grass clippings along the wooded edge. He bags instead of mulching. Several seasons worth are now piled up along a 20 foot edge of the woods. It’s city property. He does the same thing with his leaves. I know this isn’t good for the environment. A year ago I went over to tell him that in the past the city sent a letter to everyone on the street not to dump clippings or leaves on the park property. He had just bought the property, so I thought I would warn him that the city doesn’t think kindly of doing this. He’s 20 something and was a first time home owner. He obviously doesn’t care. Part of me wants to rat him out, but I haven’t.
Get off his lawn?
City property, even if it’s close to both our homes.
 
Not sure why this bothers me, but it does. My property backs up against a city park and my neighbor dumps his grass clippings along the wooded edge. He bags instead of mulching. Several seasons worth are now piled up along a 20 foot edge of the woods. It’s city property. He does the same thing with his leaves. I know this isn’t good for the environment. A year ago I went over to tell him that in the past the city sent a letter to everyone on the street not to dump clippings or leaves on the park property. He had just bought the property, so I thought I would warn him that the city doesn’t think kindly of doing this. He’s 20 something and was a first time home owner. He obviously doesn’t care. Part of me wants to rat him out, but I haven’t.
So, does he keep the grass and leaves in bags?
 
Leaves I have no issue with. Grass no bueno.

I open my back gate and blow the leaves back to the tree from which they came. If they don't want the leaves there they can pick them up
 
Not sure why this bothers me, but it does. My property backs up against a city park and my neighbor dumps his grass clippings along the wooded edge. He bags instead of mulching. Several seasons worth are now piled up along a 20 foot edge of the woods. It’s city property. He does the same thing with his leaves. I know this isn’t good for the environment. A year ago I went over to tell him that in the past the city sent a letter to everyone on the street not to dump clippings or leaves on the park property. He had just bought the property, so I thought I would warn him that the city doesn’t think kindly of doing this. He’s 20 something and was a first time home owner. He obviously doesn’t care. Part of me wants to rat him out, but I haven’t.
So, does he keep the grass and leaves in bags?
No, he dumps them onto the ground from his mower bag.
 
Not sure why this bothers me, but it does. My property backs up against a city park and my neighbor dumps his grass clippings along the wooded edge. He bags instead of mulching. Several seasons worth are now piled up along a 20 foot edge of the woods. It’s city property. He does the same thing with his leaves. I know this isn’t good for the environment. A year ago I went over to tell him that in the past the city sent a letter to everyone on the street not to dump clippings or leaves on the park property. He had just bought the property, so I thought I would warn him that the city doesn’t think kindly of doing this. He’s 20 something and was a first time home owner. He obviously doesn’t care. Part of me wants to rat him out, but I haven’t.

Not being a jerk - honestly trying to understand...how are grass clipping and leaf piles bad for the environment?
 
Not sure why this bothers me, but it does. My property backs up against a city park and my neighbor dumps his grass clippings along the wooded edge. He bags instead of mulching. Several seasons worth are now piled up along a 20 foot edge of the woods. It’s city property. He does the same thing with his leaves. I know this isn’t good for the environment. A year ago I went over to tell him that in the past the city sent a letter to everyone on the street not to dump clippings or leaves on the park property. He had just bought the property, so I thought I would warn him that the city doesn’t think kindly of doing this. He’s 20 something and was a first time home owner. He obviously doesn’t care. Part of me wants to rat him out, but I haven’t.

Not being a jerk - honestly trying to understand...how are grass clipping and leaf piles bad for the environment?

Grass Clippings

Overview


Yes, piled up grass clippings can be bad for the environment, particularly when they are dumped in natural areas.While grass clippings are a natural material, large, unmanaged piles can lead to several negative consequences, including water pollution, habitat destruction, and potential fire hazards.

Here's a more detailed explanation:
Negative Impacts:
  • Water Pollution:
    When grass clippings decompose, they can release excess nutrients into nearby water bodies. This can lead to algal blooms, which deplete oxygen and harm aquatic life according to the Kitsap Sun.

  • Habitat Destruction:
    Dumping grass clippings in natural areas can smother existing vegetation, destroy habitats, and disrupt the natural ecosystem, according to the Town of Weston, MA.

  • Potential Fire Hazard:
    In dry conditions, large piles of grass clippings can generate enough heat to spontaneously combust, posing a fire risk.


  • Methane Production:
    When grass clippings decompose in landfills, they can release methane, a potent greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change, according


  • Leaves
    • Lawn damage:
      .

      Large leaf piles can smother grass, blocking sunlight, oxygen, and nutrients, leading to dead patches.

    • Pest attraction:
      .

      Leaf piles can create favorable conditions for pests like insects and rodents.

    • Methane production:
      .

      When leaves decompose in landfills without oxygen, they release methane, a potent greenhouse gas.
 
If he was dumping on my property, we'd have a chat. Otherwise, either let the City know or don't. It's not that big of a deal.
I think the biggest threat is it’s a fire hazard. While I’m not sure how likely it could spontaneously combust as stated in a previous post, probably due to methane accumulation, a spark could set the woods on fire, which could possibly spread to houses, including mine.
 
Is it unsightly from your lawn or is it far enough back that you can’t see the piles unless you’re walking out in the woods?
 
Is it unsightly from your lawn or is it far enough back that you can’t see the piles unless you’re walking out in the woods?
It’s only visible just past my property line to the right. About 25 yards away. So not an issue aesthetically to my property.
 
I would invite him over. Have a few beers. Get to know the guy.

A few months of this and he becomes a buddy. Then two things happen: you have a new friend and you can then tell him to stop dumping his ****ing **** on city property.
Or I could send him a dead fish wrapped in newspapers. The thing that pisses me off is that I told him when he first moved in, about three years ago, that the city already sent out nastygrams about it, but I suppose he didn’t believe me, or just doesn’t care.
 
Not sure why this bothers me, but it does. My property backs up against a city park and my neighbor dumps his grass clippings along the wooded edge. He bags instead of mulching. Several seasons worth are now piled up along a 20 foot edge of the woods. It’s city property. He does the same thing with his leaves. I know this isn’t good for the environment. A year ago I went over to tell him that in the past the city sent a letter to everyone on the street not to dump clippings or leaves on the park property. He had just bought the property, so I thought I would warn him that the city doesn’t think kindly of doing this. He’s 20 something and was a first time home owner. He obviously doesn’t care. Part of me wants to rat him out, but I haven’t.

Not being a jerk - honestly trying to understand...how are grass clipping and leaf piles bad for the environment?

Grass Clippings

Overview


Yes, piled up grass clippings can be bad for the environment, particularly when they are dumped in natural areas.While grass clippings are a natural material, large, unmanaged piles can lead to several negative consequences, including water pollution, habitat destruction, and potential fire hazards.

Here's a more detailed explanation:
Negative Impacts:
  • Water Pollution:
    When grass clippings decompose, they can release excess nutrients into nearby water bodies. This can lead to algal blooms, which deplete oxygen and harm aquatic life according to the Kitsap Sun.

  • Habitat Destruction:
    Dumping grass clippings in natural areas can smother existing vegetation, destroy habitats, and disrupt the natural ecosystem, according to the Town of Weston, MA.

  • Potential Fire Hazard:
    In dry conditions, large piles of grass clippings can generate enough heat to spontaneously combust, posing a fire risk.


  • Methane Production:
    When grass clippings decompose in landfills, they can release methane, a potent greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change, according


  • Leaves
    • Lawn damage:
      .

      Large leaf piles can smother grass, blocking sunlight, oxygen, and nutrients, leading to dead patches.

    • Pest attraction:
      .

      Leaf piles can create favorable conditions for pests like insects and rodents.

    • Methane production:
      .

      When leaves decompose in landfills without oxygen, they release methane, a potent greenhouse gas.
I’m not buying it
 
Not sure why this bothers me, but it does. My property backs up against a city park and my neighbor dumps his grass clippings along the wooded edge. He bags instead of mulching. Several seasons worth are now piled up along a 20 foot edge of the woods. It’s city property. He does the same thing with his leaves. I know this isn’t good for the environment. A year ago I went over to tell him that in the past the city sent a letter to everyone on the street not to dump clippings or leaves on the park property. He had just bought the property, so I thought I would warn him that the city doesn’t think kindly of doing this. He’s 20 something and was a first time home owner. He obviously doesn’t care. Part of me wants to rat him out, but I haven’t.

Not being a jerk - honestly trying to understand...how are grass clipping and leaf piles bad for the environment?

Grass Clippings

Overview


Yes, piled up grass clippings can be bad for the environment, particularly when they are dumped in natural areas.While grass clippings are a natural material, large, unmanaged piles can lead to several negative consequences, including water pollution, habitat destruction, and potential fire hazards.

Here's a more detailed explanation:
Negative Impacts:
  • Water Pollution:
    When grass clippings decompose, they can release excess nutrients into nearby water bodies. This can lead to algal blooms, which deplete oxygen and harm aquatic life according to the Kitsap Sun.

  • Habitat Destruction:
    Dumping grass clippings in natural areas can smother existing vegetation, destroy habitats, and disrupt the natural ecosystem, according to the Town of Weston, MA.

  • Potential Fire Hazard:
    In dry conditions, large piles of grass clippings can generate enough heat to spontaneously combust, posing a fire risk.


  • Methane Production:
    When grass clippings decompose in landfills, they can release methane, a potent greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change, according


  • Leaves
    • Lawn damage:
      .

      Large leaf piles can smother grass, blocking sunlight, oxygen, and nutrients, leading to dead patches.

    • Pest attraction:
      .

      Leaf piles can create favorable conditions for pests like insects and rodents.

    • Methane production:
      .

      When leaves decompose in landfills without oxygen, they release methane, a potent greenhouse gas.
I’m not buying it
okie doki
 
Easier said than done, I try to turn a blind eye to my neighbors indiscretions that doesn't involve me. I have no problem acting when something bothers me. In this case it bothers you. I might set up a trail cam and anonymously mail some pics to code enforcement.
 
Easier said than done, I try to turn a blind eye to my neighbors indiscretions that doesn't involve me. I have no problem acting when something bothers me. In this case it bothers you. I might set up a trail cam and anonymously mail some pics to code enforcement.
I’m not going to do anything. It’s almost none of my business. I said almost because of the potential fire hazard.
 
Easier said than done, I try to turn a blind eye to my neighbors indiscretions that doesn't involve me. I have no problem acting when something bothers me. In this case it bothers you. I might set up a trail cam and anonymously mail some pics to code enforcement.
I’m not going to do anything. It’s almost none of my business. I said almost because of the potential fire hazard.
Do you garden? The stuff at the bottom of the pile is probably great fertilizer if he doesn't use a bunch of chemicals on his lawn.
 
Easier said than done, I try to turn a blind eye to my neighbors indiscretions that doesn't involve me. I have no problem acting when something bothers me. In this case it bothers you. I might set up a trail cam and anonymously mail some pics to code enforcement.
I’m not going to do anything. It’s almost none of my business. I said almost because of the potential fire hazard.
Do you garden? The stuff at the bottom of the pile is probably great fertilizer if he doesn't use a bunch of chemicals on his lawn.
No garden for me.
 
If he was dumping on my property, we'd have a chat. Otherwise, either let the City know or don't. It's not that big of a deal.
I think the biggest threat is it’s a fire hazard. While I’m not sure how likely it could spontaneously combust as stated in a previous post, probably due to methane accumulation, a spark could set the woods on fire, which could possibly spread to houses, including mine.
Unless these piles get a lot of direct sunlight in the heat of the day the threat is very low.
 
I would invite him over. Have a few beers. Get to know the guy.

A few months of this and he becomes a buddy. Then two things happen: you have a new friend and you can then tell him to stop dumping his ****ing **** on city property.
Or I could send him a dead fish wrapped in newspapers. The thing that pisses me off is that I told him when he first moved in, about three years ago, that the city already sent out nastygrams about it, but I suppose he didn’t believe me, or just doesn’t care.
This is the problem. Indirect communication. He views you as a co-conspirator since you told him that a third party might get upset. The reality is, YOU are upset. if you told him that directly he may oblige you. He doesn't care about the bogeyman and has no social contract to care about them.
 
Mice love to live in big piles of grass
If he was dumping on my property, we'd have a chat. Otherwise, either let the City know or don't. It's not that big of a deal.
I think the biggest threat is it’s a fire hazard. While I’m not sure how likely it could spontaneously combust as stated in a previous post, probably due to methane accumulation, a spark could set the woods on fire, which could possibly spread to houses, including mine.
You should be OK, as lightning never strikes mice.
 
My goodness, I'm glad I live outside city limits. Worrying about this crap is just not fun.

Last year, I had accumulated 2 piles of brush in the back edge of my lot each about the size of a minivan. I finally got around to renting an industrial woodchipper and spent a day chopping and spraying the wood chips all over the back woods.

Then there was the great bonfire of 2012 where I lit up our kid's old wooden playset in my fire pit and the flames were a good 20 ft high. It was glorious.

I burn stuff almost weekly, shoot off fireworks, let our dog out loose on occasion and can do whatever I want with my yard waste. 'Merica!!
 
I don't have backyard neighbors, instead i have a short grass strip, then trees/swamp.

If it is organic I will dump it near the edge of the wooded areas, been doing that last 10 years. Everything decomposes nicely and decaying plant matter provides fertilizer/nitrogen for the plants that do live back there: dewberries, mustang grapes, etc. The area behind my house still looks nice.

When i do dump organic matter back there i try to spread it out, not put it in big piles.

It is a natural way of dealing with organic matter that doesn't clog up a landfill where it would never decompose.


Edit: This is slightly different than OP's problem though, as he stated he could still see last seasons clippings. There is a wrong approach taken there. I would argue it's the execution of the plan, he needs to take better care to make sure the clippings do not last that long.

Edit 2: I am the one that uses the area behind my house more than anyone. Technically it is a shared space that my neighbors could also use, but with young kids we can use it to play catch, hit golf balls, etc. I am the one that cares the most about the area looking nice. The neighbors about 3 houses down built a fire pit about 7-8 years ago that they have not used in last 5 years. I wish they would clean that up as it is just a bunch of random bricks/rocks in a pile now. But I don't care enough to do anything about it.
 
Last edited:
Is this the ***Official*** Retirement thread?
Yep. This thread remains me that I'm not young anymore.

After working my tail off for 15 years, a few years ago I bought a home on my golf course. I'm just off hole one green. It's awesome. The rub though is that around 5:00 PM my course turns a ******* dog park. Due a particularly bad winter the course came into season in bad shape and it is still recovering - stating this only to state that unlike most years the health of the greens and fairways are a concern.

Just about every night my wife has to tell me not to go out and yell at the dog owners and they're stupid dogs for treating the fairway and green like a ******* dog run. Drives me insane. It's a private course so these ******** are trespassing, too. She'll let me go say something if it's particularly egregious like a couple of nights ago when a ****ing dog was literally digging on the green with the owner's encouragement.

A couple weeks ago after lots of holes and whisky we needed to break some betting ties around 6:30 PM on hole one green. My wife was gone for the weekend and we teed off with about 15 idiots and their stupid dogs on the green looking at us like we were intruding on them. I drove up and sarcastically stated, "I recognize this is a dog park, but do you mind if we play through or will that bother Fido and his friends!?" They chirped back and - bear in mind this is very unlike me - it got a little heated and I kept telling them this isn't a dog park. Problem is, a lot of these are neighbors and friends with my wife.

In short, get off my lawn green!
 
Last edited:
A couple weeks ago after lots of holes and whisky we needed to break some betting ties around 6:30 PM on hole one green. My wife was gone for the weekend and we teed off with about 15 idiots and their stupid dogs on the dog. I drove up and sarcastically stated, "I recognize this is a dog park, but do you mind if we play through or will that bother Fido and his friends!?" They chirped back and - bear in this this is very unlike me - it got a little heated and I kept telling them this isn't a dog park. Problem is, a lot of these are neighbors and friends with my wife.

In short, get off my lawn green!
That's that marijuana-induced rage coming out.
 
It's a private course so these ******** are trespassing, too.
Problem is, a lot of these are neighbors and friends with my wife.
So are these club members (neighbors) or random people out for a stroll? I would think if they are club members there is an easy solution of reporting them to the club. If they are randoms, can you call the cops?

I get the wife doesn't want to ruffle feathers but this is serious issue of damaging property. It's not just a joke.
 
Not sure why this bothers me, but it does. My property backs up against a city park and my neighbor dumps his grass clippings along the wooded edge. He bags instead of mulching. Several seasons worth are now piled up along a 20 foot edge of the woods. It’s city property. He does the same thing with his leaves. I know this isn’t good for the environment. A year ago I went over to tell him that in the past the city sent a letter to everyone on the street not to dump clippings or leaves on the park property. He had just bought the property, so I thought I would warn him that the city doesn’t think kindly of doing this. He’s 20 something and was a first time home owner. He obviously doesn’t care. Part of me wants to rat him out, but I haven’t.

Not being a jerk - honestly trying to understand...how are grass clipping and leaf piles bad for the environment?

Grass Clippings

Overview


Yes, piled up grass clippings can be bad for the environment, particularly when they are dumped in natural areas.While grass clippings are a natural material, large, unmanaged piles can lead to several negative consequences, including water pollution, habitat destruction, and potential fire hazards.

Here's a more detailed explanation:
Negative Impacts:
  • Water Pollution:
    When grass clippings decompose, they can release excess nutrients into nearby water bodies. This can lead to algal blooms, which deplete oxygen and harm aquatic life according to the Kitsap Sun.

  • Habitat Destruction:
    Dumping grass clippings in natural areas can smother existing vegetation, destroy habitats, and disrupt the natural ecosystem, according to the Town of Weston, MA.

  • Potential Fire Hazard:
    In dry conditions, large piles of grass clippings can generate enough heat to spontaneously combust, posing a fire risk.


  • Methane Production:
    When grass clippings decompose in landfills, they can release methane, a potent greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change, according


  • Leaves
    • Lawn damage:
      .

      Large leaf piles can smother grass, blocking sunlight, oxygen, and nutrients, leading to dead patches.

    • Pest attraction:
      .

      Leaf piles can create favorable conditions for pests like insects and rodents.

    • Methane production:
      .

      When leaves decompose in landfills without oxygen, they release methane, a potent greenhouse gas.
Good to know. I have a few seasons worth just...piled up. In the back of my head I am aware it is not decomposing fast enough to be sustainable.

I'll grab some bags from Lowes and spend an afternoon filling them for the next leaf/brush/grass pickup my town does. :thumbup:
 
A couple weeks ago after lots of holes and whisky we needed to break some betting ties around 6:30 PM on hole one green. My wife was gone for the weekend and we teed off with about 15 idiots and their stupid dogs on the dog. I drove up and sarcastically stated, "I recognize this is a dog park, but do you mind if we play through or will that bother Fido and his friends!?" They chirped back and - bear in this this is very unlike me - it got a little heated and I kept telling them this isn't a dog park. Problem is, a lot of these are neighbors and friends with my wife.

In short, get off my lawn green!
That's that marijuana-induced rage coming out.
I may or may not have drafted that post last night after an edible.
 
It's a private course so these ******** are trespassing, too.
Problem is, a lot of these are neighbors and friends with my wife.
So are these club members (neighbors) or random people out for a stroll? I would think if they are club members there is an easy solution of reporting them to the club. If they are randoms, can you call the cops?

I get the wife doesn't want to ruffle feathers but this is serious issue of damaging property. It's not just a joke.
They're almost all not club members (if they were, I'd actually be okay with that as it's an equity club and if they want to walk on the course and not be in the way they should be able to) but non-members who live on the course or vacation renters renting a home on the course.

I'm on my club's board. This has been an ongoing issue and we have tried law enforcement in the past but they really don't want to do anything. In fairness, they probably do have better things to be doing as this is perhaps the quintessential 1% percenter problem.

Problem is, because everybody has thrown their hands up and nothing is done, the walkers feel emboldened. A couple of years ago after I yelled at walkers to move from the path in the middle of the fairway and then hit, they had the audacity to yell at me for almost hitting them and that I should have waited (this was on hole 18 and I was trying to get the round in just before dark).

Drives me nuts and bothers me enough to make these rants. Because apparently I'm old now. :bag:
 
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Problem is, because everybody has thrown their hands up and nothing is done, the walkers feel emboldened. A couple of years ago after I yelled at walkers to move from the path in the middle of the fairway and then hit, they had the audacity to yell at me for almost hitting them and that I should have waited (this was on hole 18 and I was trying to get the round in).

Drives me nuts and bothers me enough to make these rants.
You should have hit it at them. Many years ago we were playing a public course on a holiday weekend. The place was way overbooked and there were three groups backed up at most holes for much of the day. The group immediately behind us were chirping us for the first handful of holes and we kept telling them we had nowhere to go. Just totally obnoxious.

My group weren't the best golfers. Had one guy in the 90's, a couple in the 95-105 range, and a guy in the 130 range. At one hole that was particularly backed up the group behind us finished and pulled their carts up to the tee box. There were so many carts their that one of their carts was peaking out behind the net so they were exposed if a shanked tee shot went that direction. The 130 guy in our group went up to tee off and we warned them to move because we don't know where his ball goes sometimes. They scoffed and basically shrugged us off. He proceeded to skull one right at them. A low liner that was hit hard. It nailed one of them right in the middle of the back (they were turned away so didn't see it coming). We had warned them. They didn't say a word the rest of the round and stayed behind us. It was a complete accident and they were warned to move.

In your situation I would say it is warranted to hit at those guys if they aren't being considerate.
 
It's a private course so these ******** are trespassing, too.
Problem is, a lot of these are neighbors and friends with my wife.
So are these club members (neighbors) or random people out for a stroll? I would think if they are club members there is an easy solution of reporting them to the club. If they are randoms, can you call the cops?

I get the wife doesn't want to ruffle feathers but this is serious issue of damaging property. It's not just a joke.
They're almost all not club members (if they were, I'd actually be okay with that as it's an equity club and if they want to walk on the course and not be in the way they should be able to) but non-members who live on the course or vacation renters renting a home on the course.

I'm on my club's board. This has been an ongoing issue and we have tried law enforcement in the past but they really don't want to do anything. In fairness, they probably do have better things to be doing as this is perhaps the quintessential 1% percenter problem.

Problem is, because everybody has thrown their hands up and nothing is done, the walkers feel emboldened. A couple of years ago after I yelled at walkers to move from the path in the middle of the fairway and then hit, they had the audacity to yell at me for almost hitting them and that I should have waited (this was on hole 18 and I was trying to get the round in).

Drives me nuts and bothers me enough to make these rants. Because apparently I'm old now. :bag:
I mean the only reasonable reaction here is **** those people
 
It's a private course so these ******** are trespassing, too.
Problem is, a lot of these are neighbors and friends with my wife.
So are these club members (neighbors) or random people out for a stroll? I would think if they are club members there is an easy solution of reporting them to the club. If they are randoms, can you call the cops?

I get the wife doesn't want to ruffle feathers but this is serious issue of damaging property. It's not just a joke.
They're almost all not club members (if they were, I'd actually be okay with that as it's an equity club and if they want to walk on the course and not be in the way they should be able to) but non-members who live on the course or vacation renters renting a home on the course.

I'm on my club's board. This has been an ongoing issue and we have tried law enforcement in the past but they really don't want to do anything. In fairness, they probably do have better things to be doing as this is perhaps the quintessential 1% percenter problem.

Problem is, because everybody has thrown their hands up and nothing is done, the walkers feel emboldened. A couple of years ago after I yelled at walkers to move from the path in the middle of the fairway and then hit, they had the audacity to yell at me for almost hitting them and that I should have waited (this was on hole 18 and I was trying to get the round in).

Drives me nuts and bothers me enough to make these rants. Because apparently I'm old now. :bag:
I mean the only reasonable reaction here is **** those people
I assume this would be any golfer's take. For a non-golfer though, apparently I'm the old men yelling at teenagers on his lawn.
 

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