Mongfinder General wrote: » As long as there’s gullible fools, there’ll be minge bags like that to take advantage of you. A hungry fcuk.
Dan Jaman wrote: » I leave my bins out by the side of the road full-time.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » You use public space for storing your private property? Ultimate stinge...
Dan Jaman wrote: » Hardly a stinge if I own the part of the road in question.
Quazzie wrote: » You own the road? You must be very rich.
Dan Jaman wrote: » Many, if not most, houses that border country roads own the road out to the centre line. This is a pure technicality, as the Council takes it over for the common good. I'm not a lawyer, so there's likely a more involved legal explanation about the circumstances and the law relating to it. If I decided to take full ownership of my part of the road, I'd be liable for its upkeep and damages should anyone trip in a pothole, for example. In that regard, the Council are welcome to it, and I regard it as an equitable trade-off. I get to travel on mostly decent tarmac to the shops in return, while traversing hundreds of other people's roads.
amber69 wrote: » Other way around AFAIK. Council own about 6ft from the road into your property.
Dan Jaman wrote: » Not in my case, they don't. I checked the deeds, and it's exactly as I said. What you likely mean is that the Council take over enough land to enable the road, and that would likely include a strip adjacent to the actual tarmac surface. "Take over" is the operative term - they don't actually own it, I do.
Quazzie wrote: » Try leave your car parked on the road out touching the line, and see how far your deeds get you when it's taken away. :rolleyes:
Surreptitious wrote: » I know I have said this before but my housemate has been drying her clothes free for over two years now. She refuses to put money in to feed the machine. I was going to wash a load of clothes this evening but she decided to use the dryer. There was no money left in it yet she still put her clothes in and turned it on to get the very last maybe four minutes out of it before it shut off. So her clothes are in there now and still wet? She knows full well she needed to put money in for it to work yet she refuses to part with two euros? I am ashamed for her at this stage. There is no level of scab low enough to describe her.
Bosco13 wrote: » Our petrol station had a tyre gauge machine that you put 20p into and it activated the air pump for a few minutes. One day this old sod parked right up my arse, hoping to get my remaining time and I had to reverse out on to the main road, not being able to see properly because his car was blocking me. Wish I'd just sat there til my time ran out.
Dan Jaman wrote: » The sort of miserable git who'd never buy an air pencil guage of his own, let alone a footpump at the minimum. It's hardly surprising there are thousands of cars on the road with dangerously under-inflated tyres.
4ensic15 wrote: » Anyone selling petrol or diesel should be forced to supply free air. It is ridiculous that road safety is disincentivised by charging for air.
Dan Jaman wrote: » There is a real cost to supplying 'free' air. Compressors aren't cheap, and every forecourt loses (has stolen) a couple of inflator gauges per year. Luckily for me, my local garages aren't charging yet, but I was used to paying for it in England more than 20 years ago, so if it happens, it happens. It's not the end of the world. I always carry a pencil pressure gauge, and have a compressor in my own garage, so not really that likely to need it. The real stinges are the ones who piggy-back on others' air payment.