cdaly_ wrote: » 1. Take bike into your room. 2. Tell landlord you'll be moving out so. Tenants are harder to come by these days...
teaandtoast wrote: » he said to me' be careful the wheels are hitting the wall' i replied to him ' who are you to tell me what to do' and who was he to tell me what to do i am not breaking the law i am not hurting myself or others.
maninasia wrote: » What would happen if everybody starts putting their stuff outside, bikes, old shoes, old furniture. Seems to be the other tenant was right. You can get a folding bike, easier to keep.
taconnol wrote: » Yes because the best solution to this situation is for the OP to fork out €500 for a new bike.
teaandtoast wrote: » he said to me' be careful the wheels are hitting the wall' i replied to him ' who are you to tell me what to do' and who was he to tell me what to do i am not breaking the law i am not hurting myself or others. He is not the landlord he does not have the authority to tell me what to do but some people are very sad and hateful and don't want to live and let live.
teaandtoast wrote: » i am not breaking the law i am not hurting myself or others.
Nietzschean wrote: » It really doesn't sound like you did yourself any favours escalating that conversation. Would replying "thanks i hadn't noticed" been that hard? snide comebacks rarely improve the situation...no wonder he went off ringing the landlord...
teaandtoast wrote: » Well it was hateful and revengeful to ring the landlord and complain because he wanted to get one up on me, do people not have any lives to be so bitter and revengeful. My wheels wern't hitting the stairs and it was his big ordering tone of voice that made me stand up for myself. Alot of people especially irish people don't stand up for their rights I do stand up for my rights I have to be true to myself and keep it real. alot of people here don't see the bigger picture.
teaandtoast wrote: » don't see the bigger picture.
p wrote: » With all due respect, you acted like a complete dick if that's how you replied to him. You were potentially damaging a communal area, of course he has the right to mention to you that you might be damaging the walls. Also, you're storing a bike it a public stairwell, that's hardly a safe or acceptable place for a bike. It sounds like you made your own mess. If you'd been polite and made sure you weren't hitting the walls I doubt you would have had a problem. Seriously, where's your sense of community spirit? Just cause something suits you, doesn't mean it's ok for everyone else in your apartment. I'd suggest moving apartments to somewhere that has better bike facilities, tell your landlord that's why your moving, and be a bit more understanding and courteous to other people's needs in the future.
penexpers wrote: » How about this for a bigger picture - there's a fire and someone trips over your bike trying to get down the stairs, injures their leg, can't escape and dies.
teaandtoast wrote: » Does anyone know if there is any safe bicycle racks or places in dublin city or the centre of city where its safe to leave your bicycle where it won't be stolen....I don't have a car, I work at night til 2am. Maybe i will have to move out and find a bicylce friendily place. I would appreciate any information at all
Lumen wrote: » Please try and keep responses helpful rather than feeding upon teaandtoast's persecution complex
Lumen wrote: » I just thought I'd re-post your original question with the relevant bits retained, as specific information was being requested.This thread might give some pointers. Please try and keep responses helpful rather than feeding upon teaandtoast's persecution complex, tempting though it is.