Tuesday, July 16, 2019

Elweed and the Case of the Stolen Trellises - Solved

First, you stoke hatred and fear of minorities.
Then you round them up and put them in camps.
Next, you send out raiding parties to get those who have been driven into hiding.

The armbands come next right?

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So remember a while ago when my buddy from kindergarten Elweed was having his trellises stolen?

A guy who basically has nothing as he is 300% below poverty but has been nurturing a garden for 10 years transforming the waste land of garbage into this.




Notice if you will the white signs that were posted - PRIVATE PROPERTY!  posted on that fence.

it seems the owner of that fence owns the fence and 3-4 feet on THIS side of the fence and is telling him NO GARDEN.  Elweed has lived there for 20 years and it's been a wasteland until he made it into a garden. 

The owner of the fence has been going out at night and has been ripping out the trellises and throwing them away.

So now he has an issue.  The guy is claiming 4 feet on THIS side of his fence that he has not cared about for 2 decades and anything there he ruins or takes.   

Everything there including the rocks were not there before he took over.  I's a 17x70 foot garden.  The landlord of the "motel" apartment (next to the VW place just off  The Wash near the Full House intersection - 151 and 51)  does not want to rock any boat and could care less - not going to get involved.

The world is full of the wrong kind of people.

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DJ and I are boning up on our pirate-speak as we are goin' t' a tall ship parade up nort.  We have hotel reservations and will head to Sturgeon Bay at the end of the month t' drink ale 'n loot photos o' tall ships.  ARRRRrrrrrrrr!

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A long while ago I was helping out in Madison at the Homeless Book Club.  Yea - homeless people read also you know.   The book of the month was The Art of Racing in the Rain.  A book from a dogs point of view. 

The author was amazing and he agreed to give the group of about 20 homeless people an interview and one of the amazing things was that the book is published in like 50 countries and every country had a different breed of dog on the cover.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dp2ufFO4QGg



This is an AWESOME heart warming story that begins with the passing away of Enzo the dog . . but in a very nice way as he looks back at his wonderful life and is ready for the next life whatever it may be . . . but the ending of the book/movie is heart warming spectacular.

ANY person that loves dogs needs to see this movie.

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Weather - COME ON TALKING HEADS - stop selling your wares and tell the truth.     Unlike what everybody has been saying all week - we will not hit 90 until Thursday - STILL hot but 90 brings fear and will make people watch the news - CLOSE to 90 will not, we will be close.

Thursday and Friday will be RED ALERT days as the heads are actually underplaying the heat - they don't want to be wrong.  Heat index nearing 106 with real temps nearing 100 (I say just below 100).  Then turning cooler next week with highs just above 80 and low dew points.  Weekend will be "cooler" with highs in the low 90s and a "cold" front will move into the area.

 Thursday  93, dew point near 73  heat index 102.   Good chance of early storms Thursday morning as the warm front goes by. Beautiful next week.

Cheers


1 comment:

  1. "Elweed" should look into the term "adverse possession":

    In order to claim adverse possession, a person must use someone else’s property for a period of years. In some states, it’s just a few years, but other states require up to 20 years or more. During that time, the person’s use of the property must meet several criteria:

    They must demonstrate actual possession by changing the land in some way – building a fence, cutting trees, mowing – as opposed to just walking on it.

    Their use must be so open that it would be obvious to an observer that they’re using the property as their own.

    They must act without the owner’s permission, to the exclusion of the owner and in a way that’s contrary to the owner’s interests.

    They must use the land relatively continuously – as opposed to cutting a few trees once a year, say, and then leaving the property alone at all other times.

    In a recent case, a vacant lot on a resort island on Lake Erie was owned by a real estate investment company that became defunct. For years afterward, three families whose property bordered the lot used it as their own. They cleared paths across the lot, used it to access a beach, harvested firewood there, rode bicycles and motorcycles on it, and otherwise treated it as common property.

    An Ohio appeals court ruled that as a result, they could claim ownership of the lot.

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