ChatterBank33 mins ago
What Would Your Rule Be ?
18 Answers
Prince Charles’ latest pet housing project, the Nansledan housing development in Cornwall, comes with some 85 neighbourhood rules.
They include a ban on visible washing lines, flag flying, ball games, satellite dishes, plastic blinds, caravans, external drain pipes, slamming doors and public drunkenness. There are strict rules about what House colours are allowed. Bins must be left outside on the day of collection only. House numbers must be placed in a certain way and caravans and satellite dishes aren’t allowed.
Some of these sound quite attractive to me. I can't wait until he's King !
Given the chance, what would your rule be ?
https:/ /uk.yah oo.com/ style/p rince-c harles- draconi an-neig hbourho od-rule s-12314 2446.ht ml
They include a ban on visible washing lines, flag flying, ball games, satellite dishes, plastic blinds, caravans, external drain pipes, slamming doors and public drunkenness. There are strict rules about what House colours are allowed. Bins must be left outside on the day of collection only. House numbers must be placed in a certain way and caravans and satellite dishes aren’t allowed.
Some of these sound quite attractive to me. I can't wait until he's King !
Given the chance, what would your rule be ?
https:/
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Canary42. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Just recently I had a new balcony door/window fitted - my management committee followed this with guidelines on how to care for it.
One rule was 'Do not dry washing indoors,hang outside on a line'.
I emailed them back and thanked them for the change in rules after 40 years - I have been pulled up many times for hanging out my laundry to dry. :-)
They are now in a state of flux,bless.
One rule was 'Do not dry washing indoors,hang outside on a line'.
I emailed them back and thanked them for the change in rules after 40 years - I have been pulled up many times for hanging out my laundry to dry. :-)
They are now in a state of flux,bless.
I don’t think Ive ever seen a visible line of washing, unless I look over my neighbours fence, and personally I don’t want my washing on display anyway!
I don’t like the noise flags make flapping around.
There’s a covenant in our close about no caravans.
Bins are only put out on the day here anyway.
Public drunkenness, no brainier really.
As for the other rules, sound perfectly reasonable to me, can’t actually think of another.
I don’t like the noise flags make flapping around.
There’s a covenant in our close about no caravans.
Bins are only put out on the day here anyway.
Public drunkenness, no brainier really.
As for the other rules, sound perfectly reasonable to me, can’t actually think of another.
Friends of mine rented a house in a very posh years ago. The agent contacted them and asked if the lady of the house would mind not hanging out her underwear on the washing line as it upset her elderly male neighbour. As the garden was fenced all the way around she asked how he could see said washing, which btw was very plain white for weating under her NHS uniform. The agent replied....."he looks out of his bedroom window. I get banning drunken behaviour and slamming doors but flags and satellite dishes????really?
I'm in a conservation area, so a lot of those rules already apply to me and everyone around me; they're no bother, though it's a nuisance having to get council permission to prune our Heritage Tree.
Not a bad lot of rules, really, though I wonder if parents might face eviction if their kids come home drunk one night - that would be harsh.
But making rules known in advance rather than imposing them retrospectively is fine by me; people can decide whether they want to live there.
Not a bad lot of rules, really, though I wonder if parents might face eviction if their kids come home drunk one night - that would be harsh.
But making rules known in advance rather than imposing them retrospectively is fine by me; people can decide whether they want to live there.
-- answer removed --