Illegal Clothesline Spotted

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mrb627

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 12, 2001
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5,114
Location
Buford, GA
As I was driving through my neighborhood yesterday afternoon, I spotted something that caught my eye from a distance. A neighbor has erected an umbrella clothesline in their back yard. Mind you, they have a wood privacy fence and the top of the clothesline is a mere inches above the top of the fence. The casual passerby would probably never notice. I, on the other hand, spotted it at a distance. Laughed out loud in the car as I know it will ruffle feathers in the neighborhood.

Honestly, I support them in their efforts.

<RANT>
It simply makes no sense to me that you are not allowed to have a clothesline to hang your washing out to dry when the house next door can construct this huge black, blue, and metallic trampoline that is as tall as the house, not fence it in, and don't bother to cut the grass underneath it.

Wake up people!</RANT>

Malcolm
 
Malcolm, from my reading I don't believe no-clothesline laws (usually they're local ordinances or part of HOA agreements) have ever withstood a legal challenge, anywhere in the U.S. Sounds like your neighbor understands this.
 
Malcolm,

Maybe you could stop and tell your neighbors that you applaud their efforts to buck the system.  Thumbs up to them!
smiley-wink.gif
 
 
Coming from the rural upper-midwest, I can't imagine being told clotheslines are verboten on my own property. Common sense: no junked/unregistered cars; keep lawn tidy; height restriction for fences. But no clotheslines? C'mon. I'd put one up and never use it just to piss off the association, LOL!
 
The last condo I lived in was way more strict than just about clotheslines. It was a hot day and I was sitting on the balcony. I took my shirt off and hung it on the back of the chair. Two hours later I got a call from the management telling me to stop drying clothes on the balcony.
 
I live in a country where seing clothesline  and pulleys, all the way along city streets from balconies and windows was and still is (even if less now)  as normal  as seeing a traffic lamp at a crossroad (costs of electric energy  is high and no gas dryers availabe until recent years)....
Of course drying in the dryer is more convenient, why have to deal  with the drudgery of hanging laundry if you have a dryer???

I can understand that in a country where dryers made their enter such early and where cost of running them  is so low,    and because of that are entered to be part of laundry chores job almost as a  basic laundry equipment  that  80% if not 90% of people own and use, there could be such a view about clotheslines from some people....
So that is why in USA sometimes clotheslines are associated to, poverty, slums etc.... because of that reasoning, some  people finds them unsighty because associate them to poverty...don't get me wrong, this reasoning  it's wrong simply because it lacks in a simple concept comprehension there could be other reasons going over the simply "I'm poor I cannot run/ I don't own a dryer" matter..... that would not make of  a  whole neigborhood poor also!!

I've herad many neighborhood associations bans them becuase they're supposed to drop the value of house in those neigborhoods.... theory denied more than once...

There're could be many reasons why one hangs laundry.....

One is simply that there're people enjoying hanging laundry (some people find it relaxing)....
Others just do that for global warming theory beliefs...
But even if it were did for money issue for what reasons it should drop property value then???

 

I think everyone should have the right to dry his own laundry as he prefer in his own property!

 

We're not talking about sunbathing naked! It's laundry! What disturbing is in that?

Also, I will never understand people being ashamed to hang out underpants and such!

Every summer I see tons of underpants of my neigbors hanging from their balconies, I'm not talking about <span id="result_box" class="short_text" lang="en"><span class="hps">beggars</span><span>, or women</span> <span class="hps">of dubious morality.... but even class women simply hanging their bras or tangas out with no reason to be ashamed for that....
It's underpants, we all wear it, we  wash it and so we will hang it!
So unless you hang some sorts of weird stuff  like sex toys stuff   I don't see why one should be ashamed!
I think anyway that a simple principle reason!</span></span>

<span class="short_text" lang="en"><span class="hps">Everyone should be allowed to do anything he wants in his own property unless it gives damages to others and clothesline of course DO NOT!
Cheers</span></span>

<span class="short_text" lang="en"><span class="hps">
</span></span>

[this post was last edited: 2/19/2013-17:59]

kenmoreguy89++2-19-2013-15-31-45.jpg
 
Freddy:

"Also, I will never understand people being ashamed to hang out underpants and such!"

Well, in some instances, I can kind of see that.

I mean, if the 300-pound person next door favors thongs, I don't really wanna know.

I have three words for that situation: Indoor. Drying. Rack.
 
I have been ticketed for hanging my car mats over the fence to dry while I was washing my car in my space behind the townhouse.....

it was my fault, I did not read any of these restrictions......and its a matter of keeping things tidy, versus those who would go overboard with it.....

no window A/C units allowed.....central air only to be used....

garage door open only to get car in/out

no toys on lawn after 6pm

only vehicles registered to that home could park in the driveway....visitors must park in designated areas......2 blocks from my door.....

it can be a stupid rule.....but its meant to keep certain individuals inline....and we all have to pay a price for it......one bad apple can ruin it for others.....

but never again will I buy a home where they tell me everything that I must do, including paint colors for inside and outside the home....

but this follows the same rules

No shoes
No short
No service.........now if a hot hunk walks in without a shirt who would argue.....but thats not what you get...its always that beached whale who doesn't know that toothpaste and deodorant exist, is what you will have to put up with.....and ruin for the ones to be admired!....just to make sure that everyone is PC and treated equal.....

in essence, I am the one who is not allowed to be treated equal in view of Tom Seleck.....because some jackass doesn't bare arms to a bar of soap....or a gym!
 
Jeff:

I think you misunderstand me - even attractive people can over-share their private preferences. Really sexy lingerie belongs on an indoor rack even if you're Gisele Bundchen.

But there are combinations of clothing items and people that bring up images you'd just as soon not think about.
 
hanging "unmentionables"

My grandmother never had a dryer. She did her wash on Saturday and her clothelines were in her front yard. She would hang her "unmentionables" on a line that was in between two other lines that were hung with towels and sheets...no one could see what was on the middle line! I can't imagine living where clotheslines were prohibited. I live in a middle class neighorhood mainly consisting of 1950's ranch type houses and almost all of us use clotheslines of some sort....either the two T bars with three or four lines stretched tight between the bars or the umbrella type. I also have lines in my basement to use on dreary days. I use my dryer very, very little. If it's cotton, it gets line dried (including jeans).
 
I was there only about a year before we sold and went onto the next regular home out of the HOA areas.....this was 1986

I think the rules are still in place, if not worse by now.....and even the newer developments had some outlandish rules....but it kept a number of PITA/troublemaker neighbors in line....

this was only to make the area of TwinRivers seem to be something that it was not!....we were on the far outskirts of Princeton, NJ.....to anyone else we lived in Hightstown....to add a higher price tag....our address was East Windsor......big freakin deal.....then we moved to the other side of Route 130.....now were in the POSH area of West Windsor, still Hightstown zip code.....

this was just an area where they thought the world revolved around them!
 

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