blackcob
🖖
I've just been subjected to a slanging match for 'ruining' someone's driveway, called 'a child with an attitude problem' and have been threatened with damage to my car. Your input would be appreciated...
Here's the setup. Myself and two other ladies are on DIY livery at the stables marked there. There's a small paddock behind but the alternate paddock, currently in use, is half a mile down the main road. It's a very small yard, three horses, four stables, tack room and a concrete pad. The owner has another much larger yard further down the road with a car park. The other two ladies live very close by in the village - one almost never drives over, except to bring bedding, and the other for some reason drives over all the time despite living literally next door.
At the start of every winter we are asked not to drive on the driveway to the stables wherever possible to try and preserve the surface (it's just packed hardcore, not tarmac, and gets the odd puddle). Apparently the people in the houses don't like it getting muddy. Fine, whatever - but obviously we have to use it occasionally to drive in bedding, feed and to receive hay deliveries. Also, when the horses are out in the other paddock we have to drive down to fill up water containers as the field doesn't have a supply. The alternative parking (the main road) is too far to carry things that heavy.
The YO mentioned it again to me last week as he'd had complaints that I was 'reversing in house #2's driveway', which is impossible as it is gated off but yes, I had driven down to the yard gate several times last week as I'd made a trip with bedding, a trip with bags of feed and my hay supplier had come down with ten bales of hay.
I drove down again this morning as I'd put my horse out in the alternate paddock and needed to fill up a water container to take out there. As I was getting back into the car I was accosted by the people in both houses (I use the word 'accosted' because they were very verbally hostile and, I think, if I hadn't had the dog in front of me one of them would have come and jabbed her finger in my chest, such was her ire
) who told me to stop reversing in their drives.
I pointed out that I hadn't, and in fact couldn't, as they were gated off, but that I needed to drive up and down the yard driveway to get to my horse. Both of them went off on one, including the phrases used above, and I eventually told them I wouldn't be engaging with them further after the 'attitude problem' comment - I felt I had been entirely reasonable in my responses up until that point but was not going to sit around and be called names.
I won't start too much on what a bunch of overprivileged middle class nothing-better-to-do types they presented themselves as today but you get my drift. I notice that they haven't picked on the other people who drive down there, only me - very young, with a very ratty car, who doesn't live in the village. But that's just me being cynical. Right?
I've left a message for the YO but any input from you guys would be appreciated before I have to go down this evening (I have run out of shavings so will have to drive down again, and I will have to be prepared for further confrontation it seems).
Here's the setup. Myself and two other ladies are on DIY livery at the stables marked there. There's a small paddock behind but the alternate paddock, currently in use, is half a mile down the main road. It's a very small yard, three horses, four stables, tack room and a concrete pad. The owner has another much larger yard further down the road with a car park. The other two ladies live very close by in the village - one almost never drives over, except to bring bedding, and the other for some reason drives over all the time despite living literally next door.
At the start of every winter we are asked not to drive on the driveway to the stables wherever possible to try and preserve the surface (it's just packed hardcore, not tarmac, and gets the odd puddle). Apparently the people in the houses don't like it getting muddy. Fine, whatever - but obviously we have to use it occasionally to drive in bedding, feed and to receive hay deliveries. Also, when the horses are out in the other paddock we have to drive down to fill up water containers as the field doesn't have a supply. The alternative parking (the main road) is too far to carry things that heavy.
The YO mentioned it again to me last week as he'd had complaints that I was 'reversing in house #2's driveway', which is impossible as it is gated off but yes, I had driven down to the yard gate several times last week as I'd made a trip with bedding, a trip with bags of feed and my hay supplier had come down with ten bales of hay.
I drove down again this morning as I'd put my horse out in the alternate paddock and needed to fill up a water container to take out there. As I was getting back into the car I was accosted by the people in both houses (I use the word 'accosted' because they were very verbally hostile and, I think, if I hadn't had the dog in front of me one of them would have come and jabbed her finger in my chest, such was her ire
I pointed out that I hadn't, and in fact couldn't, as they were gated off, but that I needed to drive up and down the yard driveway to get to my horse. Both of them went off on one, including the phrases used above, and I eventually told them I wouldn't be engaging with them further after the 'attitude problem' comment - I felt I had been entirely reasonable in my responses up until that point but was not going to sit around and be called names.
I won't start too much on what a bunch of overprivileged middle class nothing-better-to-do types they presented themselves as today but you get my drift. I notice that they haven't picked on the other people who drive down there, only me - very young, with a very ratty car, who doesn't live in the village. But that's just me being cynical. Right?
I've left a message for the YO but any input from you guys would be appreciated before I have to go down this evening (I have run out of shavings so will have to drive down again, and I will have to be prepared for further confrontation it seems).