Parks and off-leash dogs: Rules are broken everywhere

I just came back from a run at Robson Park (which is a designated non-off-leash park, i.e. if you want to walk your dog there you need to leash it) and what do I find? Two women with large dogs and one man with a tiny dog, all of them off-leash. There are plenty of signs in the park that advise the owners to pick up after their dogs AND LEASH THEM. Don’t get me wrong, I love dogs. I really do. But what I find annoying is breaking the rules.

There are several off-leash parks, why break the rules? So this only comes to confirm my thought that rules are broken everywhere. I am by no means a prude. But when we say that we live in a society that abides by the rules and then I walk out the door and first thing I see is someone breaking those rules, it just irks me.

At Beyond Robson, you can find a discussion on off-leash parks (although in this case, I think Degan was describing the exactly opposite situation, someone having a picnic at an off-leash park — in my case, I was running in a park where dogs must be leashed).

Related posts:

  1. Industrial parks in Richmond, BC
  2. National Canada’s Parks Day (July 17th)
  3. Raul’s rules of spring cleaning
  4. Social media faux pas? The evolution of etiquette, rules and norms in a Web 2.0 world
  5. Why do we need to monitor human behavior?

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