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I have just found and picked up a very skinny black and white cat around Underhill road area by the fish and chip shop/hair academy and was wondering if anyone may recognise them here. I have spotted the lost posters of a cat around Forest Hill Road and have had a lady also mention on our way back home how the cat looks like that one. We can no longer find these posters however so perhaps this is not the same cat. I have left a voicemail on the number from the poster though (has a spare with us to locate the number) just in case.


Please contact if you have any idea who may own this cat. We will be scanning for a microchip and will contact Celia Hammond for advice in the mean time.20220810_195457.thumb.jpg.3a98c17568e1258c07c190ea62c94315.jpg

  • 2 weeks later...

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    • Link to petition if anyone would like to object: Londis Off-License Petition https://chng.it/9X4DwTDRdW
    • He did mention it's share of freehold, I’d be very cautious with that. It can turn into a nightmare if relationships with neighbours break down. My brother had a share of freehold in a flat in West Hampstead, and when he needed to sell, the neighbour refused to sign the transfer of the freehold. What followed was over two years of legal battles, spiralling costs and constant stress. He lost several potential buyers, and the whole sale fell through just as he got a job offer in another city. It was a complete disaster. The neighbour was stubborn and uncooperative, doing everything they could to delay the process. It ended in legal deadlock, and there was very little anyone could do without their cooperation. At that point, the TA6 form becomes the least of your worries; it’s the TR1 form that matters. Without the other freeholder’s signature on that, you’re stuck. After seeing what my brother went through, I’d never touch a share of freehold again. When things go wrong, they can go really wrong. If you have a share of freehold, you need a respectful and reasonable relationship with the others involved; otherwise, it can be costly, stressful and exhausting. Sounds like these neighbours can’t be reasoned with. There’s really no coming back from something like this unless they genuinely apologise and replace the trees and plants they ruined. One small consolation is that people who behave like this are usually miserable behind closed doors. If they were truly happy, they’d just get on with their lives instead of trying to make other people’s lives difficult. And the irony is, they’re being incredibly short-sighted. This kind of behaviour almost always backfires.  
    • I had some time with him recently at the local neighbourhood forum and actually was pretty impressed by him, I think he's come a long way.
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