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There is a distressed dog in a back garden accessible via side return on the upper end of Oakhurst Grove. 

He barks for most of the day. First noticed several months ago and then stopped. Has started again over the last couple of weeks.

 

Last time, myself and several neighbours and passers-by went back to him and gave him water and food. He was on his own in the back garden. House was empty. 
 

Does anyone know what’s going on?  
 

Any advice?

  • Sad 3

Hey, know exactly the doggo you are talking about. We live v close. I work remotely and have been noticing this for months - as have my neighbours - it happens a couple times a day and I feel so sorry for it.  I looked at the RSPCA website and the first route is to speak to the council, noting it as a "noise complaint", so we did this today. The council won't escalate as the barrier for dog's barking being a "problem" is very high, thus we're a bit stuck.  The only way it can be escalated (I would think) is lots of people repeatedly noting with the council and/or video evidence, and then if they don't act we try the RSPCA again (perhaps).

  • Thanks 1

Must be someone  who can help - never heard that RSPCA would not come out for a dog in distress and even worse that from what I have read or gathered this has been going one for abit… guess it is a question  of passing the buck and I thought ED were a dog friendly community. Surely one of you who have commented could have asked for advice from vet in Lordship Lane or even picked up the phone and called them…

  • Agree 3

OK. I will try RSPCA again. And write to the Council. It’s difficult to intervene with a dog on private property. 

@beansprout - Rolling your eyes at people who are aware of a problem and trying to figure out what to do about it is not very helpful. You can of course phone the vet, council, rspca yourself if you think you can sort it. 

  • Agree 1

If it is the dog I am thinking of… I live very close by and have spoken to the owners of the dog before. She has separation anxiety so she acts like this when the family are away for the day. It pains me to hear her go on all day and I’ve not been sure what to do as she sounds like she is in distress the whole time. Also, the dog doesn’t technically belong to them (she belongs to a relative of theirs) and they only have the dog some of the time which is why you don’t hear her for weeks at a time. They leave her outside all day when the weather is nice and inside when it isn’t. 

20 hours ago, Ohhey said:

She has separation anxiety so she acts like this when the family are away for the day. It pains me to hear her go on all day and I’ve not been sure what to do as she sounds like she is in distress the whole time. Also, the dog doesn’t technically belong to them (she belongs to a relative of theirs) and they only have the dog some of the time which is why you don’t hear her for weeks at a time. They leave her outside all day when the weather is nice and inside when it isn’t. 

If this is the dog in question then it seems that the dog isn't being mistreated as such, but that it suffers from a separation anxiety - this isn't uncommon. Being left outside in good weather isn't cruel, and maybe is more interesting for the dog than being incarcerated. So long as those caring for it know that, and are doing what they can to mitigate it, I don't think it's something that 'the authorities' need be disturbed about.

The noise is clearly annoying, of course, but additional worries about mistreatment (cruelty) can be set aside.

That's purely speculation Penguin. You don't get to judge that "worries about mistreatment can be set aside" because you don't know the facts. 

The poster said they've spoken to the owners, who are not technically the owners but only part time owners, and that they leave the dog alone all day, knowing he has separation issues.

If the dog is shut outside all day - it can be fine if they are given shelter and water. Is that the case? It doesn't appear to be.

If the dog is shut in all day - can the neighbours hear it? is it only stressed when outside? It needs looking into.

 

 

 

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  • 3 weeks later...
On 30/03/2025 at 15:32, Ohhey said:

If it is the dog I am thinking of… I live very close by and have spoken to the owners of the dog before. She has separation anxiety so she acts like this when the family are away for the day. It pains me to hear her go on all day and I’ve not been sure what to do as she sounds like she is in distress the whole time. Also, the dog doesn’t technically belong to them (she belongs to a relative of theirs) and they only have the dog some of the time which is why you don’t hear her for weeks at a time. They leave her outside all day when the weather is nice and inside when it isn’t. 

Thanks. This is helpful background. Honestly, I think the dog is being mistreated. He needs company to be calm and he’s not getting it. Not easy situation for them but the owners need a better solution. 
 

but, not sure this is enough for NSPCA

  • Agree 1
  • 3 months later...

I am not sure if anyone follows this thread, but if you do, you'll know this is still happening, almost daily for at least an hour a day Sometimes in the rain, sometimes in the boiling heat.   We're on about 2 hours today 😞 

It appears to be the same(ish) time each day, mid-afternoon. The only way to get help is to consistently call the Council when it is happening.  It does not meet the threshold for RSPCA intervention (even though the noise suggests the dog's needs are clearly not being met if it is barking in distress for an hour) according to the RSPCA's website. So, if you want to help the dog, in short, you have to go down the Council route (and it needs more than one person raising the alarm).  Even if it is filed under a noice complaint, you're (hopefully) helping the dog because the Council will investigate. If you find it distressing, here is the Council's number/email: https://www.southwark.gov.uk/public-health-and-safety/community-safety/noise-and-nuisance/contact-us-about-noise-or-nuisances

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