Jump to content

Dog Owners: A cautionary tale. The case of the non-walking dog walker


krustyloaf

Recommended Posts

Last Friday, I was working from home in my bedroom. I heard the dog walker come in and say hello to my dog. I heard him leave and lock up. About 15 minutes later I went into the living room. And lo, on the sofa was my wee dog, wagging away. But how could this be? I pay someone to walk my dog, I heard him in my house not 15 minutes previously saying hello to her. I noticed that he had however moved the lead to make it look like she had been walked. Isn?t he clever?

We couldn?t quite believe the cheek of it.


So come Monday, my partner did the same again and disgustingly so do he. Greets dog, moves lead, goes.


On Wednesday I came back from work early to speak to him. I asked how my dog had been on her walk on Monday, oh fine he said. And Friday? No problems at all. I asked whether he might want to rethink those answers in the knowledge that we had been in the house both days and know without a shadow of a doubt he did not walk our dog. He didn?t even take her out for a wee. He denied my claims. He insisted he had taken her out. He finally admitted to Monday as he?d had a problem with his car and ?thought he could get away with it?. That?s the number one competency I?m looking for in someone I trust with the most important thing in my life right there. The ability to get away with not doing the one thing I pay you for. Well he didn?t get away with it. At that point, every other thing he said was worth nothing.


I know the horror that you, dear dog owner and lover are now experiencing. Thinking about the betrayal of trust, the impact that this might have had on your dog, the money that you might have been defrauded out of, your poor poor dog. Despite it being a clear case of animal neglect and cruelty, the RSPCA aren?t interested but I know that many of you will be as the thought of this happening to your dog is too much to contemplate.


We?ve since had a letter from our ex-dog walker. Apparently our abuse of him led him to this. We asked him why our dog was clean (he said he ?thought about dirtying her up to get us off his back?!), we asked him to do walks at short notice (something freelancers will be aware of the need for), sometimes our requests inconvenienced him (then just say no, we weren't forcing you), we often checked his bill (it was occasionally incorrect, too much and too little) we didn?t get him a Christmas card (we don?t do Christmas cards), we didn?t pay him when he was on holiday (seriously folks??). It is almost like we were paying him for a service, isn?t it disgusting? Turns out that we might have been paying him for a service that he wasn?t providing?..on those two days that we have proof of at least.


Best not say any more but if you or your friends have Eric York or Eric Leach (he goes by both) walking your dog then I?d think about hiding in your bedroom too. It?s horrifying what you might find out.

I've seen Eric around, walking small groups of dogs, sitting on bench halfway up Cox's Walk having a fag, but not very often!

I have talked to him and he told me that he has no dog walkers insurance, and I've been left with the impression that he's not very professional. He has 2 small dogs himself but I've never seen him out with them and I'm out a lot with my dog and I walk everywhere.

Maybe those needing a dog walker have to check a bit more closely. And if my dog walker brought my dog back home clean I'd want to know why too!!!

  • 2 weeks later...

Fortunately there are some honest, trustworthy and reliable dog walkers. Although this account of your experience with one that isn't, I'm glad that you raised this on here so that any other people that may be being conned, will be able to rethink their options of who they can trust.


I will admit my only experience of this man was a negative one, but in this thread from 18 months ago, his work ethic was called into question! http://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/forum/read.php?6,947198,page=1

  • 4 weeks later...

Omg wtf ! I employed Eric to walk my dog for 1 year and upon reflection I used to come home to papers ripped up and toys destroyed and I bet he never took him out at all ;( he have me references and I checked those and he was glowingly reviewed . But maybe he didn't walk their dogs either .

Gutted to read this review ;(

  • 5 weeks later...
Oh hi Handyman Terry, or Stevie23b as you now call yourself. How nice of you to comment on my dog care issues when you didn't even have the professional courtesy to return any of my calls regarding your dodgy workmanship.

You just can't trust anyone these days! I would be totally gutted if it were my dogs. Can you imagine how much money he has conned out of people? Untrustworthy & dishonest people make my blood boil!

Good luck with finding someone new :) xx

Just saw this thread today - what a terrible experience! Your poor dog :-( If anyone is looking for a reliable dog walker - I second the recommendation above for Kamila. She has been walking our dogs for years and is totally trustworthy and highly recommended. Her number is 07971 141 197

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Discussions

    • Trossachs definitely have one! 
    • A A day-school for girls and a boarding school for boys (even with, by the late '90s, a tiny cadre of girls) are very different places.  Though there are some similarities. I think all schools, for instance, have similar "rules", much as they all nail up notices about "potential" and "achievement" and keeping to the left on the stairs. The private schools go a little further, banging on about "serving the public", as they have since they were set up (either to supply the colonies with District Commissioners, Brigadiers and Missionaries, or the provinces with railway engineers), so they've got the language and rituals down nicely. Which, i suppose, is what visitors and day-pupils expect, and are expected, to see. A boarding school, outside the cloistered hours of lesson-times, once the day-pupils and teaching staff have been sent packing, the gates and chapel safely locked and the brochures put away, becomes a much less ambassadorial place. That's largely because they're filled with several hundred bored, tired, self-supervised adolescents condemned to spend the night together in the flickering, dripping bowels of its ancient buildings, most of which were designed only to impress from the outside, the comfort of their occupants being secondary to the glory of whatever piratical benefactor had, in a last-ditch attempt to sway the judgement of their god, chucked a little of their ill-gotten at the alleged improvement of the better class of urchin. Those adolescents may, to the curious eyes of the outer world, seem privileged but, in that moment, they cannot access any outer world (at least pre-1996 or thereabouts). Their whole existence, for months at a time, takes place in uniformity behind those gates where money, should they have any to hand, cannot purchase better food or warmer clothing. In that peculiar world, there is no difference between the seventh son of a murderous sheikh, the darling child of a ball-bearing magnate, the umpteenth Viscount Smethwick, or the offspring of some hapless Foreign Office drone who's got themselves posted to Minsk. They are egalitarian, in that sense, but that's as far as it goes. In any place where rank and priviilege mean nothing, other measures will evolve, which is why even the best-intentioned of committees will, from time to time, spawn its cliques and launch heated disputes over archaic matters that, in any other context, would have long been forgotten. The same is true of the boarding school which, over the dismal centuries, has developed a certain culture all its own, with a language indended to pass all understanding and attitiudes and practices to match. This is unsurprising as every new intake will, being young and disoriented, eagerly mimic their seniors, and so also learn those words and attitudes and practices which, miserably or otherwise, will more accurately reflect the weight of history than the Guardian's style-guide and, to contemporary eyes and ears, seem outlandish, beastly and deplorably wicked. Which, of course, it all is. But however much we might regret it, and urge headteachers to get up on Sundays and preach about how we should all be tolerant, not kill anyone unnecessarily, and take pity on the oiks, it won't make the blindest bit of difference. William Golding may, according to psychologists, have overstated his case but I doubt that many 20th Century boarders would agree with them. Instead, they might look to Shakespeare, who cheerfully exploits differences of sex and race and belief and ability to arm his bullies, murderers, fraudsters and tyrants and remains celebrated to this day,  Admittedly, this is mostly opinion, borne only of my own regrettable experience and, because I had that experience and heard those words (though, being naive and small-townish, i didn't understand them till much later) and saw and suffered a heap of brutishness*, that might make my opinion both unfair and biased.  If so, then I can only say it's the least that those institutions deserve. Sure, the schools themselves don't willingly foster that culture, which is wholly contrary to everything in the brochures, but there's not much they can do about it without posting staff permanently in corridors and dormitories and washrooms, which would, I'd suggest, create a whole other set of problems, not least financial. So, like any other business, they take care of the money and keep aloof from the rest. That, to my mind, is the problem. They've turned something into a business that really shouldn't be a business. Education is one thing, raising a child is another, and limited-liability corporations, however charitable, tend not to make the best parents. And so, in retrospect, I'm inclined not to blame the students either (though, for years after, I eagerly read the my Old School magazine, my heart doing a little dance at every black-edged announcement of a yachting tragedy, avalanche or coup). They get chucked into this swamp where they have to learn to fend for themselves and so many, naturally, will behave like predators in an attempt to fit in. Not all, certainly. Some will keep their heads down and hope not to be noticed while others, if they have a particular talent, might find that it protects them. But that leaves more than enough to keep the toxic culture alive, and it is no surprise at all that when they emerge they appear damaged to the outside world. For that's exactly what they are. They might, and sometimes do, improve once returned to the normal stream of life if given time and support, and that's good. But the damage lasts, all the same, and isn't a reason to vote for them. * Not, if it helps to disappoint any lawyers, at Dulwich, though there's nothing in the allegations that I didn't instantly recognise, 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...