I got new neighbors who thought I was the guy in the last story! I took in a dog that lived next door to me when his owners moved (a story for another day). That dog had lived there his whole 12 years, often tied to the tree in the yard with a long cable because he was an escape artist. Even when he wasn't tied, that tree provided shade, and protection from rain and snow. New owners came and started to cut that tree because it was starting to lean and would have soon pulled out of the ground. I understood, but I went to ask for a slice of the tree thinking they might say no because they wanted to use it for firewood. I introduced myself with tears starting in my eyes because I'm a sentimental old fool, and said this had been "my boy's tree" for so long and.... They looked panicked and explained quickly the danger. I realized what they thought and got to my request. They were relieved, I was relieved, I cried, and they cut a beautiful slice of the tree for me to put his urn on when I lost him 4 years later. (FYI: My boy, a Chow mix, lived outside one more year in a carefully built, escape-proof enclosure with partial cover, a house, a cement pad, mulch and 2 trees. He also got to run around the big yard in the grass with me when I was home. After that he lived inside with me. He adapted amazingly well.)
Such a sweet story, thank you for sharing it with us. Sounds like your little buddy got his dog years towards the end of his tenure, I'm glad he can sleep now with his favorite tree
One house I used to own my husband built me a huge raised garden box in the front yard. It came with its own sprinkler as well. I planted a lot of vegetables in that box. Unfortunately due to employment we had to sell the house and move. I was recently in the area and decided to drive by my old house. The garden is gone. I’m sad but it’s not my house anymore.
I can understand what Todd was feeling. My disabled father helped me plant an oak tree in our front yard a couple of years before he passed. Several years later, after the tree was a good 20-25' tall and my mom had sold the house, I noticed it was gone. It was sad, but thats how it goes.
My in-laws were worse than Todd. After the sold there house and spent thirty days renting it from the new owners. The in-laws removed most of the appliances. Refrigerator, washer, dryer, brick in mantle, chandler, drapes, oak medicine cabinet, oak toilet paper holders, oak outlet covers and oak toilet seats. Outside the rose bushes, tomato plants from garden and cupola with weather vane from top of garage. The rest is a long story.
Lipstick story: Wow, talk about living a sheltered life! Yeah, she NEEDS an escort anytime she's out. Fuel story: Yeah, gauges get faulty and you have to check manually. He was rather stupid for not actually looking once OP had. Todd story: Yeah, property ownership doesn't work like that Todd. When you sell real estate, ALL the property goes with it and the new owners get to decide whether they want to keep something, get rid of it or make changes to it.
If you install, plant something onto, into your house it becomes part of the house/property. If you sell said property it is not yours anymore. The new owner(s) can di with it what they please unless it is in the selling contract. Case in point: if you buy a ceiling fan it is yours BUT when it is installed it is then part of the house. When you sell the house and want those fans to go with you it has to be agreed upon by you AND the buyer. That is law. Bought in store it is your personal property. Once installed it is real property. I learned it on active duty in one of my classes for my job/MOS. I was reminded of it as a civilian in a Tort Law class I had to take.
Yes and no. If not specifically addressed then yes. However you can exclude or include anything contractually as you know. The funniest thing I've seen is a pond and as part of the contract it had to be maintained and kept in place for (as I recall) 15 years. It had changed hands twice by the time a friend brought the house and the same thing was included in his contract (with a countdown from the original date). Still had fish in it from the original owner
The lipstick story: What a sweet/creepy story. I feel so badly for the lady, not many people can empathize with her. How often does an ultra wealthy person get out and see what the “real world,” is all about. OP and her friend had to have been terrified at first, but very sweet in the end. It would be really cool if they became friends and hung around together, OP could teach her a ton.
WHILE "KARENS" AND "KENS" DO IN FACT STALK THE WILDS, ONE MUST ALWAYS KEEP THEIR EYES PEELED FOR THE RANDOM "TODDS" AND "BRITTANYS" OF THE WORLD...THEY ARE SAVAGE....😂😂😂😂😂
Lipstick stalker story- Im pretty sure that lady just stole that lipstick if she followed OP down with payment in full. Especially if she has never shopped on her own before...
I sold my old home where we had lived for all my children's lives. My daughter 2.0 rents the house now . The new owner has made many alterations since . I don't like what has been done. So I stay well away from it.
Story #1: I would have given her my full name, number, address, and told her my salary will be 15£. I'm her assistant, and we'd work out a schedule, but she wasn't to go out alone anymore. I'd accompany her from now on. Too scary on both sides.
I got new neighbors who thought I was the guy in the last story! I took in a dog that lived next door to me when his owners moved (a story for another day). That dog had lived there his whole 12 years, often tied to the tree in the yard with a long cable because he was an escape artist. Even when he wasn't tied, that tree provided shade, and protection from rain and snow. New owners came and started to cut that tree because it was starting to lean and would have soon pulled out of the ground. I understood, but I went to ask for a slice of the tree thinking they might say no because they wanted to use it for firewood. I introduced myself with tears starting in my eyes because I'm a sentimental old fool, and said this had been "my boy's tree" for so long and.... They looked panicked and explained quickly the danger. I realized what they thought and got to my request. They were relieved, I was relieved, I cried, and they cut a beautiful slice of the tree for me to put his urn on when I lost him 4 years later.
(FYI: My boy, a Chow mix, lived outside one more year in a carefully built, escape-proof enclosure with partial cover, a house, a cement pad, mulch and 2 trees. He also got to run around the big yard in the grass with me when I was home. After that he lived inside with me. He adapted amazingly well.)
Such a sweet story, thank you for sharing it with us. Sounds like your little buddy got his dog years towards the end of his tenure, I'm glad he can sleep now with his favorite tree
One house I used to own my husband built me a huge raised garden box in the front yard. It came with its own sprinkler as well. I planted a lot of vegetables in that box. Unfortunately due to employment we had to sell the house and move. I was recently in the area and decided to drive by my old house. The garden is gone. I’m sad but it’s not my house anymore.
That old lady story is a little bizarre, but kinda wholesome. It's certainly not "entitled". Eccentric, but not entitled.
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
I can understand what Todd was feeling. My disabled father helped me plant an oak tree in our front yard a couple of years before he passed. Several years later, after the tree was a good 20-25' tall and my mom had sold the house, I noticed it was gone. It was sad, but thats how it goes.
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
My in-laws were worse than Todd. After the sold there house and spent thirty days renting it from the new owners. The in-laws removed most of the appliances. Refrigerator, washer, dryer, brick in mantle, chandler, drapes, oak medicine cabinet, oak toilet paper holders, oak outlet covers and oak toilet seats. Outside the rose bushes, tomato plants from garden and cupola with weather vane from top of garage. The rest is a long story.
Oh, my!! 🤦🙄🤷🤔
Good afternoon everyone and RedWheel 😊
Hope everyone had a great weekend 😊
Hello RedWheel hope you are well. Thanks for sharing. Please stay safe.🏴😁😷👍. May the rest of January be amazing for everyone
Lipstick story: Wow, talk about living a sheltered life! Yeah, she NEEDS an escort anytime she's out.
Fuel story: Yeah, gauges get faulty and you have to check manually. He was rather stupid for not actually looking once OP had.
Todd story: Yeah, property ownership doesn't work like that Todd. When you sell real estate, ALL the property goes with it and the new owners get to decide whether they want to keep something, get rid of it or make changes to it.
The foot steps & then the giggling would scare anyone
Hello from Poland Redwheel and everyone!!!
😊 hello from New Orleans la
If you install, plant something onto, into your house it becomes part of the house/property. If you sell said property it is not yours anymore. The new owner(s) can di with it what they please unless it is in the selling contract.
Case in point: if you buy a ceiling fan it is yours BUT when it is installed it is then part of the house. When you sell the house and want those fans to go with you it has to be agreed upon by you AND the buyer. That is law.
Bought in store it is your personal property. Once installed it is real property. I learned it on active duty in one of my classes for my job/MOS. I was reminded of it as a civilian in a Tort Law class I had to take.
Yes and no. If not specifically addressed then yes. However you can exclude or include anything contractually as you know.
The funniest thing I've seen is a pond and as part of the contract it had to be maintained and kept in place for (as I recall) 15 years. It had changed hands twice by the time a friend brought the house and the same thing was included in his contract (with a countdown from the original date). Still had fish in it from the original owner
Starting out the week right, got #1. Redwheel and friends have a great week. Go Detroit Lions! ❤
*Comment & a Like* 😂 ❤
The lipstick story:
What a sweet/creepy story. I feel so badly for the lady, not many people can empathize with her. How often does an ultra wealthy person get out and see what the “real world,” is all about. OP and her friend had to have been terrified at first, but very sweet in the end.
It would be really cool if they became friends and hung around together, OP could teach her a ton.
Last story: Welllllllllllll . .. hopefully Todd enjoyed having his tree back!!!!
I love how you put that inflection on "Oh, ya think?"
WHILE "KARENS" AND "KENS" DO IN FACT STALK THE WILDS, ONE MUST ALWAYS KEEP THEIR EYES PEELED FOR THE RANDOM
"TODDS" AND "BRITTANYS" OF THE WORLD...THEY ARE SAVAGE....😂😂😂😂😂
Lipstick stalker story- Im pretty sure that lady just stole that lipstick if she followed OP down with payment in full. Especially if she has never shopped on her own before...
OP said she saw her paying as she left.
And she was trying to give her her commission.
@@ninaappelt9001 But that's not how that works. That's just a tip at that point.
I sold my old home where we had lived for all my children's lives. My daughter 2.0 rents the house now . The new owner has made many alterations since . I don't like what has been done. So I stay well away from it.
Fuel story: I think this guy's sole brain cell died of loneliness. 😂
Nah, diesel fumes got him
Not Todd, THE Todd 😂😂
Redwheel!!! You don't need clickbait titles to get views, com on man!!
Your description of the video about a "Karen tormenting a family" was click bait
Fuel spill story I don't believe if in USA. HAZMAT would have to be notified of the spill and fueler would be in trouble
I think the fueler was just blind if he assumed that it was not full.
The OP acknowledged that the tank was full.
@@DigitalCowboy000 I know that, what I'm saying is that the one who kept stating that it wasn't completely full was either deaf or stupid....
Clearly you failed to observe that the story was set in Australia, not the USA. Says so at 5:22.
@@jcorbett9620 I know where the story takes place, but I wasn't going by that.
Sorry I'm late, company again! Great stories! Thanks for sharing! You have a great rest of your day! I'll catch you again in the morning!
👋💜🤗💜✌️
Story #1: I would have given her my full name, number, address, and told her my salary will be 15£. I'm her assistant, and we'd work out a schedule, but she wasn't to go out alone anymore. I'd accompany her from now on. Too scary on both sides.
" They love the taste of trespassers "... 🐕🦺🐕🦺🐕🦺...🤣🤣