Coming Soon đ At the beginning of April, youâll be
introduced to a brand-new GoComics! See more information here. Subscribers, check your
email for more details.
Iâve got a John Deere lawn tractor perched atop a large rock. That would really tick off any HOA. I have a big yard and it is off to the far side of my driveway. Iâve had many compliments âŠ..someone even tried to steal it this Spring, only to find out it doesnât roll and it doesnât steer. Joke was on them!
I live not far from where Richard Thompson did.(and where he placed the Cul de Sac neighborhood.) In many of the developments around here, there are artifacts of older neighborhoodsâ farmhouses, old stores or churches, remnants of centuries old roads, etcâ that get enveloped by new housing.
And sometimes, those older homes are still occupied by descendants of the same families that lived there for generations. Iâm betting that Dillâs family is one of those.
In many ways, those âheritageâ families adhere to older laws. Running through a nearby development, we had a dirt road that the home owners on either side wanted paved, but the county wouldnât because the owner of the remnant property in the middle actually owned the road bed. He didnât want any paving done because, he said, putting in curbs would alter the drainage.
So the dirt road existed there for almost 20 years. You could drive down smooth paving, bump down onto the dirt road for the distance of maybe 200 yards, then bump back up onto smooth paving again.
(Eventually, the heritage homeowner died, his kids sold the property and the road got paved.)
My own suburban neighborhood is so old it doesnât have an HOA. We do have county zoning ordinances to follow, and those are mostly enforced by a division of the local sheriffâs department. You canât park trailers or boats in front of your house, for example, and no parking of cars on the grass. My husband ran foul of that ordinance when he decided to weld our mail box to his old Datsun station wagon and park it in the grass beside the driveway entrance. Itâs a car, the enforcer argued. Itâs a mailbox stand, hubby said. They went back and forth until hubby argued, whatâs the difference between it and the guyâs mailbox stand down the street? Heâs got his mailbox welded to a pot belly stove. Hubby won. We had that car as a mailbox stand for almost a year, until someone made an offer to buy the station wagon that hubby couldnât refuse.
My front yard, and my back yard for that matter, get visited by the DC inspectors regularly. Seems âexcessive vegetation entire propertyâ is a no-no. Then they found out it was all trees and gave up.
C over 1 year ago
A good reaction to the Harpies On Alert association
mccollunsky over 1 year ago
Dilâs family has the power.
momofalex7 over 1 year ago
Never argue with the owner of a trebuchet.
su43dipta over 1 year ago
Whatâs a lawn gnome adorned with feathers? A gnome-de-plume!
su43dipta over 1 year ago
Since the trebuchet is conveniently parked on the driveway, not the lawn, it can be passed off as a conveyance.
win.45mag over 1 year ago
toucheâ to the trebuchet
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member over 1 year ago
The doormatâs not on the lawn. Fight them all the way to the Supreme Court.
Cpeckbourlioux over 1 year ago
So thatâs a yes to the gnome.
Johnnie Polo Premium Member over 1 year ago
Adjudication is a fantastic word for a preschooler.
Hamady Sack Premium Member over 1 year ago
So funny!
Egrayjames over 1 year ago
Iâve got a John Deere lawn tractor perched atop a large rock. That would really tick off any HOA. I have a big yard and it is off to the far side of my driveway. Iâve had many compliments âŠ..someone even tried to steal it this Spring, only to find out it doesnât roll and it doesnât steer. Joke was on them!
basspro over 1 year ago
Nice I think I can hear the âGoofy Yellâ from here.
Zebrastripes over 1 year ago
The guy before him hasnât been found yetâŠ.
well-i-never over 1 year ago
Dillâs happy with the memory that it wasnât him.
Huckleberry Hiroshima Premium Member over 1 year ago
I want to live with Dillâs family.
ChessPirate over 1 year ago
Brother One: âIncoming!â
Brother Two: âOutgoing!â
fritzoid Premium Member over 1 year ago
I would have thought Marcusâs mother would have installed a bronze historical marker reading âChildhood Home of Marcus.â
stamps over 1 year ago
And thatâs the way to deal with an HOA.
Just So So Premium Member over 1 year ago
Wish I had a trebuchet when I lived in an HOA.
rhpii over 1 year ago
If you would just stick to dog made lawn objects no one would trespass.
PoodleGroomer over 1 year ago
They lured him into the trebuchet with house color sample chips that were against HOA code.
oish over 1 year ago
Reminds me of the Pink Floyd Dingo tune âWe donât need no Adjudication ⊠all in all itâs just some kitsch on the lawnâ
Cozmik Cowboy over 1 year ago
And so it should be with all HOA petty Fascists!
ellisaana Premium Member over 1 year ago
I live not far from where Richard Thompson did.(and where he placed the Cul de Sac neighborhood.) In many of the developments around here, there are artifacts of older neighborhoodsâ farmhouses, old stores or churches, remnants of centuries old roads, etcâ that get enveloped by new housing.
And sometimes, those older homes are still occupied by descendants of the same families that lived there for generations. Iâm betting that Dillâs family is one of those.
In many ways, those âheritageâ families adhere to older laws. Running through a nearby development, we had a dirt road that the home owners on either side wanted paved, but the county wouldnât because the owner of the remnant property in the middle actually owned the road bed. He didnât want any paving done because, he said, putting in curbs would alter the drainage.
So the dirt road existed there for almost 20 years. You could drive down smooth paving, bump down onto the dirt road for the distance of maybe 200 yards, then bump back up onto smooth paving again.
(Eventually, the heritage homeowner died, his kids sold the property and the road got paved.)
ellisaana Premium Member over 1 year ago
My own suburban neighborhood is so old it doesnât have an HOA. We do have county zoning ordinances to follow, and those are mostly enforced by a division of the local sheriffâs department. You canât park trailers or boats in front of your house, for example, and no parking of cars on the grass. My husband ran foul of that ordinance when he decided to weld our mail box to his old Datsun station wagon and park it in the grass beside the driveway entrance. Itâs a car, the enforcer argued. Itâs a mailbox stand, hubby said. They went back and forth until hubby argued, whatâs the difference between it and the guyâs mailbox stand down the street? Heâs got his mailbox welded to a pot belly stove. Hubby won. We had that car as a mailbox stand for almost a year, until someone made an offer to buy the station wagon that hubby couldnât refuse.
GKBOWOOD Premium Member over 1 year ago
Dillâs front yard looks like the one across the street (minus the trebuchet) from me!
ars731 over 1 year ago
Lol, bet the HOA never tried that again
norphos over 1 year ago
HOAs are such @nal retentive control freaks.
WCraft Premium Member over 1 year ago
Too bad Mr. Thompson is gone. I think a Dill family spin-off wouldâve been just as interesting
crazeekatlady over 1 year ago
My front yard, and my back yard for that matter, get visited by the DC inspectors regularly. Seems âexcessive vegetation entire propertyâ is a no-no. Then they found out it was all trees and gave up.
suelou over 1 year ago
A strip I really LOVED!!âŠthough not till the last panel!
Sisyphos over 1 year ago
See? The Wedekind Brothersâ Trebuchet does serve a useful purpose sometime! Overly restrictive HOAs must be opposed!
banjoAhhh! over 1 year ago
The last guyâs lot sorta of reminds me of where I grew up (no rules). There were a lot of Fords up on cinder blocks as yard decorations.
baraktorvan 6 months ago