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Double stan-turd! Dogs owners must scoop poop, while the horsey set can ride on

The Brooklyn Paper

This stinks.

The shortcomings of the city’s pooper scooper law fester on display in Kensington and Prospect Park, where the common sight of horses and their waste has forced Brooklynities to improvise solutions to clear the air and keep the peace among neighbors.

The decades-old city law mandating pet owners to remove excrement from sidewalks applies to dogs and dogs alone, according to the Sanitation Department.

Some people call that a double standard, yet for the most part, it works.

Except in Kensington — the horseback riding capital of Brooklyn — where an imperfect agreement has evolved among the stable owner, neighborhood groups, the city and officials in Prospect Park to tackle the nostril-infiltrating, eye-popping scourge of horse manure.

The responsibility falls to the barn hands of Kensington Stables, on Caton Place, to troll the streets and sweep away the evidence of the steeds.

The stables has accepted this chore to be a good neighbor, though, technically it’s the city’s obligation.

“Generally, the barn hands pick up around the neighborhood,” said Walker Blankenship, president of the Kensington Stables. “I have made it a general policy to handle this. We don’t make a stink out of it.” (It does appear that the pun was intended.)

But the cleanup is not handled immediately, as dog owners are required by law. Worse, it takes hours — or more — before the volunteer cleaning crew arrives at the scene of the un-crime, creating a physical obstacle for pedestrians and a wafting wall of partly digested hay, oats and the occasional carrot for everyone nearby.

“It smells like a toilet,” complained Julia Cooper, inside Prospect Park, where nags trot. “It smells so bad, you’re always turning your head.”

On top of the team from the stables, the city’s Parks and Recreation Department says its maintenance crews are deployed for doody duty when waste collects inside Prospect Park.

Outside the greensward, the Sanitation Department says any remnants would be eliminated during normally scheduled street sweeping patrols

“If there is manure on the streets, we’ll hit it with a mechanical broom,” said Matt LiPani, a spokesman.

Despite the best efforts of Blankenship’s troops and roving city workers, the urban landscape on Kensington’s quiet blocks is still littered with equine effluent. But it’s not as bad as it was before the stables agreed to clean up the stink bombs.

“Sometimes it gets out of hand [pun perhaps intended], but we haven’t had any complaints in over a year and a half,” said Randy Peers, chairman of Community Board 7.

But the apparent double standard still forces canine owners to curb their pets, while horseback riders can gallop into the sunset without getting their hands dirty.

And that really stinks, some said.

“My friend walks her dog and she has to clean up after it. Why don’t they?” scowled Frida, a Park Slope resident who declined to give her last name.

Blankenship said it’s impractical to expect equestrians to get down off their high horses and bag the refuse.

“It’s just not feasible for riders to pick up horse manure,” said Blankenship. “Many of our riders are beginners and it’s not easy to get off and on.”

Reader Feedback

none from Poop Slope says:
What dog owners clean up. Not in Poop Slope

http://poopslope.blogspot.com/
July 9, 2009, 7:23 am
Sara from Park Slope says:
So let me get this straight....
You prefer Dog owners not have to pick up their dog poo.
It's bad enough it's scraped all over the sidewalk.
And don't even get me started on the smells that are starting to linger in the air now that summer has arrived from said dog poop.
Not to mention I have to walk looking down as to avoid the potential land mine a dog may have left.
Come on guys pick up after your dogs.
Or if you prefer not to like the horses, well then we are in for a serious —— show.
July 9, 2009, 12:32 pm
Eric McClure from Park Slope says:
Complains about horse manure are just one more chapter in a long line of Park Slope-area non-issues.

Horse manure, as Mike McLaughlin correctly notes, is mostly hay, oats, the occasional carrot, and grass. It certainly doesn't smell very bad out in the open air on a bridle path. And it's highly sought after by organic gardeners for composting.

Dog manure, on the other hand, can contain pathogens and other harmful things, because dogs eat meat (or what passes for it in commercial dog foods). That's the reason one doesn't spread dog poop on one's garden.

It seems to me that the folks at Kensington Stables are pretty conscientious about trying to clean up, and the presence of horses in Prospect Park certainly adds greatly to the park's ambience, even at the expense of the occasional pile of road apples (there's one euphemism you missed, Mike.)

Ride on, horses.
July 9, 2009, 1:59 pm
Emily from Park Slope says:
Dog feces and horse manure are vastly different!
Dogs are carnivores, horses are herbivores. Horse manure is primarily undigestable bits of hay and grain which quickly breaks down. Dog feces is riddled with bacteria. Further, horse manure is so nontoxic that you can put it directly onto your garden, with no worries. The same cannot be said about dog feces. Also, look at the number of dogs vs. horses in Brooklyn. If dog owners did not clean up after their dogs, the City would be awash in their feces. Meanwhile I only see a pile of horse droppings on the trail in Prospect Park every so often. Finally, as a displaced countrybumpkin, I get happy when I see horse manure. I like the smell and it reminds me of my farmy background. Dog feces makes me think someone (like, a person) did their business on the street.
July 9, 2009, 2:13 pm
Kelly from Park Slope says:
Interesting about the differences, Eric and Emily. I didn't know that.
July 10, 2009, 9:51 am
B from B says:
Maybe they should advertise

PICK YOUR OWN

FREE horse manure for gardeners.

What does Kensington Stables do with it anyway?
July 10, 2009, 10:07 am
Dave from Park Slope says:
I recently saw some riders in Prospect Park allowing their horses to drink directly from one of the water fountains on the loop. Anyone have any information on how horse saliva is good for humans?
July 10, 2009, 11:03 am
MatvanGuilder from Marine Park says:
It's similar to people who want to live "in the country" and then want to get rid of all those cows and chickens leaving their waste! The bridle path used to run the length of Ocean Parkway. Time to come out of the bubble wrap, folks.
July 12, 2009, 3:49 am

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