Jun 16 2008

How Brooklynites Deal with Annoying Nighttime Car Alarms

Published by Erin at 3:20 pm under Cobble Hill, Neighborhood, Pets

As seen on Henry Street. Note to self: If I had a car and that car had an alarm, I’d definitely refrain from parking said car on Henry. (Don’t miss the "friendly" notes tucked under the car’s windshields, just in case the owner was unsure of how a dog with that much backup got on top of his/her car.)

poop-on-car.jpg

 

poop-on-car-closeup.jpg

 

  • Share/Bookmark

20 responses so far

20 Responses to “How Brooklynites Deal with Annoying Nighttime Car Alarms”

  1. lazon 16 Jun 2008 at 4:06 pm

    but wait! what did the notes say!?

  2. Bethanyon 16 Jun 2008 at 4:30 pm

    The dog dump is a bit much, but I’ll admit I was imagining far heavier objects hitting this car’s windshield when it woke me up at 6 am this morning!

  3. Dennison 16 Jun 2008 at 4:48 pm

    They should be lucky they didn’t get a cinder block through the window.

  4. Jenon 16 Jun 2008 at 6:12 pm

    They’re lucky the dog dumper wasn’t Tim Robbins
    http://www.streetsblog.org/2008/05/15/its-man-vs-car-in-nyc-and-tim-robbins-is-the-rectifier/

  5. in the hoodon 16 Jun 2008 at 8:35 pm

    I actually live very close to this abomination. It kept me up all night. It went off about every 20 minutes, about 10-15 times starting at around 3 am. I was ready to take a baseball bat to it.

  6. Dennison 17 Jun 2008 at 12:08 am

    When I lived next to the BQE I always thought to myself, “I’m glad it’s hard to get your hands on a rocket propelled grenade launcher, because I’d blast these damn tractor-trailers and their 10sec horn blasts at 3am.” I’m sure I’d feel much the same about a car alarm going off every 10min around the same time of night.

  7. allisonon 17 Jun 2008 at 9:26 am

    what the hell is wrong with these people? do they think the owner actually heard his alarm going off and ignored it all night?

  8. Rectifieron 17 Jun 2008 at 9:46 am

    I inflict a simpler and more proportionate punishment on cars with hairtrigger alarms. I snap off the sideview mirror. The owner can still drive the car, but will eventually need to get it fixed. That will waste a few hours of his time (just as I lost a few hours sleep) and a few hundred dollars. It’s quick and easy. Sitting on the sideview mirror and giving a quick downward thrust usually does the trick.

  9. Erin Behanon 17 Jun 2008 at 10:18 am

    AAh Dennis, but you missed the best part about living near the BQE, those tractor trailer horn blasts set off car alarms!

  10. don't believe it or noton 17 Jun 2008 at 10:23 am

    Put a bunch of poo under the door handle so when they go to open the door – voila! simple yet classic

  11. Brooklyn Ninjason 17 Jun 2008 at 1:26 pm

    Dennis – you’re a dope – You lived next to a 6 lane highway and you complained about horns? What the hell did you expect?
    That’s like living in an industrial area and complaining that a lot of trucks drive through.

  12. Bronxon 17 Jun 2008 at 2:36 pm

    Love it!!! I live next to an elevated subway that sets off hairtrigger alarms, and I know exactly what Dennis is saying about rocket launchers. The good news is, if the schmuck parks in the same area for long enough, both horn and car battery will die natural deaths. The bad news is that the rest of us have to try to sleep through it for a couple of weeks. (Really good news would be knowing where to get a rocket launcher!)

  13. Bobbyon 17 Jun 2008 at 3:45 pm

    That car owner deserves this and more. The owner not hearing it is not an excuse. The luxury of being a car owner in New York does not give you the right to damage the peace of your fellow community members. There is no need for such hair trigger alarms in this day age. If car owners are so concerned about damage or theft they should spend the extra money to use a garage.
    I feel sorry for anyone living near this selfish rude ass.

  14. Betoon 18 Jun 2008 at 11:51 am

    Heroic… I was thinking of doing the same thing to a neighbor who was stealing my NY Times every morning. You know, fill up the blue bag with fertilizer and see how well he could read his news then…

  15. Dennison 19 Jun 2008 at 12:22 am

    Beto, reminds me of the tick to keep people from eating your food from the break-room fridge at work. Just make a sandwich with dog food. (dried poo would be better of course, more impact)

  16. Grenon 19 Jun 2008 at 10:57 am

    I keep looking at this poop post to find out what the notes say! What do they say???
    Beto:
    I sat and waited for my NYTimes thief – two early mornings worth of stakeouts. When he came and got it, I sprang out the door and said: “Do not take my newspaper!” He turned around like, excuse me (indignantly which made me livid). I said, “give me back my newspaper” and he threw it back at me.
    I then watched him walk down the block and take someone else’s and continue on his way. Dont know if those people ever caught him but he hasnt been back for mine!
    But if you dont have the time for the stakeout, I say go for the blue bag of poo!

  17. Dennison 19 Jun 2008 at 2:01 pm

    Maybe someone can comment on what the note SHOULD say.

  18. Bill Scayneon 18 Jul 2008 at 8:00 pm

    If I took the time to stake out the NYT thief, I would have thrown a “poo” ball the size of a softball right at his face. It would’ve been soft so would not have injured him.

  19. BigFlushon 06 May 2009 at 9:18 am

    I think the best solution is to take a bottle of cheap balsamic vinegar and pour it down into the slots at the base of the windshield so that the car wafts of sheer sour delightfulness. Or, just dump a bowl of scrambled raw eggs all over the hood, windshield & roof. If you know anything about eggs and car paint… (not a good mix). These ass-hole car owners who allow their alarms to ruin everyone else’s quality of life deserve much more than to just have their car assaulted.

  20. Williamon 23 Sep 2009 at 12:07 pm

    I too can become enraged with car alarms that sound thru the night (I have a small child), but I think a terse note suggesting the owner have the alarm adjusted is more than enough to get the point across. Damaging the car in any way, though tempting, is a very poor choice (and illegal).