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Thread: Driving in Dundee on a Friday afternoon

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Posts
    29,226
    Quote Originally Posted by islaydarkblue View Post
    Thank you for your suggestion. I have a friend on Islay who has a dash cam and he has said that if he handed his footage over to the local police they could take half the cars owned by local residents off the Islay roads.
    He even has footage of a local lorry driver speaking on his mobile phone whilst driving his lorry with only one hand on the wheel.
    Goodness knows what would happen if this lorry driver had to serve to avoid a sheep on an Islay road whilst driving with only one hand on the wheel whilst speaking on his mobile phone.
    Sheep should be in fields unless they have a road fund license.

    If they don’t have one no reason why a lorry driver should swerve to avoid it.

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Posts
    3,313
    Quote Originally Posted by noahrab View Post
    Sheep should be in fields unless they have a road fund license.

    If they don’t have one no reason why a lorry driver should swerve to avoid it.
    It should be legal to knock sheep out the way if theyre on the road

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    8,693
    Quote Originally Posted by ABERFELDYDEE View Post
    It should be legal to knock sheep out the way if theyre on the road
    I agree with this, not like the farmers give a toss about them.

  4. #14
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Posts
    17,372
    **** the sheep.

    2-1 the mighty.

  5. #15
    Join Date
    Jan 2014
    Posts
    6,426
    Quote Originally Posted by noahrab View Post
    Sheep should be in fields unless they have a road fund license.

    If they don’t have one no reason why a lorry driver should swerve to avoid it.
    Believe it ornot in Argyll and Bute sheep are allowed to wander anywhere and farmers do not have to erect fences to keep their sheep in their fields.

    My next door neighbours once left their garden gate open and sheep from a nearby farm got in and started eating the plants in the garden. As they were at work I phoned the farmer concerned and his wife eventually came along to retrieve them from the garden. She was not concerned about the damage her sheep had caused. The woman told me that her sheep were entitled to wander anywhere as Argyll and Bute was not a closed county for sheep and my next door neighbour should have ensured that their gate was securely shut.

  6. #16
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Posts
    17,372
    Quote Originally Posted by islaydarkblue View Post
    Believe it ornot in Argyll and Bute sheep are allowed to wander anywhere and farmers do not have to erect fences to keep their sheep in their fields.

    My next door neighbours once left their garden gate open and sheep from a nearby farm got in and started eating the plants in the garden. As they were at work I phoned the farmer concerned and his wife eventually came along to retrieve them from the garden. She was not concerned about the damage her sheep had caused. The woman told me that her sheep were entitled to wander anywhere as Argyll and Bute was not a closed county for sheep and my next door neighbour should have ensured that their gate was securely shut.
    There's a lot of sheep on here and Noah is the shepherd.

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