patandchickens
Crazy Cat Lady
I had a new-in-box electric fence charger sitting around waiting to be installed for a long while, I know it was in the garage 5-6 weeks ago, but now it is gone, and I mean like "I have torn apart every room of every building on the property three times now" gone. (Had to replace it with one from TSC that was almost twice as expensive AND only half the power, b/c original one was bought from Premier in the states but shipping/tax/duty/etc makes them super expensive to order from up here as opposed to buying while down there)
Had chalked it up to one of those little mysteries....
...and then last night my husband went to put his summer tires in the trunk to have the garage swap 'em back this afternoon, and they were GONE. I am absolutely sure nothing accidental could happen to, for cryin' out loud, a set of four newish (rimless) tires. It's not like they can slip behind the sofa cushions or accidentally go out with the recycling.
We have all sorts of cr*p in the garage, so I can't tell for sure nothing else is missing, but the only thing I can think of of value is my $800 DR-brand wheeled stringtrimmer, and THAT, fortunately, perhaps thru being buried under cardboard boxes for the winter , is still present and accounted for. (I am getting a padlock today so I can chain it to the wall :/)
It is really not practical to lock the garage... the front (car) doors of the garage are old and no longer lockable and we can't afford to replace them but use them too often for lawnmowers etc to be able to just bolt them permanently shut, and while we COULD put a lock on the back 'people' door, I suppose, there is a window right next to it so what's the point really. The garage is attached to the basement, which like the garage has mostly Miscellaneous Stuff of no great value, but the door from the basement to the house itself is always kept locked.
The garage is nearly-invisible from the house and at the far end from our bedrooms, so a motion sensor light would not "alert" us to anything b/c we'd never see it. Rural area, no relevant neighbors.
I guess I'm wondering whether anyone has any creative suggestions for discouraging people from doing any more rummaging around in our garage. Can't leave dog loose there, and it has to be some sort of solution that does not interfere with OUR going in and out of the garage many times per day.
Any ideas appreciated, however wild or incompletely-workable they may be LOL,
Pat
Had chalked it up to one of those little mysteries....
...and then last night my husband went to put his summer tires in the trunk to have the garage swap 'em back this afternoon, and they were GONE. I am absolutely sure nothing accidental could happen to, for cryin' out loud, a set of four newish (rimless) tires. It's not like they can slip behind the sofa cushions or accidentally go out with the recycling.
We have all sorts of cr*p in the garage, so I can't tell for sure nothing else is missing, but the only thing I can think of of value is my $800 DR-brand wheeled stringtrimmer, and THAT, fortunately, perhaps thru being buried under cardboard boxes for the winter , is still present and accounted for. (I am getting a padlock today so I can chain it to the wall :/)
It is really not practical to lock the garage... the front (car) doors of the garage are old and no longer lockable and we can't afford to replace them but use them too often for lawnmowers etc to be able to just bolt them permanently shut, and while we COULD put a lock on the back 'people' door, I suppose, there is a window right next to it so what's the point really. The garage is attached to the basement, which like the garage has mostly Miscellaneous Stuff of no great value, but the door from the basement to the house itself is always kept locked.
The garage is nearly-invisible from the house and at the far end from our bedrooms, so a motion sensor light would not "alert" us to anything b/c we'd never see it. Rural area, no relevant neighbors.
I guess I'm wondering whether anyone has any creative suggestions for discouraging people from doing any more rummaging around in our garage. Can't leave dog loose there, and it has to be some sort of solution that does not interfere with OUR going in and out of the garage many times per day.
Any ideas appreciated, however wild or incompletely-workable they may be LOL,
Pat