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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Neighbour’s kid picked my daffodils

809 replies

Lucylooloo2 · 21/03/2025 22:48

Just that really, had lots of notifications of movement on the doorbell camera and lo and behold a kid (8ish years old) from a few houses down with a bunch of daffodils in her hand.

Checked mine in my front garden when I got home and Every. Single. One. has been taken.

I’m just really sad tbh. Know there are much bigger problems in the world but they were a little spark of joy for me 😕

OP posts:
NovemberMorn · 22/03/2025 18:39

Umidontknow · 22/03/2025 18:22

No it's not rubbish or "super sweet"

FTFT.🙄

Picklelily99 · 22/03/2025 18:42

Lucylooloo2 · 21/03/2025 22:48

Just that really, had lots of notifications of movement on the doorbell camera and lo and behold a kid (8ish years old) from a few houses down with a bunch of daffodils in her hand.

Checked mine in my front garden when I got home and Every. Single. One. has been taken.

I’m just really sad tbh. Know there are much bigger problems in the world but they were a little spark of joy for me 😕

We have daffodils growing at the top of our avenue, either side, planted by the council - breaks my heart when kids from elsewhere, help themselves to them, denying us the pleasure! Even worse is when they ride their bikes through them, flattening every single one! little feral bs!!!

ERthree · 22/03/2025 18:45

Mamofboys5972 · 21/03/2025 22:51

I also love having fresh flowers in the garden, especially daffodils. However, that little spark of joy they bring you? They clearly also spark that in others 🥰 maybe that little girl picked them for her mam for mothers day! Super sweet x

They will be dead by Mothers day.

Donttellempike · 22/03/2025 18:47

I’ve got neighbours like you @Trendyname, which is why I’m moving

Hwi · 22/03/2025 18:57

BunnyLake · 22/03/2025 15:42

Did you never make a daisy chain while sitting in the park as a kid? Are you saying children can’t pick a wild buttercup now? Never put one under your chin to see if you liked butter?

I did! But I was an unladylike thug and no example to follow!

TheBossOfMe · 22/03/2025 19:01

Some of the responses on this thread are properly batshit 😂😂😂

BunnyLake · 22/03/2025 19:09

LazyArsedMagician · 22/03/2025 15:52

Would you fuck turn a hosepipe on an 8 year old instead of just saying something to them Grin

At least they don’t live in the US.

Growlybear83 · 22/03/2025 19:15

Bitofanchange · 22/03/2025 18:25

Nah you wouldn’t 🤣🤣🤣🤦‍♀️

Oh believe me, I would.

BunnyLake · 22/03/2025 19:15

TheHerboriste · 22/03/2025 16:14

Causing them "upset" is what helps them to remember.

If they'd had the guts to show their faces, in the OP's place I would have given that child a lecture she would never forget. We all have had it with entitled "gentle parenting" that produces children oblivious that others even exist, let alone must be considered.

I never ranted at my kids, I guess you could call it gentle parenting in its proper definition. They're perfectly decent, law abiding adults. You can still tell a child they did something wrong and get them to apologise without screaming in their face and frogmarching them to the neighbour. My kids are a credit wherever they go, always have been (never so much as detention between them ever).

TheHerboriste · 22/03/2025 19:24

Growlybear83 · 22/03/2025 19:15

Oh believe me, I would.

During lockdown I happened to be watering my front garden when a kid walking a puppy went by, whipping it hard with a stick about two feet long. The puppy was tiny, shaking, tail tucked between legs. I called out to him to stop and he swore back at me.

Disrespectful, animal-abusing little fucker got a hard stream of cold water straight in the face and chest, and arse when he squealed and turned tail. Ran home and big bully daddy came along a few minutes later. I gestured to the neighbours who were there to back me up and who had witnessed the animal abuse.

Never once saw that kid again; the father still walks by occasionally with the dog but the boy never does. Good riddance.

sanityisamyth · 22/03/2025 19:35

Sunbeam01 · 21/03/2025 23:15

I couldn't get upset over this because they were picked by a very young child.

Some of these responses are extremely OTT.

Edited

8 years old is not super young. It’s 2 years off the age of criminal responsibility.

it is not “super sweet” for someone else’s child to trespass on your property and steal it.

Bitofanchange · 22/03/2025 19:54

TheHerboriste · 22/03/2025 19:24

During lockdown I happened to be watering my front garden when a kid walking a puppy went by, whipping it hard with a stick about two feet long. The puppy was tiny, shaking, tail tucked between legs. I called out to him to stop and he swore back at me.

Disrespectful, animal-abusing little fucker got a hard stream of cold water straight in the face and chest, and arse when he squealed and turned tail. Ran home and big bully daddy came along a few minutes later. I gestured to the neighbours who were there to back me up and who had witnessed the animal abuse.

Never once saw that kid again; the father still walks by occasionally with the dog but the boy never does. Good riddance.

How were the flowers you were watering, did they survive?

it’s hardly the same thing, is it?

TheHerboriste · 22/03/2025 20:18

Bitofanchange · 22/03/2025 19:54

How were the flowers you were watering, did they survive?

it’s hardly the same thing, is it?

It is to me. I spend a great deal of time and money on my gardening. Some of the perennials take years to establish; no little brat is going to damage them with impunity.

Eight is NOT a young child. Seven is considered the age of reason by developmental psychologists, religions, schools. Certain it's old enough (hell, four is old enough) to understand the concept of private property, damage, etc.

So tired of people making excuses for bad behaviour.

Marosanne · 22/03/2025 23:11

You don't wander into someone else's garden, never mind pick flowers! It's trespassing as well as stealing!

CapybaraInMyGardenOhIWish · 22/03/2025 23:45

TheHerboriste · 22/03/2025 19:24

During lockdown I happened to be watering my front garden when a kid walking a puppy went by, whipping it hard with a stick about two feet long. The puppy was tiny, shaking, tail tucked between legs. I called out to him to stop and he swore back at me.

Disrespectful, animal-abusing little fucker got a hard stream of cold water straight in the face and chest, and arse when he squealed and turned tail. Ran home and big bully daddy came along a few minutes later. I gestured to the neighbours who were there to back me up and who had witnessed the animal abuse.

Never once saw that kid again; the father still walks by occasionally with the dog but the boy never does. Good riddance.

Good for you . I have no tolerance for kids hurting animals just because they can.

There was a post not long ago on here, not an OP, but a response to a post on spanking. The poster admitted as a child she once stepped on a ladybird on purpose and her dad dealt with it by stamping on her bare feet. The way some posters talked, you would think the dad was an abuser! The poster herself said her dad was in the right and that she doesn't abuse animals or other kids anymore.

Marosanne · 22/03/2025 23:49

I think picking buttercups is perfectly fine! It's not the same as going into someone's private property and taking their flowers. Eight is more than old enough to know that you don't take flowers from someone's garden!

CapybaraInMyGardenOhIWish · 22/03/2025 23:57

AnAlpacaForChristmasPleaseSanta · 22/03/2025 16:10

No, Santa did not the bloody tightwad 😒.
But your suggestion might add some leverage as to why I need one (and it is a need, make no mistakes about it) so thanks for that 😊.

I hear ya. Santa screwed me over the same way . He isn't getting any cookies or mince pies this year! Rudolph can have a carrot if the guinea pigs haven't had them all. Mind you, I expect capybaras would also take a liking to your flowerbeds, they 're also herbivores, after all.

If the deer are muntjac, I've heard they taste quite nice and their population is out of control, maybe a crossbow is needed?

CapybaraInMyGardenOhIWish · 23/03/2025 02:02

@AnAlpacaForChristmasPleaseSanta apologies I meant alpacas, not capybaras! Time to accept that I need to be in bed as brain is no longer functioning properly at this hour. I used to be a night owl, but alas I am no longer.

monkey666lynn · 23/03/2025 08:45

Exactly!!! All the posts saying, ah she picked them for her mum etc.. NO the kid should be taught this is wrong and trespassing on other people's property. Typical of todays culture- parents cba raising their kids to be respectful.

TheLovelinessOfDemons · 23/03/2025 08:45

My DS used to go to do this in the park and I explained that the park keeper had planted them and they weren't for picking.

monkey666lynn · 23/03/2025 08:52

Stupid answer, so I take it we can all invade your garden and take what we want? Cool...

AnAlpacaForChristmasPleaseSanta · 23/03/2025 08:54

@CapybaraInMyGardenOhIWish they are indeed muntjac but my aim is so legendary awful that were I to arm myself with even a catapult the deer would be fine but my neighbour 3 doors down might be in danger 🤦.

I do also have a a bit of a soft spot for a capybara too. But don't think I'd have room for both.

Diorchristian · 23/03/2025 09:00

On reading the title I thought does it matter some little girl has been moved to collect and pick some beautiful flowers.
However taking every single one is not on and if she takes these what's to stop her taking anything else?? Also something may be poisonous to pick.
I would tell the parents and say she can pick two flowers if she wishes in future but she must knock and ask due to the above.

Busybeemumm · 23/03/2025 09:09

Diorchristian · 23/03/2025 09:00

On reading the title I thought does it matter some little girl has been moved to collect and pick some beautiful flowers.
However taking every single one is not on and if she takes these what's to stop her taking anything else?? Also something may be poisonous to pick.
I would tell the parents and say she can pick two flowers if she wishes in future but she must knock and ask due to the above.

Urm no, she can't just enter someone's garden to even pick one -poisonous or not. Clear consistent boundaries is what children need otherwise it's a slippery slope -two flowers become 4 then more! It's rude and disrespectful to enter someone's garden at all, let alone pick their flowers!

Diorchristian · 23/03/2025 09:15

@Busybeemumm umm busy bee you did read and comprehend my post?
Whereby op knocks on the door and complains about picking all her flowers but simultaneously doesn't crush the child and offers her to pick a flower if she knocks first to ask permission.
Win, win.
Umm no where did I state that this child should have free reign to ops property and garden.

Ummmmm

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