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Re: Hamilton Park Renovation - Meeting Dates
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4bailey wrote:
From the HPNA survey:

..."The option of a dog run roughly the size of two tennis courts received the largest percent of the vote (44 percent) and the second largest vote was for a dog run roughly the size of three tennis courts (31 percent). In order for a dog run to be utilized (and thus effective in its intent), it ?must be big enough to insure it will be used by all dog owners...?

By your own stats, square footage of a tennis court: 7,439 sq. ft

Two tennis courts make 14,878 square feet, using your numbers, right?!...

As a compromise to keep the dog-run within one segment and a concession to other HP interests, the 10,122 sq. ft. I propose (the full NNW segment with the tweak of ditching the game tables) seems fair to me even though it?s only 68% of the ?2-tennis-court? area specified in the survey.


Wow, rock on 4b! Good point citing the survey, hard to argue with that. But, just like the contractor has ignored the survey results for the courts and spokes, they apparently decided on a run of roughly 7700 ft, and it'll be interesting whether getting their attention for something not in the choices as is will happen. To continue the fantasy that we can have a hand in planning, where do you stand on swapping the NNW segment for the run to bleed over the walkway spoke the way the ABC playground does?

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nugnfutz wrote:
San Fran have a recommended size of 30k square feet with absolute minimum of 10k square feet.


On page 18 of the SF doc (very interesting stuff) there's a list of their runs and the size of the park they're in. None are under 10 acres. I thought "how can they do that?". SF has slightly more than 3 times our population, almost the same density, and 3,400 acres of open space to our 1,550. To me the catch is that 1000 of that is LSP, remote from most neighborhoods and much of that count is water or toxic dump. Reading that list of 10-1000 acre parks made me drool.

Posted on: 2007/5/23 2:58
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Re: Hamilton Park Renovation - Meeting Dates
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brewster wrote:
Quote:

parkman wrote:
Brewster,

Since you like to use statistics, here?s one for you.

Based on the size of HP vs. VVP, four times the size, your dog run should be in total, 18,400 sq. ft. vs. VVP?s of 4,600.

Your perception that HP?s large run is in proportion does not compute


Hmm, I thought I've been careful NOT to ever say that a dog run should be proportional to a park's size. Where would that put LSP?!!

4bailey: The reasons to compare us to Manhattan is the size of our park, small for many an outer borough park. My point about Washing SQ Pk is that in a park even larger, in a higher density area (more demand on the run) they didn't make it substantially larger than D's large run. The critics about the size aren't citing other urban parks of similar size that that have substantially larger runs, they just say THEY want it bigger. I'd like to see more structured arguments for their case, as I have made for mine. Do your own googling.

Oh, and FWIW, VV is 36% the size of HP, not 25%. (source: satellite images & CAD)

Take your satellite and point it back onto Washington sq. park and you will see that the small run is only 500 sq. ft. in a park that is ?even larger, in a higher density area? than HP. In fact WSP is NOT that much bigger than HP; maybe 1/8 larger if that. It?s two blocks square, as is HP. We are talking ratio again.

If you are not going to use size a guide, then don?t say that the small run in VVP is too small; it?s larger than the one in WSP.

And why shouldn?t you use proportion to govern the usage in a park? If you have a park that is 2/3rds larger, as you say HP is to VVP then the HP should be able to provide a run of 13,800 sq.ft. and LSP should do so relative to its size and capability.

All this haggling about size, proportion, and comparisons to other locations misses the point that we need to accommodate the dog population, present and near future in HP, now. To short change the space will create enforcement and compliance problems for the park sooner than you think.

Like I said, no ax to grind, you have to live with your choices, not me.
We have enough issues of our own to deal with in VVP, I?m just voicing opinions I think may be helpful to you that we have already been through.

Posted on: 2007/5/23 2:32
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Re: Hamilton Park Renovation - Meeting Dates
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brewster wrote:
...What the HPNA ballot said on the subject of spokes was clear:

Would you like the pathways in the park returned to their original historic layout of a circle-and-spoke design, in which all park entrance pathways extend to the center of the park? If this change occurs, other features of the park may need to be repositioned slightly to accommodate the layout change.
A. Yes - 189 votes; 72%
B. No - 70 votes; 18%
...

brewster - So let me get this straight? when it?s convenient for you to quote the HPNA ballot and survey to make your case that?s OK, but when I try to champion a solution that?s closest (with compromises) to the intent of the HPNA survey, I?m just asking for an area for a dog-run that?s too big!?!

From the HPNA survey:

..."The option of a dog run roughly the size of two tennis courts received the largest percent of the vote (44 percent) and the second largest vote was for a dog run roughly the size of three tennis courts (31 percent). In order for a dog run to be utilized (and thus effective in its intent), it ?must be big enough to insure it will be used by all dog owners...?

By your own stats, square footage of a tennis court: 7,439 sq. ft

Two tennis courts make 14,878 square feet, using your numbers, right?!...

As a compromise to keep the dog-run within one segment and a concession to other HP interests, the 10,122 sq. ft. I propose (the full NNW segment with the tweak of ditching the game tables) seems fair to me even though it?s only 68% of the ?2-tennis-court? area specified in the survey.

Posted on: 2007/5/23 1:44
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Re: Hamilton Park Renovation - Meeting Dates
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parkman wrote:
Brewster,

Since you like to use statistics, here?s one for you.

Based on the size of HP vs. VVP, four times the size, your dog run should be in total, 18,400 sq. ft. vs. VVP?s of 4,600.

Your perception that HP?s large run is in proportion does not compute


Hmm, I thought I've been careful NOT to ever say that a dog run should be proportional to a park's size. Where would that put LSP?!!

4bailey: The reasons to compare us to Manhattan is the size of our park, small for many an outer borough park. My point about Washing SQ Pk is that in a park even larger, in a higher density area (more demand on the run) they didn't make it substantially larger than D's large run. The critics about the size aren't citing other urban parks of similar size that that have substantially larger runs, they just say THEY want it bigger. I'd like to see more structured arguments for their case, as I have made for mine. Do your own googling.

Oh, and FWIW, VV is 36% the size of HP, not 25%. (source: satellite images & CAD)

Nug: Some of hose stats are like the stats used by the JC parks recreation survey which showed we needed to quadruple the number of baseball diamonds we have. They're for all residential areas nationwide, not taking into account density and available land at all. I got news for you: JC is not a small town or suburb. Have you ever been to Sacramento? It's not a "city" by a definition of a certain residential density. Like much of America, it's just an endless sprawl in ex-farmland. I don't know how SF, a compact city, supports that standard, but they probably do it by not letting smaller parks have dog runs. I'd like to know more about their code. It's nice to see someone besides me use the power of their broadband to support their statements.

Posted on: 2007/5/23 1:12
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Some sources on size of dog parks:
http://www.akc.org/canine_legislation/dogpark.cfm
http://www.sacparks.net/docs/Off-Leas ... sk-Force-final-report.pdf
http://www.parks.sfgov.org/wcm_recpar ... Final_Dog_Policy_2002.pdf

AKC recommend a minimum of one acre (43560 square feet). San Fran have a recommended size of 30k square feet with absolute minimum of 10k square feet. Sacramento recommend 1 acre of dog run per 25k population.

Posted on: 2007/5/23 0:44
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brewster wrote:
Googling for urban dog run sizes for comparisons is rough going, but I found this page that cites the Washington Sq park run as being 4800 sq ft, only slightly bigger than D's large dog run, in a park nearly twice the size of HP and in area with much higher density. They have large/small runs there, but it's unclear whether the size refers to both or not. I assume not. I cite this to debate the description of 4391 sq ft for D?s large run as "too small".

The article also is vehemently in favor of separate large/small runs.

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parkman wrote:
Also, being an ?overgenerous? small run does not make it a proper use of space.


I don't have an attitude towards you, but want rational reasons for repeatly stated opinions, not invalid comparisons and unsubstantiated descriptions of "D" being too small. As for the size of the small run, perhaps the reason the one in VV is underutilized (according to some) is that it is TOO SMALL!!

I'm not opposed to taking the spoke for the run, rather than plan ABC, but I simply have not been convinced it's necessary to have a viably sized pair of runs.
Brewster,

Since you like to use statistics, here?s one for you.

Based on the size of HP vs. VVP, four times the size, your dog run should be in total, 18,400 sq. ft. vs. VVP?s of 4,600.

Your perception that HP?s large run is in proportion does not compute

Posted on: 2007/5/23 0:17
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1. I like the idea of preserving the parks spokes
2. I like the idea of a multi-use court
3. I think the idea of a putting green is a waste of space and funds
4. I'm neutral on the idea of separate small and large dog runs. Small dog runs tend to get used more by anti-social big dogs than actual small dogs - so whatever.

I don't like the idea of reducing the size dog runs in proposal D and I think the vote has been engineered with this specifically in mind. Why for example, can't option B be amended to preserve spokes, have a multi-use court and have segregated dog areas?

I also am not totally thrilled with the idea of pushing the playground closer to the higher-traffic and probably least shaded section of ninth street.

I agree with other posters - if we're voting purely on the designs, lets make it a proportional-rep style ranked vote.

Or better still, why not vote on the real options:
1. Putting green or not
2. Dog run in NW corner, or split in smaller sections to east
3. Multi-use court or communal garden or tennis court
4. Preserve spokes or not.

Posted on: 2007/5/23 0:11
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brewster wrote:
Googling for urban dog run sizes for comparisons is rough going, but I found this page that cites the Washington Sq park run as being 4800 sq ft, only slightly bigger than D's large dog run, in a park nearly twice the size of HP and in area with much higher density. They have large/small runs there, but it's unclear whether the size refers to both or not. I assume not. I cite this to debate the description of 4391 sq ft for D?s large run as "too small"....


JC ain?t Manhattan ? comparing JC to the boroughs is a better apple-to-apple comparison. In my ?tweak?, I propose a 10,122 sq. ft. (using your stats ? but with buffers it?ll be even smaller) that?s to be partitioned with a divider fence into small-dog:large-dog areas. I honestly don?t know the answer (this isn?t a rhetorical question), but while you?re Googling: is the 10,122 sq. ft. I propose bigger than anything in Brooklyn, Bronx, or Queens?...

Posted on: 2007/5/22 23:35
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Re: Hamilton Park Renovation - Meeting Dates
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Googling for urban dog run sizes for comparisons is rough going, but I found this page that cites the Washington Sq park run as being 4800 sq ft, only slightly bigger than D's large dog run, in a park nearly twice the size of HP and in area with much higher density. They have large/small runs there, but it's unclear whether the size refers to both or not. I assume not. I cite this to debate the description of 4391 sq ft for D?s large run as "too small".

The article also is vehemently in favor of separate large/small runs.

Quote:

parkman wrote:
Also, being an ?overgenerous? small run does not make it a proper use of space.


I don't have an attitude towards you, but want rational reasons for repeatly stated opinions, not invalid comparisons and unsubstantiated descriptions of "D" being too small. As for the size of the small run, perhaps the reason the one in VV is underutilized (according to some) is that it is TOO SMALL!!

I'm not opposed to taking the spoke for the run, rather than plan ABC, but I simply have not been convinced it's necessary to have a viably sized pair of runs.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 22:51
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brewster wrote:
Quote:

parkman wrote:
It?s not whether or not I like the ratio. I?m just stating from experience in VV that, as drawn, ?plan D? has a small run that is too large and a large run that is too small. If you are trying to accomplish what I think most residents want (to provide a large enough area for dogs to run off leash and thereby encourage owners to keep their dogs on leash elsewhere in the park), D as presented will not, in my opinion, make that happen.

Also, where are you coming up with the ?4391? for D?s large run? I don?t see square footage anywhere on the plan.

I still like ?D? if the large run can be expanded.



Parkman, I appreciate your sharing your experience with us, but where I can't follow your reasoning is the conclusion the "D" large dog run is too small just because Van Vorst's large run is, though ours is nearly half again as large. Why not think of the small dog run as "overgenerous" and get over it? The D locations make several other constituencies like parents and historic preservationists happy, the fact that similar total space in the ABC location "might" possibly be divided better seems slim reasoning to oppose D.

If tweaks happen, they can happen in either location. I've been told that they're more interested in nailing down features than exact sizes at this point. It is unfortunate that the contractor is not a profesional demographer like our Jen Greely, and the ballot is poorly designed and doesn't include options you like, such as a dog run spanning over a spoke, as separate questions that could be compiled to paint a picture of the park we want. But here we are now with this as it is, and lucky to be here we are, getting our park renovated!

What the HPNA ballot said on the subject of spokes was clear:

Would you like the pathways in the park returned to their original historic layout of a circle-and-spoke design, in which all park entrance pathways extend to the center of the park? If this change occurs, other features of the park may need to be repositioned slightly to accommodate the layout change.
A. Yes - 189 votes; 72%
B. No - 70 votes; 18%


I arrived at D's footage, as I explained in post #233, by importing the drawing into CAD and scaling it using the size of the tennis court, which is a standard. I could then draw a line around the run in the image and the program tells me the area of the polygon.

As for "aggressive", mea culpa. I misunderstood the meaning of the barking described. That doesn't change the fact that a certain constituency of dog owners believes separated runs are better than simply being split. It's a "pro" column item for them.

4bailey: you keep saying it's the "wrong shape". Can you enlighten us as to what the "right" shape is? An oval track perhaps?
I?m not sure why you find it necessary to have an attitude toward my comments. I have no ax to grind and enough to deal with in VVP; you may take or leave my suggestions.

If 72% of the votes ?made it clear? they wanted clear spokes, why did three of the four designs impede them? I didn?t say I liked the option of ?spanning over a spoke?, however, doing so addresses some issues that have been brought up here and it actually may be
a good compromise.

Also, being an ?overgenerous? small run does not make it a proper use of space.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 22:47
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parkman wrote:
It?s not whether or not I like the ratio. I?m just stating from experience in VV that, as drawn, ?plan D? has a small run that is too large and a large run that is too small. If you are trying to accomplish what I think most residents want (to provide a large enough area for dogs to run off leash and thereby encourage owners to keep their dogs on leash elsewhere in the park), D as presented will not, in my opinion, make that happen.

Also, where are you coming up with the ?4391? for D?s large run? I don?t see square footage anywhere on the plan.

I still like ?D? if the large run can be expanded.



Parkman, I appreciate your sharing your experience with us, but where I can't follow your reasoning is the conclusion the "D" large dog run is too small just because Van Vorst's large run is, though ours is nearly half again as large. Why not think of the small dog run as "overgenerous" and get over it? The D locations make several other constituencies like parents and historic preservationists happy, the fact that similar total space in the ABC location "might" possibly be divided better seems slim reasoning to oppose D.

If tweaks happen, they can happen in either location. I've been told that they're more interested in nailing down features than exact sizes at this point. It is unfortunate that the contractor is not a profesional demographer like our Jen Greely, and the ballot is poorly designed and doesn't include options you like, such as a dog run spanning over a spoke, as separate questions that could be compiled to paint a picture of the park we want. But here we are now with this as it is, and lucky to be here we are, getting our park renovated!

What the HPNA ballot said on the subject of spokes was clear:

Would you like the pathways in the park returned to their original historic layout of a circle-and-spoke design, in which all park entrance pathways extend to the center of the park? If this change occurs, other features of the park may need to be repositioned slightly to accommodate the layout change.
A. Yes - 189 votes; 72%
B. No - 70 votes; 18%


I arrived at D's footage, as I explained in post #233, by importing the drawing into CAD and scaling it using the size of the tennis court, which is a standard. I could then draw a line around the run in the image and the program tells me the area of the polygon.

As for "aggressive", mea culpa. I misunderstood the meaning of the barking described. That doesn't change the fact that a certain constituency of dog owners believes separated runs are better than simply being split. It's a "pro" column item for them.

4bailey: you keep saying it's the "wrong shape". Can you enlighten us as to what the "right" shape is? An oval track perhaps?

Posted on: 2007/5/22 22:15
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Re: Hamilton Park Renovation - Meeting Dates
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PM... That's a possibility that makes sense... certainly location wise it's potentially the least noxious to the NIMFY crowd, and could reasonably be an easy to accomplish tweak after the fact if D becomes the desired choice... certainly little cost involved.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 22:03
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As an added thought:

Three out of the four plans interrupt the flow of foot traffic in the northeast quadrant, if that is acceptable to most, why not join the two dog runs on ?D? across the east midpoint walkway. By doing so, the ratio between runs could be adjusted, the cost to build may actually be reduced, and you wind up with a total run 1/4 to 1/3 larger. It is also a much smaller spoke you are losing with less negative impact.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 21:28
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It?s not whether or not I like the ratio. I?m just stating from experience in VV that, as drawn, ?plan D? has a small run that is too large and a large run that is too small. If you are trying to accomplish what I think most residents want (to provide a large enough area for dogs to run off leash and thereby encourage owners to keep their dogs on leash elsewhere in the park), D as presented will not, in my opinion, make that happen.



I think this sums up how I feel.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 21:19
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Re: Hamilton Park Renovation - Meeting Dates
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brewster wrote:
Quote:

parkman wrote:
I also stated that D works only if the large run can be extended. Two equal size runs will not accommodate the dog population of HP. The ratio should be closer to 3/4 large to 1/4 small. If the tennis court cannot be shifted to make this possible, you?re better off using B and eliminate the game tables in that location and utilize the entire quadrant for a split run.


The ratio on plan "D" appears to be 60:40, however, comparing ratios without size is not very scientific. Since the Van Vorst run is a total of 4600 sq ft according to a JJ article, then 2/3 of that is 3036. So our "plan D" run at 4391 is 44% larger than Van Vorst's 3036, and the many small dogs have plenty of room too.

What's your problem? Are you really saying to vote against "D" because the ratio isn't to your liking, though the run itself is much larger than Van Vorst's?
Brewster,

None of my comments are meant to tell anyone how to vote, they are from my observations, opinions, and preferences based on having spent the last 10 years working on VVP and the last year almost exclusively on the VVP dog run.

It?s not whether or not I like the ratio. I?m just stating from experience in VV that, as drawn, ?plan D? has a small run that is too large and a large run that is too small. If you are trying to accomplish what I think most residents want (to provide a large enough area for dogs to run off leash and thereby encourage owners to keep their dogs on leash elsewhere in the park), D as presented will not, in my opinion, make that happen.

Also, where are you coming up with the ?4391? for D?s large run? I don?t see square footage anywhere on the plan.

I still like ?D? if the large run can be expanded.


4bailey,

Although I was a dog owner for over 22 years, my comments about the division fence is based on being in the VVP run more than anyone in the last four months. I did not say that the divider is the cause of all barking, but that it does encourage that behavior when occupied on both sides. Just as a dog walking on the outside of the run causes some dogs to bark at them, so does the division fence when dogs on opposite sides what to play with each other. Separate runs would eliminate some noise.

Bottom line, if the runs do not have the proper ratio or size, money will be wasted, most dog owners and non-dog owners will not be happy with the consequences, and you will still have a ?pet free? and ?off-leash? problem.



It?s your one chance to get it right from the start. I can tell you from experience, getting the City to redo something after they completed their work is next to impossible.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 20:59
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BrightMoment wrote:
You are ill-informed with respect to both the use of the VVP dog run and the need for separate dog runs for small dogs.


Actually, no, I'm not, as I own a small dog and use the VVP dog run. The result of two areas of the VVP dog run is often a filled large dog run and empty small dog run.

Quote:

There is too much literature on the subject to weigh in here, just google "small dog runs" and you'll see why.


There may be, but in reality, at this point in time, the small dog run is under used in comparison to the large dog run.


Quote:
On May 19, 2007, at 8:49 AM, Sfhecht@... wrote:

From personal experience, my family has learned the hard way that separate dog runs for large and small dogs is definitely the way to go. My sister's beloved shitzu, Yahtzee, was seriously mauled by an overzealous larger dog in a fenced-in dog-run


This is the result of bad owners who don't or can't control their dogs, not the design of a dog park. This is another reason to spay and neuter dogs, to reduce their desire to dominate other dogs and reduce aggressive behavior. This is the result of owners who don't discipline their dogs or have control over them.

Finally, the fact that there is a small dog run at VVP, I think its perfectly reasonably to not include a small dog run at Hamilton Park. Concerned owners can simply use VVP if they think there will be a serious problem.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 20:41
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ianmac47 wrote:
[...]

I'm beginning to lean towards D as well, but mostly because I'd rather see the park pathways restored properly. That being said, I think splitting the dog run the way it is in plan D is a waste of space.

I also think, after watching how under used the small dog run is at Van Vorst, that there is no need to separate out small and large dogs, only that there should be better enforcement of rules like "no aggressive behavior" and "no dogs that can't get along with other dogs."

Most times the VVP small dog run is empty.
I also wouldn't ever say that the large dog run is ever dangerously crowded, but why bother having the small dog run if its going to be so very under used.


You are ill-informed with respect to both the use of the VVP dog run and the need for separate dog runs for small dogs.

There is too much literature on the subject to weigh in here, just google "small dog runs" and you'll see why. My neighbor is very active with Parkman and others at VVP's dog runs, she has 2 Papillons and is moderator for the most important dog web site in JC and they ALL understand the need for a separate small dog run with over 150 members.

Suffice to say if you check out their site (you must join to read message board at yahoo groups) you'll see they are very vocal about the HP dog runs and need for separation for small dogs from big dogs, irrespective of dog's temperament.

Mia Scanga, with Talking Politics, also knows this subject very well and was instrumental with the VVP dog run.

DOGJC ? Dog Owners Group of Jersey City
http://pets.groups.yahoo.com/group/DOGJC/

Below are some representative posts:

Quote:
On May 19, 2007, at 8:49 AM, Sfhecht@... wrote:

From personal experience, my family has learned the hard way that separate dog runs for large and small dogs is definitely the way to go. My sister's beloved shitzu, Yahtzee, was seriously mauled by an overzealous larger dog in a fenced-in dog-run near her home in Scottsdale, Arizona. Only after several surgeries and many months of suffering was Yahtzee once again able to venture out, but NEVER back to the dog-run. Had there been separate runs, Yahtzee would NEVER have been attacked by a larger dog.

The prospect of dogs "barking madly" as opposed to dogs biting madly, seems like a reasonable one to me. I shall vote for Plan D in the hope that none of our friends and neighbors, or their dogs, need to suffer like poor Yahtzee did.

Whatever research is being referred to is obviously flawed. Even one attack is one too many.

Vote for Plan D


Quote:
Re: [DOGJC] Hamilton Park Dog Run Proposal
"Van Vorst Park D.O.G." wrote:

To clarify, YES - I absolutely agree that there has to be a small dog run. Absolutely essential, no doubt. I also agree that it is preferable that they be separated as much as possible. However, the proposition in plan D is horribly flawed and completely unworkable.The proposal is misleading as well, as it seems to indicate that the only plan for 2 runs is plan D. That is completely false. The vote
is to indicate the LOCATION and SIZE for the final run AREA.

After the vote, the HPNA has asked me and Mary Ann to work with them to come up with the actual design, which regardless of which of a,b, or c passes WILL include a small breed run.

Please do not vote for D. If D passes, all the dogs lose.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 20:25
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Quote:

EggFlyLice wrote:
While i don't think option D is necessarily the best use of space, i don't oppose the design option, and in light of the way the options are being presented, i will be voting for option D.


I'm beginning to lean towards D as well, but mostly because I'd rather see the park pathways restored properly. That being said, I think splitting the dog run the way it is in plan D is a waste of space. I also think, after watching how under used the small dog run is at Van Vorst, that there is no need to separate out small and large dogs, only that there should be better enforcement of rules like "no aggressive behavior" and "no dogs that can't get along with other dogs." Most times the VVP small dog run is empty. I also wouldn't ever say that the large dog run is ever dangerously crowded, but why bother having the small dog run if its going to be so very under used.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 19:34
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1++!

Best post yet on this topic, IMO!

Quote:

EggFlyLice wrote:
Quote:

4bailey wrote:
Quote:

super_furry wrote:
...What we know is that YOU don't prefer Concept D. Other dog owners seem to be open to Concept D....

Will any dog owners out there please chime in??...

As a dog-owner, if you think Concept D serves dog owners the best, please make your opinion known.


Dog-owner here checking in, and one who uses the VVP dog run, several of the NYC dog-runs, and takes my dog leashed into many a park, including the dust bowl that currently is Hamilton Park.

While i don't think option D is necessarily the best use of space, i don't oppose the design option, and in light of the way the options are being presented, i will be voting for option D.

i'm willing to chime in that our dog is an english bulldog - not known for their sprinting or need to go on long jogs. i think it would be informative if 4bailey would be transparent about what breed(s) he owns, and don't understand why he hasn't yet answered the question. it's entirely relevant.

that said, i think dog owners who choose to live in densely populated urban areas should take responsibility for their choices, and if their breed isn't having its needs met, then they should examine their lifestyle and figure out how to solve the problem, without looking to the city or the community to do it for them. nobody is entitled to a luxury item such as the dog run that is tailored to suit their individual breed's needs.

i also think it's silly for one dog owner to purport to speak for all dog owners. i don't remember electing anybody as the dog-owner spokesperson, and i don't speak for anybody's opinion but my own (and my dog's, but his english is not so good).

I thought the whole point of a community voting was to recognize that what serves each person's interests "best" shouldn't necessarily control, but rather what serves the interests of the community should. If having two separate dog runs makes it possible to have one large playground, making it safer for parents and teachers to watch children of different ages playing, i'm willing to recognize that mine and other dogs' needs can take a back seat to that.

i don't have kids, i do have dogs, i do have perspective, and though some dog-owners like to think of their dogs as children, they're not.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 17:12
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Quote:

EggFlyLice wrote:

Dog-owner here checking in, and one who uses the VVP dog run, several of the NYC dog-runs, and takes my dog leashed into many a park, including the dust bowl that currently is Hamilton Park.

While i don't think option D is necessarily the best use of space, i don't oppose the design option, and in light of the way the options are being presented, i will be voting for option D.

i'm willing to chime in that our dog is an english bulldog - not known for their sprinting or need to go on long jogs. that said, i think dog owners who choose to live in densely populated urban areas should take responsibility for their choices, and if their breed isn't having its needs met, then they should examine their lifestyle and figure out how to solve the problem, without looking to the city or the community to do it for them. nobody is entitled to a luxury item such as the dog run that is tailored to suit their individual breed's needs.

i also think it's silly for one dog owner to purport to speak for all dog owners. i don't remember electing anybody as the dog-owner spokesperson, and i don't speak for anybody's opinion but my own (and my dog's, but his english is not so good).

I thought the whole point of a community voting was to recognize that what serves each person's interests "best" shouldn't necessarily control, but rather what serves the interests of the community should. If having two separate dog runs makes it possible to have one large playground, making it safer for parents and teachers to watch children of different ages playing, i'm willing to recognize that mine and other dogs' needs can take a back seat to that.

i don't have kids, i do have dogs, i do have perspective, and though some dog-owners like to think of their dogs as children, they're not.


Nice to see you too,... NON! Glad to see you're not holding any grudges.

BTW... Great beard!!!

Quote:

SamS wrote:
I suspect that ultimately an additional dog run will have to be built someplace out side of Hamilton Park to accomodate the growing number of dogs that may coming in to the neighborhood with all the new development.


Isn?t that yet another reason to get the size, ratio, and shape of the dog-run (all the usability factors) as good as we can now?...

As a dog-owner, I?m telling you today that the all the factors in Concept D leave you with a small-dog run that?s too big and large-dog run that?s too small and poorly shaped to accommodate the current patterns of off-leash activity.

I know what I witness - I?m in HP at least ? hour a day, probably 330 days a year ? rain, sun or snow. I have greyhounds, so I HAVE to keep mine leashed at all times unless in a safe, fenced area. So,? don?t ?shoot the messenger? in what I?m about to tell you?

If a big goal of this is voluntary compliance with the leash laws, with Concept D, you?re gonna get the minimum compliance based on the usage patterns I witness on a daily basis

Call me myopic (I?m sure some of you will), but why endorse such an ill-fitting proposal for dog-owners today when you could do better??... Is a more advantageous position of the kiddie spray pool that much more important?...

Posted on: 2007/5/22 17:08
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Quote:

4bailey wrote:
Quote:

super_furry wrote:
...What we know is that YOU don't prefer Concept D. Other dog owners seem to be open to Concept D....

Will any dog owners out there please chime in??...

As a dog-owner, if you think Concept D serves dog owners the best, please make your opinion known.


Dog-owner here checking in, and one who uses the VVP dog run, several of the NYC dog-runs, and takes my dog leashed into many a park, including the dust bowl that currently is Hamilton Park.

While i don't think option D is necessarily the best use of space, i don't oppose the design option, and in light of the way the options are being presented, i will be voting for option D.

i'm willing to chime in that our dog is an english bulldog - not known for their sprinting or need to go on long jogs. i think it would be informative if 4bailey would be transparent about what breed(s) he owns, and don't understand why he hasn't yet answered the question. it's entirely relevant.

that said, i think dog owners who choose to live in densely populated urban areas should take responsibility for their choices, and if their breed isn't having its needs met, then they should examine their lifestyle and figure out how to solve the problem, without looking to the city or the community to do it for them. nobody is entitled to a luxury item such as the dog run that is tailored to suit their individual breed's needs.

i also think it's silly for one dog owner to purport to speak for all dog owners. i don't remember electing anybody as the dog-owner spokesperson, and i don't speak for anybody's opinion but my own (and my dog's, but his english is not so good).

I thought the whole point of a community voting was to recognize that what serves each person's interests "best" shouldn't necessarily control, but rather what serves the interests of the community should. If having two separate dog runs makes it possible to have one large playground, making it safer for parents and teachers to watch children of different ages playing, i'm willing to recognize that mine and other dogs' needs can take a back seat to that.

i don't have kids, i do have dogs, i do have perspective, and though some dog-owners like to think of their dogs as children, they're not.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 17:02
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I suspect that ultimately an additional dog run will have to be built someplace out side of Hamilton Park to accomodate the growing number of dogs that may coming in to the neighborhood with all the new development.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 15:31
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Quote:

brewster wrote:
I thought I made clear I was compiling pros/cons of the plans as presented, and clearly attributed that opinion as not originating with myself.

Why don't you make a clearly written addition to the "cons" column instead of attacking me?


I believe the term ?aggressive barking? is yours, not Parkman?s.

Quote:

Parkman wrote:
? I have also observed from our run that small and large dogs on opposite sides of the division fence promote barking from both sides?.


?Aggressive? is pretty inflammatory, and carries a whole lot of baggage, don?t you think?...

If that opinion isn?t yours, would you be willing to remove it from your ?pros list? if Parkman retracts his statement that the divider fence promotes barking.

Parkman, are you standing by that statement ?as is??..

Posted on: 2007/5/22 15:05
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Quote:

super_furry wrote:
...What we know is that YOU don't prefer Concept D. Other dog owners seem to be open to Concept D....

Will any dog owners out there please chime in??...

As a dog-owner, if you think Concept D serves dog owners the best, please make your opinion known.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 14:46
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Quote:

4bailey wrote:

Many dogs simply bark as a way to interact with each other or because they?re happy. One of my dog barks when she wants attention or when she wants to poop. brewster?s use of the term ?aggressive barking? just shows he doesn?t have a clue on this.

brewster? I urge you to step away from the computer and the AutoCAD; take a walk to the VVP run and observe with an open mind first-hand. Otherwise, let?s take pro #1 off your list.


I thought I made clear I was compiling pros/cons of the plans as presented, and clearly attributed that opinion as not originating with myself.

Why don't you make a clearly written addition to the "cons" column instead of attacking me?

Posted on: 2007/5/22 14:39
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Quote:

4bailey wrote:
To add insult to injury, Concept D (the least-preferred design for dog-owners) combined with this ballot that splits the vote of one-run advocates is a dream come true for the anti-dog faction.



4bailey, repeating your assumption that Concept D is the least-preferred design for dog-owners does not make it a true statement. What we know is that YOU don't prefer Concept D. Other dog owners seem to be open to Concept D.

There is no such thing as an "anti-dog faction." Dog ownership is part of the fabric of daily life in downtown JC. IanMac is correct in his assertion that dog owners and non-dog owners fundamentally want the same thing ? a dog run that will be used. The HPNA survey demonstrated that pet free areas are very important, and a well implemented dog run is a prerequisite for enforceable pet free areas.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 14:34
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Hey brewster? too much to debate and I?m at work, so let?s work on you pro/con list one item at a time. First,:

Quote:

brewster wrote:
?
Pros...

1 - The dog runs are physically separated, which Parkman say reduces aggressive barking through the fence of a divided run?.

This assertion is basically what I pick up from the south end of my dogs every day.

I?ll defer the Parkman might know a thing or two about construction on a dog-run, but there?s no way I?m going to validate his expertise on canine behavior over mine or any other dog owner. I don?t think Parkman?s intention was to hold himself up as the ?Dog Whisperer of VVP?.

If the divider has sooo much to do with barking, walk by the VVP run when there are no dogs in the small run and many dogs in the large run (a condition which happens quite frequently). If the divider is the cause of ?aggressive barking?, the run should be quite, right?... NOT SO.

Why do dogs bark in a dog-run?...

In my view, breed characteristics, individual dog personality and dog-run shape influence why a dog barks far more than any divider fence. Beagles and other scent-houds tend to bay, toy and miniature varieties (most of the occupants of any small-dog area, BTW) tend to be? well,? ?vocal?.

Many dogs simply bark as a way to interact with each other or because they?re happy. One of my dog barks when she wants attention or when she wants to poop. brewster?s use of the term ?aggressive barking? just shows he doesn?t have a clue on this.

brewster? I urge you to step away from the computer and the AutoCAD; take a walk to the VVP run and observe with an open mind first-hand. Otherwise, let?s take pro #1 off your list.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 13:54
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I'm beginning to lean towards D on this at this point based on the pathway configuration, since I think it makes more sense to keep the pathways in the proper spoke alignment. But as a practical matter, if the dog run ends up being too small to accommodate all the dogs that use Hamilton park, you can bet the problem of dogs running free on the grass areas will not have been solved. Even if there are pet free areas, you can be sure that a dog park that is too crowded will lead to dogs on the open pet free areas. After all, people don't always follow the rules, like say, having alcohol in the park. I think the only way to ensure that pet free areas remain pet free is to have a legitimate alternative for dog / dog owners. Splitting the dog run may very well fail to accomplish this intended goal.

Also what I'll say about the small vs. large dog run. The large dog run at Van Vorst is consistently filled with large and small dogs. The small dog run is often empty, or has just one, lonely small dog in it. In short, I'm not sure if having a small dog run is necessarily the best use of space considering limited resources.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 13:34
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Quote:

BrightMoment wrote:
?.Please explain why you think that only "anti-dog/dog neutral posters ...gravitate to "brewster D"..." as I am neither anti-dog or dog neutral. Also please let us know whether you have big or small dogs and do you see the need for separate dog runs for both sizes.

First, I think I?ve got a record on JCList documenting my position on the need for separate large and small dog-runs. (see here). That?s been consistent in VVP, HP and hasn?t changed.

Don?t get all hung up that there?s nothing in Concepts A, B, or C that say ?Small Dog Area.? The four proposals are done by a Landscaping Architect, not an organization that really knows what they?re talking about regarding design of a dog run. You can tell because there?s no mention of an air-lock entrance, an entrance for maintenance vehicle access, surface, drainage, or ADA ramps. It?s just a place-holder. If all that is ?implied? in the renderings, it?s logical to assume a small dog/big dog divider is ?implied? in Concepts A, B, C too. In my view, the only reason why Concept ?D? has a ?Big Dog Run? and ?Small Dog Run? explicitly labeled is that it?s a handy justification for shoehorning two runs in any available space.

You?re right, BM. Perhaps, I?m a little to harsh asserting that "anti-dog/dog neutral posters ...gravitate to "brewster D". I don?t mean to offend, calling you ?dog neutral?. Can I change that to ?anti-dog/dog-neutral/people-who-haven?t-looked-at-this-as-thoroughly gravitate to Concept D??

Why do hate I Concept D with/without the brewster tweak so much?... It?s the wrong size, the wrong shape, the wrong ratio and it?s poor bang-for-the-buck. I would have hoped that an HP dog-run would have taken what was good about the VVP design and improved it; this is a giant step backwards. It?s a missed opportunity for some sort of d?tente between dog-owners and other interests in the HP community putting dog-owners last-in-line.

To add insult to injury, Concept D (the least-preferred design for dog-owners) combined with this ballot that splits the vote of one-run advocates is a dream come true for the anti-dog faction. On this thread, we?ve made the HPNA aware of the ballot flaw before the vote. Why not change the ballot to a ranking-style?... I?m not talking about adding or deleting more concepts, just changing the ballot. Is it a matter of not enough time or a lack of willingness??..

Posted on: 2007/5/22 13:18
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Another Home "Run", brewster!

Option D gets my vote for sure.

Quote:

brewster wrote:
Maybe a little focusing of this discussion could help.

Here's the plan D pro/con breakdown as I see it. Can anyone add to either list?

Pros:

1 - The dog runs are physically separated, which Parkman say reduces aggressive barking through the fence of a divided run.

2 - reopens the northeast spoke path, restoring the historic walkways.

3 - Retains 2 tennis courts, making one multiuse.

4 - creates bigger more consolidated playground, which makes it easier for parents (and preschool teachers) to watch kids of multiple ages.

5 - Playground area has larger trees well placed for shade in playground, a perennial complaint about the existing one.

6 -water play area is better placed for monitoring multiple kids there as well as in the playground.

7 - because of actually moving the playground there's a possibility of the new one being built before demo-ing the old one, thus not being without for many months.

8 - Brings the playground further away from the basketball court and it's loud, often foul voices.

Cons:
1 -Dog runs in total together are 5% smaller than the run in A,B,C. This is without any tweaks to either design.

2 - No putting green

3 - No community garden replacing ball court.

NOTE: I avoid listing whether the dog run is by 9th St or McWilliams as a pro or con since it depends on where you live or hang out in the park.

Posted on: 2007/5/22 4:25
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