What do you make of this situation?

I disagree. I understand the place you're coming from, but not everyone needs to be direct to fix a problem. Bringing something with you helps break the ice, and IMO may help mend fences lol sorry about the pun... can't think of a better term... lol There's no reason that neighborly relations can't BE neighborly.

When I worked in a Chinese Restaurant, the cooks HATED me. For no reason. They just decided not to like me, and made my life as a waitress HELL. (late orders, mix ups on purpose...) Eventually, I decided to take the sweet way. Started bringing donuts on Sundays to the crew. Not long after, the cooks started calling me their favorite.
When my son was in middle school, a boy who had never met me started teasing my son about how fat I was. (I wasn't, and never have been, and the boy didn't know me) It upset my son, and when he told me about it, I told him to make a joke of it. Told him to tell the boy the family was having to roll me through the kitchen door. By making a joke about it (like joking about chasing chickens being the reason for the fence) my son took the boy's power away. Since his comments no longer "bothered" my son, he stopped being a problem.

My point is, you don't have to be confrontational to fix problems. The more you can put your neighbor at ease the more likely you are to have a good outcome. I know first hand that not all solutions have to be actually talking directly about the issue.
 
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The fencing I got has nothing to do with her property, it's just for around my chicken coop. It doesn't divide our yards, and it doesn't even reach to her property. That's why I don't understand why she would have a problem with it. I even mentioned to her several times last summer that I was looking to get some sort of fencing or kennel to use as a run for my birds, and this year we made the plunge and got the poultry fencing. Why she would have a problem with it, I'll never understand. She sat in a chair in her yard all afternoon staring at my children as they did their chicken chores, and then as they played, in MY yard, absolutely NOWHERE near her property. Why sit there staring at my children? The only reason I knew she was doing this is because my mother was sitting in her room watching the neighbor.
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I don't know how to approach this neighbor. She is so strange, and anti social. My fencing has absolutely nothing to do with her, and I don't understand why she is putting up these signs 2 days AFTER I put up my fencing. It just doesn't make sense to me.
 
Did you ever stop to think that..?

A. Her signs have nothing to do with you.
B. She doesn't care about your fence.
C. She wasn't "staring at" your children, she was just sitting in her yard.
D. She dislikes your chickens in her yard as much as you dislike her cats in yours.
E. You yourself are encouraging her cats to come over because you are feeding them.

Does any of this seem possible? I don't understand all the drama over so little. To be fair, you did ask, "What do you make of this situation"? Well, that's what I make of it. It sounds like you are making a lot of assumptions. I don't mean to be rude, but seriously. How can you be upset about her cats when your chickens are going in her yard and you are encouraging her cats coming over by feeding them? Why is it your concern what signs she puts up on her property?
 
chicken_china_mom,

I read your post and I sat reading it and reading it to find a possible reason for your distress. If I seem to be a little brash in this message that is not my intention.

I see where you are coming from when you feel like your neighbor is getting a little crazy. But try not to read too much into the situation. Some people seem ice cold and others seem very open hearted. Coming from an Island of diversity, we have so many cultural mixtures. There is also old school and new school cultures. Where the "Old School" hold on to heritage and "New School" go with what society does. Then there is Mix school where they blend the two. Sometimes you have to just be the bigger person even though you feel like you have given your all to be a fabulous neighbor. I understand that you feel like she is a cat hoarder and at times doesn't provide for them adequately. But you may want to step back and do not feed the cats if they are not your own. You have to provide for your own-selves. I do not know if your neighbor is old school Irish or like you Irish American. I only know what you posted. This is only my take on the situation and I feel like you just needed to vent a little. That is fine, we all need to vent now and then.

But just be the friendly neighbor you have always been. It is better than becoming the neighbor you never liked....
 
First of all, I wouldn't care if her feelings were hurt. She's a predjudiced idiot. Your kids are better off not playing with her son, and you are better off with a fence between you. It's good that you fenced the chickens in. We all should keep our animals on our own property. As for the cats, that's easy too. It's cruel to starve cats and let them run feral and breed that way. If it's in your yard, catch it and take take it to the pound or a cat rescue.
 
If it were me, I wouldn't feed the cats, I'd call the animal shelter and have them come collect the cats. If they are sickly looking and skinny, I'd be more afraid of disease than anything. But, I'm a butt like that.
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I wonder if since they are so thin, animal control could be called for a wellness check?

Such a catch 22. Feed them because they need to be fed better, and have them in your yard all the time...
Or let them get bad enough that animal control will take them because she's a bad pet owner.

I don't envy your choices!! lol
 

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