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Eurovision

(70 Posts)
merlotgran Sat 23-May-15 20:47:40

The usual racket!

At least the UK entry could sing.

Iam64 Tue 26-May-15 07:37:00

Our new front door is state of the art, sounds like the one durhamjen has. It's very difficult to break in, providing we use the key to lock it. We had 4 new doors a couple of years ago, all top scale anti burglary but all need to be locked whereas the old Yale ones locked when closed.

Eloethan Mon 25-May-15 22:39:38

I never bothered about locking the front or back doors until there was a spate of burglaries near us and a policewoman recommended that I lock the front door at night. She said most doors, unless they are double-locked from inside - are very easily opened.

I lock the front and back doors when I go to bed. The dog barks if he hears anything unusual (in fact he barked one night and we heard the front door slam. We thought it was our son - who was staying with us at the time - coming home late. When we got up in the morning there was a dent at the edge of the front door where someone had forced it open - the door slamming must have been our dog scaring him off).

I suppose it's sensible to take these precautions but I don't like living in such a state of heightened paranoia that I keep doors locked even in the daytime. Perhaps I'd feel differently if we didn't have a dog.

durhamjen Mon 25-May-15 22:37:30

My husband was an architect. Part of his job was to specify door furniture, so I know this lock is okay for insurance purposes.

durhamjen Mon 25-May-15 22:35:48

I have a seven-lever Yale type lock, but it is connected to the door handle. If I lock the door on the outside, it locks on the inside, and vice versa. If I want to allow people to get in, it has to be unlocked. The door handle works from the outside and inside.
I agree with you, roses, that that sort of lock might be ideal for my door. It is the sort that fits on wooden doors, and we used to have on the guest house. However it creates its own problems.
We also had that type on the house we had before that. When we had a break in one day when I was out, the thieves had locked the door on the inside so I could not get in with my key. I had to get my next-door neighbour to break in for me so I could find out what had happened and ring the police!

Anya Mon 25-May-15 22:29:47

One of the questions on house insurance quotes asks what kind of lock you have on external doors.

grumppa Mon 25-May-15 22:21:36

I agree with you, Ana. I cannot recall knowing anyone whose front door did not have a "Yale" type lock that could only be opened from the outside with a key, certainly for the past fifty years.

And not just in big towns and cities.

Ana Mon 25-May-15 22:03:18

Oh.

durhamjen Mon 25-May-15 21:48:31

No.

Ana Mon 25-May-15 21:15:09

Surely most front doors are only openable from the inside without a key? confused

Iam64 Mon 25-May-15 21:07:11

It's rather depressing to feel we have to lock our doors during the day. I always lock up about 5 and keep the front door locked if I'm in the back garden. The dogs are a deterrent, not that they'd be aggressive but they do bark loudly and persistently if someone comes up the front path.

rosesarered Mon 25-May-15 14:31:18

Numberplease, I do remember you telling us the other year about the man who wandered into your kitchen.our doors are not actually locked when we are at home, but nobody could open the door from the outside, it's that kind of lock.
DJen, that sounds like the sort of lock that you need on your door, unlocked from the inside but locked from the outside.

durhamjen Mon 25-May-15 14:16:31

I do not think my insurance says I have to keep the door locked when I am in the house, just when I go out.
I live in a bungalow, and can see anybody walking past the window when I am watching the TV, so that's not a problem, either.
We did actually see her walking past the window. She wasn't in any state to burgle, so we discovered.

Anya Mon 25-May-15 11:54:21

So unimpressed in fact they may refuse to pay out.

grumppa Mon 25-May-15 11:07:06

If you leave a door unlocked and are burgled while, say, you're engrossed in the Eurovision Song Contest, your insurer will not be impressed.

annodomini Mon 25-May-15 10:42:02

You should always lock the back door too, number. There's a well-known ruse in which criminals work in pairs. One comes to the front door to keep you talking while the other nips in the back door and swipes your handbag and any other valuables. I only wish I always heeded my own advice.

Iam64 Mon 25-May-15 09:19:53

Lucky girl to arrive at your house jen. Some friends found a man asleep on their sofa in the morning, assumed he was a friend of their daughter's, who was asleep upstairs. They made him breakfast and chatted happily. He seemed a nice guy, like all their daughter's pals. She wandered down late morning and asked to be introduced to their new friend……. It seems he'd been under the influence, wandered in and fallen asleep on the sofa. He was a bit bog eyed in the morning and went along with their assumption that he'd come home with their daughter. He was evidently very apologetic when it became clear he'd never me the daughter before. They live in a very "nice" area in south Manchester and he lived nearby. grin

Anya Mon 25-May-15 08:51:15

Ever since a stranger walked into a former house, uninvited, I've ensured my front door and back gate are locked.

soontobe Mon 25-May-15 08:47:33

There are police cuts. Police are not showing up quickly necessarily anymore, about this type of thing. And as numberplease says too, it is sometimes a man that enters drunk and confused.

numberplease Mon 25-May-15 00:34:57

Our front door is always locked, but not the back, as I`m in and out all the time, and there`s always someone in here.

durhamjen Mon 25-May-15 00:16:03

I prefer to leave my front door unlocked in case I have another life threatening aortic dissection and need the ambulance myself. However, I left it locked today, and have been worried at every little twinge in my back.
If there is a group of people in, I do not see the need to lock the door.

rubysong Sun 24-May-15 23:16:52

DH & I went to a Eurovision party in the village. There was fabulous euro themed food. We dressed as Austrians. We didn't hear much of the music as there was so much chatter.
My brother and SiL were in Sweden with their daughter so I expect they had quite a party.

Ana Sun 24-May-15 23:08:02

It never ceases to amaze me how many people leave their doors, front and/or back unlocked just because they're in the house themselves.

durhamjen Sun 24-May-15 22:56:02

This one didn't. She lay down on the bed-settee and fell asleep. We had to get the police as she had no address or ID, no mobile, nothing.

numberplease Sun 24-May-15 22:51:04

It happened to us TWICE last summer! Each time was in the afternoon, and each time the person was drunk. First time was a rather burly young man, luckily he turned and left when he realised he was in the wrong house, the second was the following week, a woman walked (staggered) in, my son-in-law said "you`re in the wrong house duck", and she turned around and left. A bit un-nerving though.

durhamjen Sun 24-May-15 21:08:00

I do not know where you live, soon, but it's quite unusual in this village.
I know the grandparents of the girl she was going to stay with. I will not say anything to them unless I hear on the grapevine. Do not know what sort of state the granddaughter was in!
Yes, sparky, it was a shock. Pleased my son and his family were here.