I didn't think that this was possible at least without special permission. At the very least there are public health issues to be considered. Can you expand on the details of the case you mention without infringing on the privacy of the people involved?bond-007 said:Also another cheaper option is to be buried in the back yard. I know of one such burial in the last week.
So? That's their prerogative. Not everybody needs some physical representation of the deceased (e.g. a grave/headstone or urn of ashes) in order to grieve properly and remember them. In fact some people may explicitly want no physical reminder if it would be too emotionally distressing for them. It's impossible, intrusive and meaningless to infer anything from a person's actions in this context. It's their business and nobody else's. Burying a body in the back garden is different as it may impact on others!ribena said:I know someone who had their child cremated, scattered her ashes over the garden and then sold their house two or three years later and moved away.
ClubMan said:I didn't think that this was possible at least without special permission. At the very least there are public health issues to be considered. Can you expand on the details of the case you mention without infringing on the privacy of the people involved?.
Depends on the council - in Fingal, you have to be over 65 or dead already!Lorz said:There is nothing stopping you from buying your plot from the Council either.
bond-007 said:I can think of one case in Wicklow about 20 years ago where a man buried his wife in the woods without permission. AFAIK the body was exhumed by court order and the man faced prosecution.
Oh yes!Bamhan said:Was she dead?
ClubMan said:I
So? That's their prerogative. Not everybody needs some physical representation of the deceased (e.g. a grave/headstone or urn of ashes) in order to grieve properly and remember them. In fact some people may explicitly want no physical reminder if it would be too emotionally distressing for them. It's impossible, intrusive and meaningless to infer anything from a person's actions in this context. It's their business and nobody else's. Burying a body in the back garden is different as it may impact on others!
My former neighbour buried her father's ashes beneath an apple tree in their garden and I don't recall her retrieving them when she moved house.
What fact does the emoticon represent?ribena said:God ClubMan, I think you're being a bit harsh. I was merely stating the fact nothing else.
ribena said:I know someone who had their child cremated, scattered her ashes over the garden and then sold their house two or three years later and moved away.
What you don't know won't hurt you. I never mentioned the ashes issue to my new neighbours and presume that they don't know (assuming that they are still there).I personally would hate to buy a house with someone buried or scattered or whatever out the back.
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