Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Carol singing polar bear probed over noise

A six-foot mechanical polar bear that dances and sings Christmas carols is being investigated after a council received a noise complaint. The bear, named Bernard, bursts into song when people walk past Loft Café in Shefford, Bedfordshire, where he has stood since 1 December. An enforcement officer told owners Rob and Teresa Farndon there had been a complaint about "noise nuisance".



Central Bedfordshire Council said there was an "ongoing investigation". Bernard sings snippets of five or six Christmas songs, including Andy Williams' It's The Most Wonderful Time of the Year, and is activated either by movement or by pressing a button. He stood outside the cafe every day last December with no complaints and has been put away at 4pm every day so far this year. The owners' son Connor Farndon said the complaint was "so petty".

"We put the bear outside for the kids to get them in the Christmas spirit and all the kids love him," he said. "You can't even hear him over the traffic when it is standing stationary at the traffic lights outside. It's not the council's fault - they're just following up a complaint. It's the person who's complained who is ridiculous." Mr Farndon said he thought the only thing the council could do was "tell us to take it away".

Not the actual polar bear. This one stands outside a fish shop in Germany.

YouTube link.

A council spokesman confirmed the premises had been visited "on a number of occasions" but that "Bernard has not been deemed a nuisance. We have written to both parties, explaining the situation as part of an ongoing investigation," he said. "The council takes noise complaints seriously and has a legal obligation to fully investigate them, but we also want everyone in Central Bedfordshire to enjoy themselves over the Christmas period and would urge residents and business owners alike to be mindful of their neighbours when planning festivities."

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Re: "It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year." Staples (a U.S. office-supply retailer) had this ad many years ago:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fwcYbo7pjto

MANY years ago. Before there was an "Easy" button, which was added to this video. The kids in the ad are probably 30 by now.

But, the spouse & I periodically laugh about this ad.

Lurker111

P.S.: Regarding the address numbers in the "Please prove you're not a robot" test. Ever wonder if someone is scanning street addresses, using us to convert them to numbers, and in the end applying this information for nefarious purposes? I do. But then, I'm weird. Sort of. Maybe.

arbroath said...

Heh heh, those were the days.

I'm not sure what you mean by address numbers. I just get two words to type.