apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


AT on: Previous Tenants' Stuff

9-21-at on.jpgIt seems like every time I move, previous tenants have left stuff behind. Old paint, tin boxes, newspapers, a box of tea bags, spices, toilet bowl brushes, and almost always, paper clips, safety pins, tacks. Once, a sterling silver spoon.

When I moved into my current home a few months ago, the tenant had showered and then taken an early flight to South America. He left me his wet towel. He also left an enormous houseplant, ice cream, a modem, toxic cleaning products, and multiple broken objects -- bottles, flowerpots, a chimenea, a patio table. But last weekend, while doing some work outside, I came upon...

 
 

A bone.

I was picking up tree branches and pieces of bamboo in a small ivy-covered area, and I looked down and noticed I wasn't holding a branch. I was holding a bone. A fairly large, old bone. Not a chicken bone, not a cow bone. That's pretty disturbing for anyone, I think, but especially for someone who recently lost a pet.

The gardener was here the next day, and cleaned up the area. No more bones were found.

I'm still thinking about what to do with it. If someone did bury their pet -- and my landlady doesn't know if that might be the case, although if it was, it was many years ago -- the bone deserves to be treated with some respect.

(Update 10/07: The police had no interest in the bone. I eventually got my vet to identify it: It was a very old bone from a coyote. (It must have been very old. I don't live in a rural area.) And they disposed of it properly.)

Image: bosela via morguefile

Tags

AT on...

Related Links

Share

Comments (17)

I viewed my apt the same day the previous tenant moved out. The management company took care of the food and other things left, but I had them keep the awesome curved Ikea mirror mounted on a narrow wall. I guess that was a more pleasant discovery!

posted by lurker2209 on September 21st 2007 at 2:15pm
view lurker2209's profile

I had a similar problem with my house too; except the previous tenant was the owner. He and his family moved out in a rush and the place was a *mess*. Lots of random stuff left in drawers.

Moving into apartments however, has been the opposite experience. The apartments have always been clean and empty.

Sigh, it's a pity I don't enjoy sharing walls with my neighbors. I guess us house renters are out of luck when it comes to that kind of stuff - since normally they are managed by an individual owner. Sort of blows.

posted by theninthcloud on September 21st 2007 at 4:51pm
view theninthcloud's profile

When we did a remodel in our home and found lots of old stuff: children's toys in the ducts, 1960's and '70's magazine behind the kneewalls in the upper floor, a child-sized gun rack with engraved name in the basement, a surprisingly well-preserved apple core in an interior wall. Most of this is gone now, save the vintage magazines, but it added a little interest to the reno.

posted by Kuri on September 21st 2007 at 6:13pm
view Kuri's profile

My best friend was just complaining that the house she just bought had the greediest previous owners. She say's they couldn't even leave toilet paper, they took the last roll upon leaving for the final time.

I thought that was funny!

Atleast every place I have moved in, there was toilet paper for the first night.

posted by sanriofreak on September 22nd 2007 at 12:38pm
view sanriofreak's profile

My dad used to buy cow bones from the butcher to give to our lab, who would bury them once he had picked them clean. Could that be what you found?

posted by kitty teeth on September 22nd 2007 at 4:10pm
view kitty teeth's profile

the previous tenant of my new place left a pool table. in the kitchen. it was the weirdest thing ever.

nonetheless, let's just say we didn't end up keeping it.

posted by the big d on September 22nd 2007 at 4:30pm
view the big d's profile

Since I couldn't move across 12 states with it, I left a good deal of top shelf liquor in the last apartment I had rented. I thought the super would appreciate it, knowing he did drink, but instead he charged us a $150 cleaning fee.

posted by SMM on September 23rd 2007 at 7:13am
view SMM's profile

Whoof, when we redid the attic insulation (NOT an easily accessible spot) I found cans of paint, rolls of carpet, butcher paper, kitchen tile, old wallpaper (that I has just finished ripping out of the bathroom - NEVER wallpaper in a steamy bathroom) and a lot of fake flowers. I guess they were just hoarders, there were a lot of different colors of carpet up there!

posted by Anne (in Reno) on September 23rd 2007 at 11:50am
view Anne (in Reno)'s profile

There is a difference between leaving stuff behind, unannounced and unexpected, and notifying a landlord that there can be a box of top shelf liquor or paperbacks or cleaning supplies. Me, I've discovered too many eggs behind the stove to eagerly anticipate what might be next. I've moved into places stripped of light bulbs, so I don't expect that all previous tenants genuinely care to make their successors feel welcome.

posted by krister on September 23rd 2007 at 11:54am
view krister's profile

At my last place, the previous tenant left behind things we had discussed and that I purchased from him (i.e., an area rug), and lots of bonus items: a vacuum cleaner and some pots and pans (all useful items, donated to a friend), old cleaning supplies, some very yucky food in the fridge (he knew I wasn't moving in until almost a month after he left), and lots of dirt and dead bugs. What a welcome.

posted by pearlgirl on September 23rd 2007 at 6:29pm
view pearlgirl's profile

weird. In france, could be in europe too for all I know, we strip everything bare before we leave. There will be nothing left unless it's been agreed so between the former and the newer tenant (kitchen cabintes come to mind). I think it's just a matter of politeness, if you don't want all the crap you are leaving behind, do you expect the new tenant will cheerfully take care of all your junk? I don't think I left my precious low-energy light bulbs in my previous apartment! And I much prefer moving in a stripped clean apartment.

posted by loki on September 23rd 2007 at 10:16pm
view loki's profile

The most I ever found when moving into a new place was very small children's toys. I used to love watching "If Walls Could Talk" because of the wonderful things the new owners would find, until the show started that tacky "and HOW MUCH IS IT WORTH?!" bit. Come on, let's save that bit for Roadside Antiques. So now I might watch the show, but as soon as they start the jabbering about money, I fast foward or shut it off.

posted by kuroneko on September 24th 2007 at 7:34am
view kuroneko's profile

I've always stripped everything when I leave, including my CFLs and yes, the toilet paper, and I wish other people would do the same. But unless the place has been remodeled between tenants there's always junk. Once someone left a really foul old mattress, and a toilet (unattached to plumbing, but alas, not clean) in the bedroom. Now I'm just happy when the junk I find can fit in a garbage can.

posted by dot on September 24th 2007 at 9:39am
view dot's profile

You first said that the person left so quickly that he left a wet towel still there before he boarded a transcontinental flight to South America.... and then you find a large bone in the backyard.... and you havent called the police.

posted by joey c on September 24th 2007 at 11:49am
view joey c's profile

Joey c's comment notwithstanding...

Isn't it good that someone as thoughtful as you found the old bone? It does sound an upsetting experience.

posted by Lesley - London on September 24th 2007 at 12:18pm
view Lesley - London's profile

When I was little, my family dog was a Great Dane. When he passed away, my parents buried him in the backyard of the little home we were renting at the time. I feel terrible for whoever was unlucky enough to happen upon that enormous skeleton, and pray they forgive us!

posted by viaKendra on October 15th 2007 at 4:33pm
view viaKendra's profile

Almost every single place I've ever moved into, the previous tenants forgot their slotted grill pan in the drawer under the range. I have quite a little collection going at this point.

posted by SeattleMama on January 31st 2009 at 4:38am
view SeattleMama's profile