Is this code for something? Or, just bored teenagers....just wondering.
Anybody know why I keep seeing tennis shoes hanging from power lines in my neighborhood?
heard tennis shoes hanging over a power line meant you could buy crack there.
It's a time-honored tradition to throw your sneakers over the power lines on the last day of school.
When I was a lad of 13 in Nashua, New Hampshire, we used to steal pairs of shoes that had been carelessly left on the sidewalk by kids who had popped open a fireplug. At this point we would play "over the wire keep away" until (a) the kid's mother, brother, father, or a passing police officer put a stop to the game, or (b) shoes went up but didn't come down.
When I was in the military and guys were getting ready to get out and go back to a "regular" life they would take their combat boots and paint them up all funky before tying the laces together and throwing them over a wire.
I agree with the drug theory. I saw a news brief on Amsterdam, and there was a pair of shoes hanging in the ghetto where everyone does drugs. So I assume it means "stop here."
Either they're meant to increase visibility for low-flying aircraft, frighten rattlesnakes away, or just for the hell of it.
I read in the newspaper that shoes would be thrown over the power lines to serve as a reminder/warning of a murder that occurred nearby. This seems proven to me: as I was traveling past a home in which a drug-related murder had occurred about three months prior . . . a pair of shoes were hanging from the power lines in front of the home.
Depending on what part of the country you are from, one shoe from a light post or sign represents the death of a gang member. Usually seen in the inner city.
When I was a kid (late 60s, early 70s) the boys would tie together (1) their own sneakers that they hated or (2) sneakers of the weak and/or overweight kids and toss them over the telephone wires for fun. It usually took a number of tosses to get them up there, so the boys took this as a challenge.
The fact about the shoes hanging across the overhead wire is: my wife won't let me bring them into the house after I walked across the barnyard. This is a certified true fact.
Used to be a gang sign--sneakers hanging over telephone or electrical wires were to designate gang turf.
I'll admit to being a former shoe thrower. After getting a new pair of sneakers, it was a common ritual in my neighborhood to tie the shoelaces of your old pair together and throw them up on the telephone wires. What else are you going to do with your old pair of sneakers?
I used to teach inner-city youths in Washington, D.C., and witnessed older children throwing the shoes of younger children over tree branches and telephone lines, or a gang of children would take a single child's shoes and toss them. This was, as far as I could tell, an exclusively male pastime. The kids did this to be mean and make a difficult time of life even more difficult. One fun part about this type of kid is that if an adult tells them to stop, the adult is "disrespecting" their right to do whatever they want. The other fun part about some of these kids is that they are armed. I am not restricting my criticisms to children in inner-city Washington either.
There is no solid cause-effect going on here. Just your everyday kid hijinks. I suppose you could say it's a way of marking territory. Shoes can be seen hanging all over the beach area here in San Diego, over lampposts, power lines, trees, etc. It's as pointless as jamming gum in water fountains or throwing water balloons at cars. Just one of the things kids do.
Reply:Stupid kids messing with eachother.
Reply:that neighborhood sells drugs.
Reply:Bored and idiot children.
Reply:Usually that is a sign of a dealer nearby.
Reply:well in a neighborhood i used to live in wherever you found tennis shoes hanging was a place where drug deals took place. How the cops did not catch them at this i do not know.
Reply:I lived in Baltimore Maryland and the tradition was that drug dealers marked their corners with shoes. I have also heard it was out of respect for a fallen friend. I am sure there are different reasons across the country.
Reply:Not just a ghetto thing. It's a kid thing.
Reply:bored teenagers being mean. they are throwing peoples shoes up there so they cant get them back.
Reply:i dont know but dont try getting them down.
Reply:its a ghetto thing, i assume you live in the ghetto.
Reply:why don't you try asking the people tossing the shoes on the line? how can anyone know that answer?
Reply:As a kid we did it for something to do over summer vacation when there was nothing to do and all the adults were at work.
If you go to an army base and see this, soldiers do it, only they spray paint it a load color and then toss it as a sign to showing that they are getting out of the army.
Reply:i was always told that it means that there are drugs sold there...but i think it is just kids doing it, thinking that they are funny
Reply:♥ ♥ bored kids ♥ ♥
Reply:Ok Im sure im a bit older than most of you BUT back in my day lets say the early 60s a black pair of cons (Converse) meant it was a black hood and a white pair of course meant a white hood. This comes from the streets of Cypress Hills Housing Projects in the heart of ENY. In the 60s there were both black and white pairs hanging. Can't imagine any more white ones now.
Reply:Some of these people are telling you incorrectly, because tennis shoes hanging up on power lines usually means that some young person was killed in your area usually by a drug dealer, and they took their tennis shoes and hung them up there for all to see. This is evidence of gang violence in your area.This is a very bad sign in your neighborhood. You should contact your real estate agent as quickly as possible, and get out.
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