WOULD you ask a couple to continue having sex in their car after they caught you watching them through the windows?

Would you fail to phone for an ambulance after witnessing a horrifying car crash?

Would you waltz into a cinema, skip past the box office and mosey on into a screening of the latest blockbuster without paying?

Just three questions Dalgety Bay sculptor Denis Carbonaro is asking after growing sick of having his work undervalued.

His inspiring Bark Park landscape at his Strathbeg Drive home is a recognised tourist attraction attracting visitors from across Fife and beyond.

The Bark Park features an array of handmade and upcycled works of art including a giant spider, chapel and even a galleon ship complete with masts and rigging.

The project is very much a labour of love and he has devoted many days, nights and untold hours creating the site.

Anyone who visits Bark Park is asked for a small donation to one of his handmade collection caskets, inspired from Terry Pratchett's works.

However, a recent experience with a passer-by – one of many, according to Denis – has left him feeling "heartbroken", he told the Press.

He says that a woman was walking past with her young daughter when they decided to stop and attempt to take a picture of the attraction, without having either made a donation to the casket at their feet or booked to visit Bark Park.

The Italian, from Sicily, says Bark Park is listed on TripAdvisor under the specific Things to Do category and explained: "Although the expression, 'Just Looking', is often used legitimately by shoppers who browse shops, but are not ready to buy goods yet, when you use the same 'Just Looking' expression as an excuse to skip paying the ticket at the box office of a theatre, cinema, museum etc then surely it no longer applies?

"Another situation in which the 'Just Looking' expression is not applicable is, for example, when witnessing a serious car crash and the police then ask you: 'Why didn't you call the emergency line? You could have saved lives!', and you reply: 'Sorry! I was Just Looking!'.

"Or when a romantic couple decides to park their car in a secluded spot along the beach or in the woods, during a stunning sunset. They start making love in the car when, all of a sudden, they discover that there is a person standing next to the car, right in front of them and staring through the car's windows.

"They ask the peeping Tom to leave but he/she doesn't and he/she replies: 'I'm just looking! Don't let me stop you!'.

"'Just Looking' is a convenient expression often used as an 'excuse', for not paying the ticket at the box office. Out of context, like when away from shops, the 'Just Looking' excuse is not always as 'just' as it may look."

"Unofficial visitors to the Bark Park, who drop by uninvited or unexpectedly, to snoop and peep through its gaps, gates and bushes, are comparable to the aforementioned peeping Tom using the 'Just Looking' excuse to justify her/his perversion, which in this case is 'stealing' six years of hard work.

"Coming to the Bark Park without the expected donations is like going to the pond to feed the swans without any bread. How disappointing for the poor swans, running to greet visitors who forget to bring their expected bread.

"The Bark Park is the result of over six years of full time and overtime work. The work is physically exhausting, often in extreme conditions, hanging high on trees, handling dangerous power tools in awkward positions, under any weather.

"The Bark Park is not a shopping centre. If you choose to come to enjoy this inspiring dimension, remember that, just like swans expect and need bread, the Bark Park expects and needs donations. It is not rocket science. It’s called sustainability.

"If you forget your donations at home, please postpone your 'Unjust Looking' visit to another day.

"My privacy has also the right to be left in peace, unless you are bringing sustainability in the appropriate heartfelt caskets."