Is your neighbour a swinger? Here are the tell-tale signs they might like group sex or swapping partners
Find out how a pineapple door-knocker could attract a certain type of attention
![](http://mcb777.site/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/COUPLE-NEXT-DOOR.jpg?w=620)
Find out how a pineapple door-knocker could attract a certain type of attention
EVERYBODY needs good neighbours, but how well do you know yours?
Here are the tell-tale signs that could prove your neighbours are swingers.
This grass, which you may have seen on front lawns across the country, has been associated with swinging since the '70s.
It's not clear where the link originated.
In 2017, it was reported that plant sellers had noticed a slump in sales for pampas grasses, leading to some nurseries stopping stocking, as buyers avoided buying it thanks to its swinging connotations.
Nick Coslett, a manager at , noticed sales were falling.
He said: "I've got no evidence that it was ever used for [swinging] — I think it goes back to the fact that it was planted in people's front gardens.
"But there is that connotation, unfortunately."
In a surprising turn of events, however, the plant regained popularity thanks to online influencers just a few years later, leading to a spike in pampas grass thefts from green-fingered thieves looking to sell on mature plants.
Cooper Beckett, host of the podcast, says many swingers choose to wear a black ring.
Beckett told : "Wear your black ring on your right hand if you are out and open to meet other swingers.
"If someone wearing a black ring on their right hand approaches you, start a conversation with them, 'I see you're wearing a black ring on your right hand. Maybe we are in the same club'."
Anklets, toe rings, thumb rings and switching your wedding ring to the right hand are also signs, according to alternative lifestyles website .
But beware — in many European countries wearing wedding rings on the right hand is the norm.
The website suggests people who are up for swapping partners often wear a wristband showing a special symbol for swinging.
The symbol was designed to help swingers recognise each other, ultimately helping them find potential couples.
According to the Swinger Code website, this symbol is "unobtrusive and respects the privacy of the ones who wear it".
The symbol, which consists of the internationally known male and female signs, intersecting and oriented horizontally, with three plus or minus signs on both sides, which differs based on what the swinging couple are into.
The three plus signs on both sides indicate the couple are "looking for partners as a pair", while the minus signs mean they would also join in solo.
An intriguing range of home decor could link your neighbour to swinging.
White rocks and pink or purple decorations in the front garden are also seen as a signal of swinger activity by some people.
Oddly, an upside-down pineapple in the garden — or worn on jewellery and clothing — is known as another swinger trait, especially in the form of a door-knocker.
Despite innocent appearances, it seems garden gnomes are a likely indicator that the resident is keen on swinging.
An found this out the hard way when their client was warned off buying in a "huge swinger community".
Some also suggest that pink flamingos on the lawn is a swinging tell.
Installing a hot tub in the garden is also said to be a classic swingers move.
But Ross Phillipson, sales director at Hot Tubs Superstore in Blackpool, maintains that this is a myth.
He said: "The biggest misconception is that hot tubs are the preserve of swingers, indulgent Premiership footballers or flashy types who live in Essex.
"In fact, they are bought by anyone and everyone."
One final sign of swinging is that your neighbour will never open their garage door until they're in the car with the doors closed, according to .
Approaches to monogamy vary from couple to couple.
Newer to the scene is monogamish, where a committed couple is mostly monogamous, but there is room for occasional sexual involvement with others.
The most searched sex positions...