ChatterBank0 min ago
Neighbour's garden
24 Answers
My elderly neighbour's garden is composed mainly of briar which I have to cut off regularly ( you need leather gloves to even touch it). It has now grown over the top of his 7ft high leylandii and great swathes of it are hanging over my garden and because it is so high I can't reach it and have to pay a gardener to cut it off which is expensive. I have spoken to him and his only response is "It's your problem - just cut it off and sling it over the fence".Is there anything I can do? Can I ask the council to intervene? I am at my wit's end and it's making me ill. When I moved in I had to get a new fence because his was broken and he showed now sign of mending it. I would be grateful for any advice. Thanks in advance.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You moved there knowing what the garden next door was like.
Bednobs answer is correct.
Your neighbour is correct to. He has said you can cut anything your side and is willing to let you throw it back over to him. He doesn't have to agree to have it put back over his fence. It is your obligation to remove it if he doesn't want it back.
If I were you. I would just do as he suggests, have it cut back and throw the cut brambles back over the hedge.
Bednobs answer is correct.
Your neighbour is correct to. He has said you can cut anything your side and is willing to let you throw it back over to him. He doesn't have to agree to have it put back over his fence. It is your obligation to remove it if he doesn't want it back.
If I were you. I would just do as he suggests, have it cut back and throw the cut brambles back over the hedge.
Elderly folk can't always cope with things as they used to, so I'm not surprised if he lets the briar grow. Probably see it as a deterrent to burglars anyway. You can offer to do his garden for him, as a favour, but unless you can prove it's causing you the sort of problem you can protest to the council about, I suspect he is at liberty to grow any legal plant he wishes.
Prune them yes, but not kill them as far as I am aware.
That would include overhanging branches and roots.
Mind you in this case I don't think the neighbour would complain or even realise that some of his brambles had been poisoned.
What I would do is just cut the brambles my side and toss them over into neighbours garden, as the neighbour suggested. Any roots that come through I would dig up. Which is exactly what I do in our garden with stuff that comes through from next door, and what our neighbours do with our stuff.
If the neighbours garden has other problems, i.e. rubbish, rats, etc. and if it is an eyesore to the neighbourhood then action can be taken by councils. If nobody can really see all the brambles then there is little you can do.
That would include overhanging branches and roots.
Mind you in this case I don't think the neighbour would complain or even realise that some of his brambles had been poisoned.
What I would do is just cut the brambles my side and toss them over into neighbours garden, as the neighbour suggested. Any roots that come through I would dig up. Which is exactly what I do in our garden with stuff that comes through from next door, and what our neighbours do with our stuff.
If the neighbours garden has other problems, i.e. rubbish, rats, etc. and if it is an eyesore to the neighbourhood then action can be taken by councils. If nobody can really see all the brambles then there is little you can do.
"When I moved in I had to get a new fence because his was broken and he showed now sign of mending it"
Have some patience.. your neighbour is an old man.. and may have limited funds to live on.. so may not have money to splash out on new fencing etc.
It shouldnt be worthy of worrying you so much it makes you ill though.. .. Many people have far more stress in their lives than an overgrown plant.. and dont make themselves ill! Try to be a bit more rational!
If you were to speak to your neighbour instead of posting here.. he may be kind enough to allow you access to his garden and cut the plant at the stem near the ground!
Have some patience.. your neighbour is an old man.. and may have limited funds to live on.. so may not have money to splash out on new fencing etc.
It shouldnt be worthy of worrying you so much it makes you ill though.. .. Many people have far more stress in their lives than an overgrown plant.. and dont make themselves ill! Try to be a bit more rational!
If you were to speak to your neighbour instead of posting here.. he may be kind enough to allow you access to his garden and cut the plant at the stem near the ground!