Mosey
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2002
- Messages
- 1,565
- Location
- Conifer, Colorado
- Tractor
- 2000 New Holland TC29D with 7308 FEL, and top & tilt. 1950 John Deere B. 1940 Farmall A.
Something just happened yesterday at my place to make me give the advice "keep him off your property!". It's your land, you should have control of it. As I stated earlier, there is a row of trees right along the property line between my neighbor and I and he usually mows it on my side as he mows around all of the trees (which he planted more than 5 years ago before I moved here). I mow it once it a while on my side, but never go on his side. The trees are about 7' tall now.
Well, yesterday he decided to trim the trees. I like evergreen trees (most of these are scotch pine) that have the branches all the way to the ground. I think they look better that way, plus they do a better job of blocking noise. His driveway runs along next to this row of trees, so I've been looking forward to these tress getting bigger so I would have more privacy, less dust, and less noise from people driving up and down his driveway (between his kids and other folks, his driveway gets a lot of traffic on weekends). He started trimming them so the lowest branches are about 3' above the ground. Since they're right on the property line, I feel like he should have talked to me about it first. But, apparently he feels that since he planted them and has been mowing around them, he can do what he wants without consulting me first. Should I go over and talk to him before he finishes the rest? The only reason he quit yesterday is because it started raining.
The more I think about it, the more I get irritated that he planted them right on the property line in the first place. It seems to me he should have planted them on his side. I'm in the process of planting a row of trees on my side already (I put in a row of white pines last year), because I felt like a double row of trees would be even better than the single row, plus he didn't plant all evergreen type trees and I want a "tree fence" year around, not just in the spring and summer. But, the way he planted his right on the property line forced me to plant mine farther into my yard, thus reducing the size of my yard. Maybe he got the OK, from the guy who used to live here, but if it would have been me I would not have agreed to it.
Well, yesterday he decided to trim the trees. I like evergreen trees (most of these are scotch pine) that have the branches all the way to the ground. I think they look better that way, plus they do a better job of blocking noise. His driveway runs along next to this row of trees, so I've been looking forward to these tress getting bigger so I would have more privacy, less dust, and less noise from people driving up and down his driveway (between his kids and other folks, his driveway gets a lot of traffic on weekends). He started trimming them so the lowest branches are about 3' above the ground. Since they're right on the property line, I feel like he should have talked to me about it first. But, apparently he feels that since he planted them and has been mowing around them, he can do what he wants without consulting me first. Should I go over and talk to him before he finishes the rest? The only reason he quit yesterday is because it started raining.
The more I think about it, the more I get irritated that he planted them right on the property line in the first place. It seems to me he should have planted them on his side. I'm in the process of planting a row of trees on my side already (I put in a row of white pines last year), because I felt like a double row of trees would be even better than the single row, plus he didn't plant all evergreen type trees and I want a "tree fence" year around, not just in the spring and summer. But, the way he planted his right on the property line forced me to plant mine farther into my yard, thus reducing the size of my yard. Maybe he got the OK, from the guy who used to live here, but if it would have been me I would not have agreed to it.