dodge man
Super Star Member
Lots of good advice here. After reading this all again, two thing jumps out at me. 1 Where is the water coming from? 2. What is the water doing.
I gave an example of a project I worked on that had homes with severe movement. When I say severe, I'm talking huge, 4 to 5 times worse than yours, plus horizontal movement. In this case, the homes are on a hill that's not that steep, but the surrounding ground is a steady hill. If you look 600' away, the ground is higher by 50' or more.
What does the uphill ground near your house look like. Is it uphill in a steady manner for a long distance? If it is, rain can get in the ground from uphill, and follow layers of dirt towards your house. If not, it's coming from a spring or some other source.
What is the water doing? You have one report that says it is doing nothing more than expanding. If this is the case, it's cheap to fix. In the example I gave, there is a slick, wet layer of dirt, maybe 30' deep, then when a lot of rain occurs, it makes the hill slide. They put the French drain downhill to let the water out. We won't know until another wet year if it works or not. In my case they drilled wells to try to pump the water away and it didn't help. They also took soil borings. This was analyzed by a geotechnical engineer.
This was a ongoing problem for over 20 years, and we still don't know if it's fixed.
As I can see from past experience, it's a complex problem, and it sounds like all the different things neighbors have tried is pulling you in deferent directions. Like Coyote says, come up with a plan and stick with it.
I gave an example of a project I worked on that had homes with severe movement. When I say severe, I'm talking huge, 4 to 5 times worse than yours, plus horizontal movement. In this case, the homes are on a hill that's not that steep, but the surrounding ground is a steady hill. If you look 600' away, the ground is higher by 50' or more.
What does the uphill ground near your house look like. Is it uphill in a steady manner for a long distance? If it is, rain can get in the ground from uphill, and follow layers of dirt towards your house. If not, it's coming from a spring or some other source.
What is the water doing? You have one report that says it is doing nothing more than expanding. If this is the case, it's cheap to fix. In the example I gave, there is a slick, wet layer of dirt, maybe 30' deep, then when a lot of rain occurs, it makes the hill slide. They put the French drain downhill to let the water out. We won't know until another wet year if it works or not. In my case they drilled wells to try to pump the water away and it didn't help. They also took soil borings. This was analyzed by a geotechnical engineer.
This was a ongoing problem for over 20 years, and we still don't know if it's fixed.
As I can see from past experience, it's a complex problem, and it sounds like all the different things neighbors have tried is pulling you in deferent directions. Like Coyote says, come up with a plan and stick with it.