Neighbour won’t let me cut down my own tree?

Neighbour won’t let me cut down my own tree?

Author
Discussion

Routemaster93

Original Poster:

100 posts

88 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
Back in 2004 I bought and planted a Eucalyptus tree at then top of our garden slightly on the border between our house and the neighbours house. Because of their big trees the Eucalyptus is leaning almost at 45 degrees over our garden. It’s now about 20 foot tall and the trunk only about 5” diameter. It looks hideous as it is.

So today I came out and started to rope the tree to control its fall and begin cutting, only for the neighbours annoying son to come out and tell me it’s their tree. So I told him i bought it and planted it in 2004. But knowing nothing about gardening he said it had been their much longer. Ffs it’s a Eucalyptus they grow fast! He knows nothing about gardening. Doesn’t even know what type of bloody tree it is.

If I don’t do anything it will become a monster that will require expensive professional felling as it will become dangerous and unstable.

Point is it’s my bloody tree on the border. I told the son that, but his father was out all day so had to down tools I’ve wasted a full day.

So my question is am I in my rights to cut down my own tree on the boundary that’s leaning right over our garden, I ll even leave a 5’ stump with one branch remaining if it satisfies them?

Edited by Routemaster93 on Friday 23 February 21:32

Pericoloso

44,044 posts

163 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
Your tree ,why did you down tools ?

What was son going to do ,call the tree police ?

dazwalsh

6,095 posts

141 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
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Yeah cut away, if you planted it its yours and fk em.

blearyeyedboy

6,284 posts

179 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
If it's on your side of your boundary, you can do what you like.

However, I'll share my story. I once got the hump with a neighbour who wouldn't let me replace "my" fence, which was 30 years old and had holes in. I kept my grumbles to myself and my wife, who is far wiser than I am, asked me to double check where the boundary lay.

I'm glad I did.

Rather oddly, several houses were built in my part of town with a thin cable separating them. Many occupants erected fences on their side of the boundary... and this chap was one of them. "My" fence was really his, and further up the street I could see several fences built right up against each other.

So I joined them and built my own fence adjacent to my neighbour's, hiding his monstrosity.

TL; DR: Check where the boundary really lies before taking action.

ST_Nuts

1,487 posts

107 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
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Tell him to fk off and cut the damn thing down FGS! What else should you do?!

Routemaster93

Original Poster:

100 posts

88 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
Pericoloso said:
Your tree ,why did you down tools ?

What was son going to do ,call the tree police ?
I agree but there the kind of people who’ll tell the Council and get a tree preservation order put on it. And it will cost me fortune in solicitors fees to get permission to cut it down. It’s not even a native species and is only 14 year old.

V8RX7

26,828 posts

263 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
Routemaster93 said:
I agree but there the kind of people who’ll tell the Council and get a tree preservation order put on it. And it will cost me fortune in solicitors fees to get permission to cut it down. It’s not even a native species and is only 14 year old.
Which is precisely why you should have carried on !

When I buy a new project any trees get cut down early on a Sunday morning for this reason.


Richie C

637 posts

206 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
All the more reason to get it down sooner rather than later!

2gins

2,839 posts

162 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
Routemaster93 said:
I agree but there the kind of people who’ll tell the Council and get a tree preservation order put on it. And it will cost me fortune in solicitors fees to get permission to cut it down. It’s not even a native species and is only 14 year old.
Bit late for that when its in the skip. Take photos showing how curious it is then get the stihl out!

paul.deitch

2,095 posts

257 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
Ah yes boundaries. Neighbour 1 took exception to some trees on the other side of the road which he claimed gave him an allergy and coated his solar panels and he conferred with neighbour 2. They both agreed that the land belonged to farmer A and he was approached with the request to fell them. Farmer A helpfully felled the trees the next day. My wife said oh neighbour 3 are not going to be happy about that. So everybody seemed to know whose land it was but didn't. Farmer A had to pay compensation to neighbour 3. Coincidentally neighbour 1's wife has just left him and neighbour is not so much of a knowitall nowadays.

anonymous-user

54 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
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Cut it down before someone sticks a preservation order on it, mind you if they do you can return the favour on their mature trees.

Routemaster93

Original Poster:

100 posts

88 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
blearyeyedboy said:
If it's on your side of your boundary, you can do what you like.

However, I'll share my story. I once got the hump with a neighbour who wouldn't let me replace "my" fence, which was 30 years old and had holes in. I kept my grumbles to myself and my wife, who is far wiser than I am, asked me to double check where the boundary lay.

I'm glad I did.

Rather oddly, several houses were built in my part of town with a thin cable separating them. Many occupants erected fences on their side of the boundary... and this chap was one of them. "My" fence was really his, and further up the street I could see several fences built right up against each other.

So I joined them and built my own fence adjacent to my neighbour's, hiding his monstrosity.

TL; DR: Check where the boundary really lies before taking action.
Good point. So even though I bought and planted the tree and it happens to be more on their side of the boundary they could claim it as theirs? That wouldn’t surprise me as they can be awkward like that next door. Even though they would never plant a tropical Eucalyptus tree themselves as they only like native species.

Surely though over 80% of its over hanging our garden and I just cut off the overhang and leave behind the straight stump few feet high with a branch coming off it then techinically all I’m doing is pruning it and anyone has a right to prune trees and shrubs overhanging their own garden?

It’s crazy I’m having this problem for a tree that cost me £4.50 in 2004.

anonymous-user

54 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
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Don't forget to return the prunings, all 18' of it.

I can imagine a wheelie at the end of the drive with that sticking out of the top doing wonders for neighbourly relations.

JQ

5,734 posts

179 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
Routemaster93 said:
It’s crazy I’m having this problem for a tree that cost me £4.50 in 2004.
But it's a problem all of your own making, you let a child tell you what you can and can't do. It's your tree, in your garden, just cut it down.

TwigtheWonderkid

43,327 posts

150 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
Pericoloso said:
Your tree ,why did you down tools ?

What was son going to do ,call the tree police ?
Special Branch?

Yipper

5,964 posts

90 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
Dominate the chainsaw.

Badbooks

13 posts

80 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
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A Eucalyptus tree would not get a preservation order wink

Not worth falling out with neighbour

Good luck

cuprabob

14,579 posts

214 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
Carry out a "root and branch" review...

RichB

51,531 posts

284 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
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Routemaster93 said:
... I ll even leave a 5’ stump with one branch remaining if it satisfies them?
If you cut it off just 6" above the ground the stump will grow back as a shrub.

Wacky Racer

38,143 posts

247 months

Friday 23rd February 2018
quotequote all
TwigtheWonderkid said:
Pericoloso said:
Your tree ,why did you down tools ?

What was son going to do ,call the tree police ?
Special Branch?
I think you are barking up the wrong tree here, I wood be inclined to have a chat with his elder and get to the root of what his problem is, better to jaw jaw than saw saw.