potentially part lawyer guys
potentially lawn tips
bought a new house last summer. place was built in the early 80s as part of a then brand new development. the developer added a "community drain" in the back corner of our southeast neighbor's yard. the southeast corner neighbor is up on a bit of an incline so all water from his yard runs to the drain. we are the lowest point of the 4 yards.
southeast neighbor, years ago now, planted a pine tree about 10 feet from the drain. it's enormous and looms over the drain, dropping its pine cones and needles on top of the drain. the neighbor decided that he needed to mulch and throw tons of tiny little stones under the tree... to cover the bare spot, i guess?
downside: all that #### washes in to the drain but clogs the grates, blocking the drain and sending water in to 3 yards. cleaning the grate is easy enough.. just gotta get to it, dislodge the trash and continue to sweep the grates clean as the water disappears. takes 30 - 60 minutes depending on volume & what's blocking the drain.
flooding has now happened a good 6-8 times in the last year. our neighbor's response has been "don't #### around in my yard, with my drain".. and a shrug of the shoulders as his yard is not impacted by the excess water.
i'm not sure what made him take action this weekend... guilt? but he decided to "try to fix it" by ringing the drain with large, but very light, stones & pouring down yards of mulch.
it poured down rain last night. i mean, biblically. so i was awakened at 5:30 to my wife telling me that 80% of our yard was under water. i ambled out there and worked for an hour to keep the drain clear. drained most of the water.. not all. had to get ready for work & kids off to school.
he has resisted reason to this point. he blames the neighbor next to him that's slightly higher and refuses to acknowledge that his yard, while wet from rain, is not 8" deep in water like mine.
my question: is there a way to force this guy to remove that tree and all the trash landscape? do i have to find a city ordinance that says he has to remedy the flooding?
are there any potential landscaping remedies? marshy plants? anything?
my wife likes to flex her google knowledge in these sorts of situations. she is suggesting that we have a dry well installed. that's way down the road as far as i'm concerned. the immediate solution has to be simpler.