But look at that last photo: he could clear all of the leaves, cut some clearance for the fence at the bottom, and the water would still hug his house and go behind/to the side IMO.
Where else would it go? The water has got to get to the drainage easement/channel behind his fence.Quote:
the water would still hug his house and go behind/to the side IMO.
I agree with Evan. Looks like the lot grades UP to the back fence and that water isn't getting to the back fence. OP needs to dig a little trench right where his back foundation ends to pull the draining onto his side of the property line and continue it to the edge of his property toward the drainage ditch. By pass the neighbor's fence and move it to a place where he can actually have control of it.evan_aggie said:
But look at that last photo: he could clear all of the leaves, cut some clearance for the fence at the bottom, and the water would still hug his house and go behind/to the side IMO.
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Looks like the lot grades UP to the back fence and that water isn't getting to the back fence.
Completely agree that the neighbor SHOULD handle the water, but when I see the condition of the back fence panel and the "improvements" that have been made to it, I think OP may be better off creating his own solution than relying on the neighbor to fix anything the right way:Apache said:Quote:
.. certainly an option but not an ideal one as it should be on the neighbor to handle that water.
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Yes - I agree with just about everything I skimmed.
You can add dirt - but that really just pushes water to the "new" low spots.
French drains (and similar systems) are best because you can put the inlets in your existing low spots and it'll carry it out to the street and past any other high spots that would block drainage (like the dudes neighbors driveway).
We actually did this in our house recently because we didn't want to lose any of our landscaping by creating a large ditch through the side yard.
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Yeah - neighbor totally blocked his chance to drain it on the surface
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Sidewalk, driveway, landscaping, etc.
He needs to go under and punch through the curb
CAR96 said:
Any chance you could give a bid on some work?
Apache said:
I said on the earlier thread you created that your neighbor needed to raise the fence level in his back yard because the pickets were at grade. This blocks leaves & debris building up creating a dam which causes water to back up.
The pics you just posted are showing exactly that. Cut the pickets to allow water out, that is step one.
This is such a simple fix, it's kind of silly it hasn't been done.
Step two in your front yard, you need to add more than a sprinkling of dirt to raise the soil level.
I'm thinking several inches of soil with new sod on top once proper fall was established. Too many variables here to give you good advice, I'd have to be there in person.
You definitely don't need a French Drain as you have plenty of slope from back to front to drain above ground (if only the neighbor would fix his fence).