Some subdivisions I've worked in have restrictions such that
the neighbor must confine his own run-off to his yard at his
own expense. Not haing such a restriction, you are on your own.
Some kind of retaining barrier is about it, if you can divert the
run-off to a better area. Ideas include railroad ties, boulders, a berm
2006-10-21 14:08:38
·
answer #1
·
answered by wallyinsa 3
·
1⤊
0⤋
along the fence line it should be graded to drain towards that drain. You say a "big storm drain" so I assume you mean a manhole sized one that's around 2' across. That should be big enough to drain A LOT of water, unless they only put in a 2" pipe or something weird. Use a string and a string level. Have it drop about 1" every 10 feet (roughly a 1% slope) along the fence. You might want to have part of it drain towards the front and into the gutter if you can. Then you wont need quite so much drop, Maybe 40' (for a 4"drop) drains toward the back drain and 20' (for a 2" drop) drains out to the curb, or maybe 30' and 30' would work better.
2016-03-18 22:35:59
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
one day i was laying back on my backyard porch watching the rain fall in my backyard. I have a very long Driveway that runs from the front of the house to the back. While this rain was falling, i noticed all the water running down the driveway as it is on a slope. Now this i thought to my self was a natural occurencee. Every time it rained it did this. Where i live we have water restrictions as the rising population is using more water that the earth provides. So we salvage what we can.
So What i did was at the bottom of the driveway where the concrete ends i made drainage gates and dug a hole underground. (An underground rain water tank) Now everytime the water runs down the driveway it goes straigt into an underground water tank. I never have a water bill as The underground tank holds 30,000 litres of water so is constantly full and being topped up for free by mother earth.
2006-10-21 12:10:03
·
answer #3
·
answered by Mr Warrior 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
In our area (west georgia) it is illegal to reroute water and cause it to drain on your neighbor. However it is a civil matter (between you and your neighbor). Otherwise we would be lawyers for the entire population. First tell the neighbor what is happening. He might not be aware. Also take pictures of the problem just in case you end up in small claims. Or, have a few lawn designers out for a free estimate of how they would repair the problem. Also, do you have a Home Owners Association? They might address the problem.
And finally, NEVER NEVER NEVER buy the low house on the street. You will almost always catch the water flow.
2006-10-21 21:47:36
·
answer #4
·
answered by Mache 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
Talk to the city manager. There is probably a legality about raising the yard where it drains and dinterfers with a neighbor. I had the same but the neighbor dug a trench so his would flood my large backyard from his higher yard. The city put him straight and didn't allow it. I would ask the neighbor to do something first and if he didn't, I would see the city, then if you have to do it yourself dig a trench and route it to a hole at the edge of the yard to go back where it came from!Until then put up a barrier of sheet metal where it flows from their yard and again near your doorway. You have to protect your home!Best wishes!
2006-10-21 12:03:12
·
answer #5
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
First, talk to your neighbor.Perhaps he is not aware that he is causing a problem. He should install a drain between your property and his. Something as simple as a pipe with holes drilled in it , buried at the property line, and that drains to the street or sewer might work. If you can't resolve it amicably with your neighbor, contact the appropriate officials in you community. If you live in a city contact the city manager. If you live in a rural area contact your counties planing and zoning, or Community Development. Though the wheels of government turn slowly, and using this route may take time.
2006-10-21 19:03:20
·
answer #6
·
answered by blindfredd 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
If you have hired in the past landscape gardeners for tasks that ended up costing you tens of 1000's of dollars then that other alternative is to make it effortlessly from right here https://tr.im/NBaRQ Your way due to the fact , in the end and without this expertise , projects constantly value much more and took longer than anticipated.
Ideas4Landscaping is a comprehensive multimedia resource database of more than 7000 substantial-resolution images and 300 systematic guides , themes and video tutorials for men and women seeking for landscape suggestions and inspiration around their personal residence.
If you are a landscape gardening enthusiast of any kind , you need to by Ideas4Landscaping , a package with several wonderful components to stimulate venture ideas.
2016-04-23 09:40:19
·
answer #7
·
answered by ? 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
Build a damn to stop it. My neighbor build a house next door to me. The problem is the cement on the side of his house (my side) is about 3 inches higher than my driveway, garage doors, etc. I plan on doing a special order at Home Depot and getting several pallets of windsor stones and run them about 16 inches high down the fenceline (will take 3-4 rows high to achieve this height.) Then his water will back up in his area and backflow into his driveway.
2006-10-21 13:33:05
·
answer #8
·
answered by Michelle G 5
·
1⤊
0⤋
I live in the country and just did some landscaping. the back of the property has a slight hill and when it rains hard water runs down thru my back yard (along with dirt) and im afraid it will wash out my landscaping. what can i do,I dont have much money to spend
2015-04-06 08:46:33
·
answer #9
·
answered by mary 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
If you are planning to start on your woodworking project, this isn't something you should use, it's something that you would be insane not to. Go here https://tr.im/A5Gtg
Truth is, I've been a carpenter for almost 36 years, and I haven't found anything like this for less than 10's of thousands of dollars.
2016-05-01 06:20:38
·
answer #10
·
answered by ? 3
·
0⤊
0⤋