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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to chop the hedge nice and low? (aka is revenge a dish best served cold?)

121 replies

Rosietheriveter28 · 21/06/2011 16:27

First post in AIBU so here goes - a bit of background (it's long sorry)

I moved to London 5 years ago with my autistic DS - we found the most amazing maisonette flat and to this day, I still love the flat itself. However for the last 5 years I have effectively been bullied by my neighbour who lives downstairs. I couldn't go into every single incident but here's a tasty roundup:

  • Telling me I made the place look like 'a council house' when actually I am the one who has primarily maintained the joint areas. I feel though tbh this was a jibe at being a single parent
  • Having a weird obsession with my washing machine - having a go for putting it on at night, putting it on too much "why do you need to do so much washing anyway" and then when I got a tumble dryer it was that. I should point out it makes no more noise than any other washing machine I have ever encountered. Even when I bought special rubber matting to appease this, it wasn't enough. Add to that noise about the TV / talking with my friends when they come over etc etc - I often wonder if she sits with her ear to the ceiling.
  • Having a go at me for 'stomping' to the toilet too late at night. We absolutely, certainly do not stomp around anywhere. In fact I constantly would remind DS to tip toe everywhere which looking back was pointless and stupid. In fact so many things we did to appease her were pointless as she just found something new to complain about.
  • Banging on the door and shouting at my babysitter for shouting up the stairs once for my DS to come down and get his coat on
  • Continually telling me that I shouldn't be in a flat with a child.

-Then putting up a 6ft fence down the middle of the shared garden without consulting / telling me

-Pushing fag butts under my door that she found in her garden that she is convinced came from me. I didn't even smoke.

Anyway, that was supposed to be a round up. There's loads more petty and ultimately bizarre things. As you can see they are not huge incidences in themselves but over 5 years it has totally worn me down. If I pass her she looks at me as if she scraped me off her shoe. I am now thankfully moving but I received another lovely note from her the other day telling me to cut the hedge at the front of the garden. She claims that since she has paid for it every year except last year (not true, I actually cut it myself the first two years she was here, which she seems to have forgotten, plus the fact I was the only one who mowed the last for the first 2 years too) that I had to fulfill my obligations to maintain the shared areas and 'address the imbalance.'

Now, I'm moving in approximately 2 weeks. I'm currently dealing with DS's transition to secondary school and I am also interviewing for jobs - it's not a huge priority and since I paid for it last year, I had assumed she would pay for it this year. I am worried about her making my life hell before I move. Everyone I know thinks I should just ignore it and let her get on with it.

However, when I used to cut it myself, I asked her if we could cut it down low to make it easier (as it's currently over 6 ft) and she said no because she wanted it to completely cover her windows. (Windows I should point out have those plantation shutters on them so kinda private) There's a teeny weeny part of me that wants to cut the hedge but chop it in half!

I would totally and utterly be stoking the fire wouldn't I? I've been so miserable here though (and I am bitter because as I said, I loved living here apart from that - I have lovely neighbours either side who have never complained about noise and admit they never ever hear us, even when I am playing music) that I feel like I want the last laugh after years of actually being too scared to go into my own garden.

Anyway - so cut the hedge / don't cut the hedge?

OP posts:
Fimbo · 21/06/2011 16:57

Just be careful what you \link{http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/2168132.stm\wish for}

Rosietheriveter28 · 21/06/2011 16:58

Senorita - I would have to pay for it that's the thing and money is super tight at the moment what with the move etc. The reason I wanted it chopped down was so I could maintain it myself. I mean, she seems to forget I bought the hedge trimmer when I moved in and gave it a bloody good go but that i just couldn't do it at that height (our road is on a hill and even with a tall ladder I can't really get up high enough)

OP posts:
gethelp · 21/06/2011 16:58

A life well lived is the best revenge. Don't waste your time hedge hacking - go out and celebrate your future and put this small-minded petty woman in the past. Hopefully you've got your rage out here in safety!

bananamonkey · 21/06/2011 16:59

I would be tempted to cut it in a novelty penis shape but think you should just be smug about the piano Grin

I had a downstairs neighbour like this. There were lots of ridiculous complaints about everything we did and glaring everytime we left/came home, I think because she had nothing to do all day except think up things to be annoyed about.

The pettiest one was just pointless. We had a kind of shared driveway that accessed the garages behind the flats but it was also double width so that cars could park on one side of it, which they did all the time. She shouted at us through the window to complain about a car our visitor had parked there and even got her daughter to join in the ranting. Apparently it was 'spoling her view' from her window. That would be the picturesque view of the driveway and a 6 ft fence, insane Hmm

Rosietheriveter28 · 21/06/2011 17:01

gethelp - I have actually - it's really helped that even though I really only have listed a smidgeon of incidents, there seems to be a consensus. For ages I thought I was a terrible neighbour and it's hard to be objective when your friends and family are obviously going to be on your side.

OP posts:
gethelp · 21/06/2011 17:01

fimbo gulp, prison for cutting down a hedge. . .

pingu2209 · 21/06/2011 17:01

Rosie, I'm not sure that is correct. When we sold the solicitor letter from the buyers was worded any altercations whether legal or not, arguments etc. I think you may find it is wider than just legal disputes.

CaveMum · 21/06/2011 17:03

I'm with alice - Don't cut it but perhaps accidentally spill something toxic (to plants) on the roots so that a few weeks after you have gone it will start to look decidedly ropey.

Copper nail idea is very intriguing - does it work?!

joric · 21/06/2011 17:03

Chop it. You'd only be tidying the garden for the new owners / tenants after all....

SenoritaViva · 21/06/2011 17:04

Rosie don't waste your money on the woman then. Also, if the people have already purchased it, is there a clause about making changes to the property? You could use this against her. E.g. I am not chopping it since I would not want the new owners to think I had changed the property they had bought?

Wouldn't it annoy her more not to do anything about it. How long till you move and are rid of the witch?

Rosietheriveter28 · 21/06/2011 17:05

Pingu - Solicitor knows there have been issues and it's my reason for moving and didn't seem to flag anything - will double check though, thanks.

OP posts:
Rosietheriveter28 · 21/06/2011 17:06

Senorita - only two / three more weeks really - exchanging this week I think - and yes, in retrospect it probably would annoy her more if I did nothing.

OP posts:
ILoveYouToo · 21/06/2011 17:07

God some of the posts on here are vicious. Hmm And of course the usual ageist shit. Hmm

I'm going to be the lone voice of dissent here and say that having a washing machine on at night is pretty antisocial if you live in a flat above someone. That was pointed out to me very early on in my flat-dwelling life, by my downstairs neighbour.

I think that noise from above is really oppressive, whereas noise from below is somehow more bearable. She does sound peculiarly intolerant, though, for someone who has chosen to live in a ground floor flat. It sounds as though she has taken a dislike to you and done her best to make your life a misery. It would upset me too, so I really feel for you. Sad

I'm glad for you that you're moving, and so long as you aren't contravening any condition in the lease, then I would definitely cut the hedge down low. In fact, I would pay a professional to come and do it (so she can't claim you've massacred it, and because as someone else said - it will be a hard job if it's a mature hedge). The only thing is, she'll probably come out and stop the cutter doing a proper job. Does she go out shopping much?

Rosietheriveter28 · 21/06/2011 17:11

ILoveyouToo - The washing machine was never on after 8pm (well maybe once or twice when I had an emergency sports kit to wash for the next day but that really was it - Even I don't like the washing machine banging on late at night) and also - the woman in question is no older than 40.

OP posts:
HonestyBox · 21/06/2011 17:14

Cut it low enough to annoy her but not low enough that it looks unreasonable Wink. Otherwise you could spray it with glyphosate in the middle of the night before you leave.

MooMooFarm · 21/06/2011 17:15

Don't cut it - buy a big container of weed killer and pour it along the bottom of the hedge just before you leave Grin

EvenLessNarkyPuffin · 21/06/2011 17:18

I'd trim the hedge sensibly, not too short. And leave sheet music for 'Roll out the barrel' as a welcome gift for the new owners

oldraver · 21/06/2011 17:21

I think I would go round with some loppers and cut it two inches from the ground. Then chuckle when she realised over time it was 'dying'

GnocchiGnocchiWhosThere · 21/06/2011 17:22

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ThisisaSignofthetimes · 21/06/2011 17:23

No to the cutting, yes to very strong weedkiller.

GnomeDePlume · 21/06/2011 17:35

Not weedkiller, what did the hedge do wrong?

An old student trick was to write rude messages in 'weed and feed' on the lawn.

WhereYouLeftIt · 21/06/2011 17:43

It would seem only sensible to bring the hedge into line with the rest of the street.

But OP - surely you want to indulge your passion for Flamenco? To loud music?

fedupofnamechanging · 21/06/2011 17:44

She put the hedge there without your consent, so I'd simply tell her to cut her own fucking hedge. Then I'd key her car on the way out

fedupofnamechanging · 21/06/2011 17:47

Oh, sorry, I thought you said she'd put the hedge up, not the fence.

I'd still tell her to do it herself.

Spend the next two weeks stomping on your floor in high heels and put your washing machine on at midnight. The cigarette thing was disgusting and she deserves some comeback

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