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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

At my wit's end with drunk neighbour and her friends

244 replies

Skedaddle465 · 18/08/2021 00:04

Surely keeping your neighbours awake until the early hours, or alternatively waking them up at 3am, EVERY WEEKEND is unreasonable?

Background:
I've lived in my terraced house on a small quiet street for 11 years. Never had a problem with neighbours or noise until the last 4 months and I'm at my wit's end. I feel so on edge every weekend.

For a few years the house that shares my living/dining room and bedroom walls was home to a family with 4 kids. Most recently it was a young couple with a dog. Previously I'd hear some normal day to day stuff from that side, sure they heard it from me, but it was nothing annoying or interfered with daily life or sleep. Nothing anyone ever needed to mention. We knew each other to say hello, exchange a Christmas card. That's about it.

The family in the house behind has a big do once a year but that shuts down around midnight. It's not a party area at all. It's mainly older people and a few families.

I say all this to show I know what the noise level between the properties is. I'm not new to it.

Problem:

The young couple next door sold the house earlier this year. A young woman (mid to late twenties) moved in, with her young daughter, during last lockdown. During the week it's fine. But at the weekend the daughter is with the dad and my neighbour has her mates around. From the first weekend she moved in, it's been almost every Saturday night. So over 4 months of either being kept awake until 2/3am, or woken anywhere between 3-5am by her coming home with friends and carrying on the party.

It started during lockdown (which was even more frustrating) and I hoped once places reopened she'd be someone who was out in a bar or club. But I suspect she's the only one of the group with her own place and so they all come here. Sometimes when they're too hammered to go back to their own places. Other times they just stay here for the long haul.

Once the summer arrived they moved to sitting in the garden until 3am or later, with music playing inside the house loud enough for them to hear outside. Which means I can hear it from all directions. The street is dark, every house and garden is dark, because it's night time, and she and her friends are out their with lights on, music playing, wittering away and breaking into song. I've heard other houses slam windows shut. She's oblivious. Because she's off her face.

The more they drink, the louder the get. And they drink A LOT. Mixed with energy drinks. The "babe" the "omg" and the cackling. I can hear whole conversations, the exact songs they're asking Alexa to play so they can sing bad karaoke.

The first time, back in April, I let it go, thinking she was lonely in her new place and also wanted to show it off to her friends. The following week, when they came home and at 4am and sang karaoke until 8am, I put a note through the door. Polite - welcome to the street, hope you're settling in, but you might not realise the walls aren't that thick and you woke me from 4am-8am. Last week you kept me awake until 2am. I could actually hear quite a lot of the conversation and some of it sounded very personal and you might not want neighbours not know that much detail. Thought you should know.

She posted sweet apology note back, said she was really sorry, didn't realise and would keep it down.

And then has carried on exactly as before. Every weekend.

They are so loud that even through the wall I know, for example, that her parents bought the house for her after her latest breakup, of which there have been several (her friend proclaimed her to be amazing and, I quote: "I'm going to use a big word, she's....resilient"). One of her friends hates everyone they work with and is annoyed they didn't get a promotion. Her older sister, ironically, wants to move house because her "neighbours are trash". Someone's boyfriend cheated, but they "don't need that baggage". Literally, I know everything about them it's that loud. All to a soundtrack provided by Alexa, who's called on regularly.

I have tried banging on the wall at 1am. I've tried loudly slamming my windows shut at 2am when they're in the garden. I even resorted to desperately shouting "please, please keep it down" when they woke me at 3.45am coming home shouting "Alexa, play 'happy and healthy" and proceeded to try and learn it by playing it on a loop and shrieking. That was despite me going to bed in earplugs. Nothing worked.

On advice from a friend who's had a similar problem in the past I've kept a log of all the incidents so that I could report it to the council. I also kept a copy of my original note and her reply. But I really don't want to have to go down formal channels. I also live alone and hate confrontation. Covid has meant working from home too, so I'm literally here all the time. I don't want any trouble or animosity.

But this past weekend when she had 3 people arrive at midnight and stayed out in the garden with music playing from inside the house and raised voices and cackling every other word was "babe" or "f", until after 2am, I just couldn't take it anymore. When I called out that people were trying to sleep, one of them told me to f off....

I put a handwritten letter through the door the next day saying that the noise from her house and garden was continuing to disturb me and I suspect several other houses. Specifically on these occasions (listed every date and time from last 4 months to show the clear pattern), that in 11 years no one in the street had made the amount of disturbance she had, and in the last 4 months I've bought industrial earplugs and new headphones just to try and get some peace at weekends. That I can't relax when it sounds like the party is in my house, that it's increasingly stressful not knowing when it will end and I can go to bed, or if it's quiet and I go to sleep will I be woken up in the early hours? This is despite the ear plugs. That I have sought advice and can take this to the council but wanted to approach her again first, and she had promised to keep it down back in April. I'd rather solve it informally. But that she and her friends could go to any number of places to party, but her neighbours have nowhere else they can sleep. Please can this issue be ended now.

I've not had a response and honestly I hate confrontation and don't particularly want one. I just want it to stop.

The neighbours the other side of her (the end of the row) are away every weekend with their caravan (lucky them) and so can't back me up by saying anything.

I feel like I'm alone in a weekly nightmare and I don't understand why she doesn't see that her behaviour is too much. But I'm pretty sure it's because she's so hammered she has no idea what day or time it is, let alone notice that every house in the street is trying to sleep.

OP posts:
Jofergo · 03/07/2022 13:35

Use the council noise service.

The one for my area are pretty good and have been really proactive about neighbour noise and coming out to shut down parties (they will even remove sound systems).

Or you could contact her parents and advise them that their tenant is being noisy....

Jofergo · 03/07/2022 13:36

sorry pressed submit too soon. Send her mum and Dad the recording of her shagging.

That might make her more careful.

Herejustforthisone · 03/07/2022 13:41

I’d be tracking down her parents and phoning them every single time. And explaining exactly what their daughter is up to…

Youaremysunshine14 · 03/07/2022 13:44

Having RTFT, I don't know how you haven't lost your sanity, OP. Have you ever tried to speak to her face to face? The post about her screaming at her daughter and then having a party with the child in the house is particularly awful, and I think calling ChildLine for advice with a view to reporting her to social services might be the best thing to do, because her child was clearly at risk on that occasion and could be on others.

HollowTalk · 03/07/2022 13:45

Do you know whether she's bought the property or whether she's renting?

beautyisthefaceisee · 03/07/2022 14:09

Balgoresboy · 18/08/2021 00:32

'You phone the police.
Every
Single
Time.'

police won't do anything, it's up to the council ime.

not IME.

Can't believe I'm admitting this in public but I was up at a vair nice estate my pal has moved to a few weeks ago - we were having a (slightly loud) sing along to Alexa at around 730 pm (a one off) and the police arrived at the door.

beautyisthefaceisee · 03/07/2022 14:13

I've only just found this thread so I read it all in one.

OP, I'm so sorry, but I'm glad you've found an outlet here!

crosstalk · 03/07/2022 14:18

Zombie thread. But it would be good to know how it all ended.

beautyisthefaceisee · 03/07/2022 14:30

crosstalk · 03/07/2022 14:18

Zombie thread. But it would be good to know how it all ended.

Didnt she update today?

iwantmyownicecreamvan · 03/07/2022 14:34

OP posted an update today.

Nametoname · 03/07/2022 14:41

crosstalk · 03/07/2022 14:18

Zombie thread. But it would be good to know how it all ended.

The op has updated today, around 11 posts before yours!

justasking111 · 03/07/2022 14:49

MrsMoastyToasty · 18/08/2021 00:28

You phone the police.
Every
Single
Time.

And suggest they breathalyse departing guests coz they're over the limit. Our police do clock private parties and do this

1dontunderstand · 03/07/2022 14:54

Don’t call the police unless it is a genuine emergency, that you are worried for your Dartmoor the safety of someone else.

do contact her parents did you would like, or just reports it through the appropriate channels.

Powerpotpie · 03/07/2022 15:00

I voted yabu because if you’re not willing to take some action and actually make a complaint and follow through this time with the council then I’m not sure really what you expect the outcome to be.

flutterbybabycakes · 03/07/2022 15:17

Check if you fulfil the criteria for Nuisance and sue in civil court, or just threaten the home owner be they the neighbour, social landlord, or private.

It's basically something that stops you enjoying your home that must be regular and above certain thresholds for time and noise levels.

SofiaSoFar · 03/07/2022 15:21

Xiomara22 · 03/07/2022 13:34

Ring the police and say you think someone’s being attacked next door next time she starts having sex.

Why do people post utterly ridiculous things like this?

DorchaAndLouis · 03/07/2022 15:27

So you've never even met your neighbour? I can't find any mention in your posts of meeting, just notes going back and forth.
Why on earth don't you try and talk face to face?

beastlyslumber · 03/07/2022 15:29

Read 'Those People' by Louise Candlish... it might give you some ideas!!

oakleaffy · 03/07/2022 15:32

My goodness @Skedaddle465
I’d be tempted to record her stupid cackling and sex noise and play it back to her.
She sounds dreadful , I pity her daughter, but sadly the daughter may well end up like her mother.
It happens.
Or the myriad visiting men may start sniffing around the daughter.
It doesn’t sound a wholesome or safe environment for a child to be enduring.

Fraaahnces · 03/07/2022 15:33

Call the council and SS

Mummapenguin20 · 03/07/2022 15:34

Please put your report in

beautyisthefaceisee · 03/07/2022 15:35

DorchaAndLouis · 03/07/2022 15:27

So you've never even met your neighbour? I can't find any mention in your posts of meeting, just notes going back and forth.
Why on earth don't you try and talk face to face?

Maybe because she seems to be able to magic up strange, dodgy men.

TerriblyNaice · 03/07/2022 16:00

That poor dog!

madasawethen · 03/07/2022 16:00

What a nightmare.
File the reports.
In my limited experience, they will go to the owners of the house.

You could write to her parents and send a short audio clip of the noise level.
They may be mortified knowing this was going on at their property.

mammamiafrozenpizza · 03/07/2022 16:03

Someone who is probably a drug addict and who disregards notes from neighbours and a visit from the police probably won't respond well to a face-to-face meeting. I wouldn't be eager to knock on her door for a chat! She knows there's a problem. What good will it do to speak to her directly?

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