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If a front garden is bordered by a hedge that extends out over the pavement, how far out is considered acceptable? It's not unusual for about a third of the pavement space to be lost to overhanging hedges, causing a bottleneck should there be a lamp post or tree at the kerbside opposite, and bloody awkward on narrow pavements on residential streets.


I feel the tingle of a coming 'hedge rage'...




BTW, you know you read the title of this thread and clicked on it for all the wrong reasons...

if it causes an obstruction it needs to be trimmed back, when it rains the branches gain wait and hang outwards so if you brush past them you get a soaking, also this makes less room for (say) parents with prams, basic obligation is to keep it in order.

having said that, must trim mine it's been a few years.

KidKruger Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> if it causes an obstruction it needs to be trimmed

> back, when it rains the branches gain wait and

> hang outwards so if you brush past them you get a

> soaking, also this makes less room for (say)

> parents with prams, basic obligation is to keep it

> in order.

> having said that, must trim mine it's been a few

> years.


We are talking about your pubes here right????

SteveT Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> The growth should not extend beyond the boundary

> of the property, and if Southwark get involved

> they charge you for doing the maintenance the

> owner should have carried out, I believe.


This is right. It can hinder and injure blind and visually impaired people as well as others. A lot of property owners don't give a damn. Report any problem hedges to Southwark.

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