Aloha all,
I am hoping for a reality check from folks with any experience with…
…a situation at a property in Ainaloa where the lot next door has a huge banyan tree that overhung our house. The “peas” and leaves would drop for months on our roof, which was not only a noise annoyance (like intermittent hail) but would cause constant trouble in the gutters, even after installing gutter guards.
We paid Backyard Monkeys to trim the branches to the property line several months ago. $3600 worth.
Now there are invasive roots messing with the toilet line and septic which have been cleared for the time being. (When the clogged toilet was removed there were tentacle roots exposed on the bathroom floor. Kinda Steven King like. ) Had to have the septic pumped out, which is between our house and the neighboring property, and the guy who did it said that the leach field was likely so rooted that it would only get worse. We’re fertilizing those roots!
I got some drain stuff to supposedly keep the lines clear, but that is just a temporary measure and _serious_ damage to our concrete foundation is likely in the future. Hopefully not tomorrow.
Both the county and Ainaloa Association have given repeated notice to the lot owner to remove the tree, but neither seem to have any actual enforcement power. Removing the tree would would likely cost tens of thousands of dollars, probably more than the lot is worth.
So, how to kill the roots on our property?
Dig a deep enough trench (easier said than done on rock soil) along the property line to cut off the invasive roots and overfill with lime or salt?
Spread a generous amount of rock salt along the 25-30 feet of ground from the house to the property line and hope that would eventually kill the roots? (And hopefully after a time the grass would come back?)
Any other ideas? Or comments about those ideas?
Some have told me the only option is to take the owner to small claims court to force him to get the tree removed. I suspect even if such a claim was ruled, the tree might not get removed because of the cost.
There is a dilapidated structure on the property that has no water or electricity, yet a couple people appear to live there intermittently with the owner’s blessing. No problems from them. Just the big butt banyan tree.
Cheers,
Kirt
Edit: can’t figure out how to turn off emojis, sorry.
I am hoping for a reality check from folks with any experience with…
…a situation at a property in Ainaloa where the lot next door has a huge banyan tree that overhung our house. The “peas” and leaves would drop for months on our roof, which was not only a noise annoyance (like intermittent hail) but would cause constant trouble in the gutters, even after installing gutter guards.
We paid Backyard Monkeys to trim the branches to the property line several months ago. $3600 worth.
Now there are invasive roots messing with the toilet line and septic which have been cleared for the time being. (When the clogged toilet was removed there were tentacle roots exposed on the bathroom floor. Kinda Steven King like. ) Had to have the septic pumped out, which is between our house and the neighboring property, and the guy who did it said that the leach field was likely so rooted that it would only get worse. We’re fertilizing those roots!
I got some drain stuff to supposedly keep the lines clear, but that is just a temporary measure and _serious_ damage to our concrete foundation is likely in the future. Hopefully not tomorrow.
Both the county and Ainaloa Association have given repeated notice to the lot owner to remove the tree, but neither seem to have any actual enforcement power. Removing the tree would would likely cost tens of thousands of dollars, probably more than the lot is worth.
So, how to kill the roots on our property?
Dig a deep enough trench (easier said than done on rock soil) along the property line to cut off the invasive roots and overfill with lime or salt?
Spread a generous amount of rock salt along the 25-30 feet of ground from the house to the property line and hope that would eventually kill the roots? (And hopefully after a time the grass would come back?)
Any other ideas? Or comments about those ideas?
Some have told me the only option is to take the owner to small claims court to force him to get the tree removed. I suspect even if such a claim was ruled, the tree might not get removed because of the cost.
There is a dilapidated structure on the property that has no water or electricity, yet a couple people appear to live there intermittently with the owner’s blessing. No problems from them. Just the big butt banyan tree.
Cheers,
Kirt
Edit: can’t figure out how to turn off emojis, sorry.