Lots of suggestions from others to get you started. I was going to mention the bindweed in your garden which you are clearing. From the garden pic you posted taken from an upstairs window it looks as though your neighbour on the right has a whole garden full of it. Assume this is the neighbour who denies the fence is his.
I doubt your neighbour plans to tackle this infestation any time soon so I just wanted to highlight the fact that you will need to be vigilant and remove it as it arises in your plot. You don't want your hard work ruined.
We’ve really struggled with the bindweed, it really gets everywhere and seems to grow so quickly!
Surprisingly we met their gardener yesterday when we were taking down the shed at the end of the bathroom, as we are rebuilding the wall soon. They are working on the garden soon, but will be keeping the tree right by the house So I’m hoping it doesn’t cause structural issues in the future with its roots.
Surprisingly it is the other neighbour with the fence issue.
is there a way to just stop it getting in our garden? Or is it likely that it’s there now and unlikely to really ever go away?
Our tree has been felled. It was causing structural issues with its roots so had to be out. Really brightens up the garden, next step... skip for the structure at the back and all rubble!
Why not consult and get a professional level of help from some gardening services. You can make great things and the costs are really good. If you want take a look at some of this: https://www.tree-surgery-london.co.uk/
@treesurgerylondon .... trawling though old posts and thenposting spam-adverts on them really is despicable. This site belongs to Immediate Media and is free to amateur gardeners to use ... adverts have to be paid for ... contact details are at the foot of the page ... to do otherwise reveals you to be free-loading spammers and your posts will be deleted virtually as soon as they appear so you're just wasting your time. .
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
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Surprisingly it is the other neighbour with the fence issue.
is there a way to just stop it getting in our garden? Or is it likely that it’s there now and unlikely to really ever go away?
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.