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new neighbours, thoughtless people, no more sun in the sunny bed

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  • Nin....Im so sorry that you are having these problems with your new neighbours image(((

    I hope that you manage to find a solution that works for you xxx in the meantime sending some hugs xxxx

  • ninnin Posts: 216

    Oh your all so sweet Lou12, dovefromabove and shirley Kennedy big hugsimage

    Suffolk is lovely my great grandmother who i never met lived in Ufford , had loads of children and grandchildren none of whom I have ever met. but I love the area . my g grandmothers house was one of the pink houses with icing i have seen pics apparently some american lives in her house now has extended loads but still the same from the front. 

    Its funny how we fall in love with places, Suffolk for me seems to be the opposite to all Rickmansworth in hertfordshire is and it is about real people love of gardening love of food and so much beauty without pretentiousness,where as Rickmansworth is about pretence and career minded met line loving cold  money worshipping . 

    I know parts of suffolk are getting a bit city slicker but i intend to stay away from the good train lines. 

  • MirandaFMirandaF Posts: 31

    Another 'thug' which might be good to cover the monstrosity is a Passion flower - I put one in he front garden 25 years ago, dug it up about 15 years ago and have been waging war on it ever since! I feel for you - we are lucky in that we have lovely neighbours here in London, but the people over the back have the dreaded Leylandii on their back fence which just suck out all the moisture from the groundimage I'm now investigating making some sort of feature with railway sleepers and shade lovers that don't mind being bone dry and shaded all summer!

  • MirandaFMirandaF Posts: 31

    Pansy face, can't your neighbours shop the 10-bed house to the local council or someone similar? 

  • MirandaFMirandaF Posts: 31

    Another 'thug' which might be good to cover the monstrosity is a Passion flower - I put one in he front garden 25 years ago, dug it up about 15 years ago and have been waging war on it ever since! I feel for you - we are lucky in that we have lovely neighbours here in London, but the people over the back have the dreaded Leylandii on their back fence which just suck out all the moisture from the groundimage I'm now investigating making some sort of feature with railway sleepers and shade lovers that don't mind being bone dry and shaded all summer!

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