In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
Cacciatore, As I am not a resident of Italy, I can not offer advice, except to advise you on how I would handle this problem in Australia.
I would arrange for all residents on the street to attend a meeting at my place with refreshments provided beforehand in the form of a barbeque with grog supplied.
After dining and grogging on for a while, we would convene the meeting to discuss the matter, with the possibility to elect an executive comittee to advise on various modes of action, We woud then break off onto smaller groups to give our reactions to the proposals and reconvene to put our best advice to the plenum and ask for a show of hands to agree on a commonly approved action to be taken.
Whil this is going on, I would have taken a chainsaw to the tree and chopped it into tiny pieces.
It's easier to ask for pardon than to ask for permission.
Phil,
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
I used to be upset at how the locals were so brutal in slashing away all the plants, but after a couple of years here it is obvious, in the UK we had to work hard to get things to grow, here it is hard to stop them. The main branch things sounds like an excuse. If that main branch wasn't there another one would take its place!
In reply to A newbie all over again! by Annec
I personally would take the tree/branch down as soon as poss, regardless of school bus, what happens if you need an ambulance? or fire truck,
If the owners dont live there then they probably wont notice anyway.
A) Speak to the comune and see what they have to say
B) Arrange with bus driver for him to collect your children just before the offending tree (assuming it is not a huge distance away)
C) As we have had a lot of high winds lately branches have been coming down, and if your neighbours are not there and do not tend the land there is a risk of trees becoming dangerous so go for the chop - if they complain blame the wind.
D) Explain situation to neighbour (assuming you know how to contact him) and ask him if you can trim the tree sufficiently to allow the bus to pass.
(We had a similar problem with some poplars on neighbouring land at the side of the white road - one very large one blew down and blocked the white road - fortunately no one was hurt. The land is owned by Italians who rarely visit. Our Italian neighbours and ourselves dealt with the fallen tree - apparently it is the landowners responsibility to ensure that tress do not become too large and overhang too much or become dangerous - as such, with some persuasion, he chopped all the others down - our nieghbours quoted H&S at him and threatened a denuncia.)
If its any consolation we pay 5 times more than you for the school bus service and yes, the drivers do look after their buses very zealously.