Image Up Advertising & Design

Life in Solera January 2024

Issue link: https://imageup.uberflip.com/i/1513796

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 6 of 51

| LIFE IN SOLERA | JANUARY 2024 | 5 REAR YARD You mean to say, I need a permit for doing 'stuff ' in my rear yard? Yes you do! (6.7) Any project outside your home (front or rear) needs a permit. When you follow the Design Review Guidelines and obtain a permit, it will alleviate problems that might occur. Some residents have had to takeout or redo projects completed without a permit. Diagrams for rear yard landscaping is a great help to the committee in understanding what you plan to do. In your diagram, include drain locations. Some residents have wanted to pour concrete in their yard without regard to drains. Not only might you have runoff after long periods of rain, but it could impact your neighbor as well. When you plant a tree in your rear yard, it needs to be at least five feet from the property line. Trees that have been planted without a permit are causing vinyl fence to raise. Also, roots have grown under the fence and are causing problems for neighbors, such as raising their side walkway to the rear yard. Some larger trees are encroaching over the fence and 'making a mess' on the neighbor's property. (Your neighbor can trim the part of a tree that is over the fence.) All citrus trees and/or fruit trees must be dwarf or a semi-dwarf variety. Remember, the rear yard is not a storage place for unwanted lawn furniture or other unwanted items. This could become a hazard to you, as well as being unsightly to your neighbors. Design Review Committee Curb Appeal Feature l l 1152 LANTANA RD 1192 LANTANA RD 1192 DESERT POPPY LN

Articles in this issue

view archives of Image Up Advertising & Design - Life in Solera January 2024