Hello, bat has a 3 acre deciduous wood which is isn't really marked out that clearly on one side. Two sides are clearly defined since they border on public lanes, but the other side borders on someone else's coniferous wood and there isn't a dividing fence or such-like.
I can stand on that edge of the wood (well, maybe hang is a better word) and 'see' roughly where the coniferous trees start and say that's theirs, whereas this oak tree over here is mine, etc.
I have the land registry plan from when the solicitor did the search and it shows a thin red line to mark out the boundaries. If I superimpose this on a google satellite picture, I can make out where the red line is with respect to the trees pretty precisely (+/- a metre or two, I think) and there seems to be a line of stout yellow stakes about 20 m apart which someone has hammered in at some stage, I would guess around 10 - 15 years ago. It is all pretty clear to the eye, really, but that is all I have ever had to go on in terms of a boundary line in the last 6 months of being the owner.
Anyhow, it seems that some of the neighbour's coniferous trees come about 10 metres into what I would consider to be 'mine'. No big issue, but is there someway to clarify the boundary more? Is it worth getting a surveyor in?? Probably quite expensive?? Should I contact the neighbour, who I don't yet know, in person or in writing via the land registry info?? Just thinking that starting a boundary dispute is probably not the best way to greet the neigbours, but if I just let sleeping dogs lie for the foreseable future, I can see myself being disappointed if there is a cock-up later on when they come to do any felling, etc. Is it worth doing more extensive searches with the land-registry in case there are any larger scale plans, etc, somewhere? My impression is that the wood is part of a bigger plot that was split up a few decades ago. Any clues much appreciated.
Bests for now, bat.