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Texas Woman’s Neighbor Plants Bamboo Right by Her Foundation: “My Worst Homeowner Nightmare”

How planting bamboo became a homeowner’s nightmare

How planting bamboo became a homeowner’s nightmare

|(Image source: YouTube/@SamTaylor1)

You might be an expert property picker, with a keen eye for location and view. But there's one thing that's certainly not under your control - annoying neighbors. A Texas woman learned that the hard way, thanks to some bamboo.

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When fitness creator Sam Taylor, who goes by @ssam.ttaylor on TikTok, stepped into her backyard and found a wall of bamboo growing inches from her driveway and home foundation, she was utterly shocked.

She first filmed the bamboo from inside the neighbor's fence, then went to her own side to show how close it had gotten to her property. "POV: ur neighbor installed bamboo this close to your driveway & foundation," she wrote.

She added in the caption: "Guys this is literally my worst homeowner nightmare. BAMBOO!!!!!!! I've already dealt with so much this year on my house now I have to fight off bamboo!!!"

Her outrage was justified. Plant specialists will tell you that bamboo is anything but passive once it reaches the ground, despite its graceful and harmless appearance. Bamboo "is very challenging to control or remove and should be planted with extreme caution," according to the Brandywine Conservancy. Under the right circumstances, several species can expand up to 10 feet annually.

For homeowners, what grows underground is what makes it so horrifying. Running bamboo's roots can push through bricks, drains, cavity walls, patios, and take advantage of fissures or flaws in concrete. Its lengthy lateral branches can reach nearly 30 feet below the ground. Most people don't see it coming.

Bamboo spread from a nearby garden, traveled underground across the property boundary, and burst through the concrete floors of the living room, study, hall, and kitchen in what experts at Environet UK described as the worst case of bamboo encroachment ever seen in the nation. Eventually, the bamboo also grew into the cavity walls. The insurance claim exceeded £100,000, and the entire bottom floor had to be removed and excavated.

Back in Texas, commenters under Taylor's video recounted their own experiences. "Bamboo is heavily regulated, check in your area but they could be responsible for damages to your property," one user wrote.

Another tried to offer reassurance: "That's graceful bamboo, it's a clumping variety. It won't spread but it will get pretty tall." A third kept it short: "Bamboo is a homeowner's worst nightmare." And one commenter simply said: "Yeah so mine's like 50 feet tall."

It's unclear if Taylor's bamboo is the dreaded "running" species or the "clumping" form, which is far less aggressive. Taylor was contacted by The Mary Sue for comment and more details, but as of the time of writing, no response has been received.

The story resonated with many on the internet because it speaks to a deep-seated concern shared by many homeowners: that one decision made by someone you didn't choose on property you don't own could end up being your most expensive problem.

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