The HOA Ordered My Wall Removed, Then The Rain Exposed Everything-Quieen - Chainityai

The HOA Ordered My Wall Removed, Then The Rain Exposed Everything-Quieen

The strangest fight of my life began with a sentence so ridiculous I had to read it three times in my kitchen.

According to the new HOA president, my retaining wall was ruining the beauty of the community and negatively impacting her scenic backyard experience.

Scenic backyard experience.

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That was the phrase in the letter.

Not slope stability.

Not drainage.

Not erosion.

Her view.

I stood there with the certified envelope in one hand and the letter in the other, looking out at the massive timber wall that had been holding my hillside in place for almost twenty years.

It was ugly.

I never pretended otherwise.

It was dark, heavy, weathered, patched in places, and about as elegant as a railroad bridge.

But it was also the reason the homes below mine had not spent the past two decades dealing with mud in their basements every rainy season.

I live outside a small town in western Oregon, high enough on a slope that summer sunsets look like postcards and winter storms make you respect every inch of dirt under your feet.

When I bought the house in 2004, the previous owner gave me one warning before handing over the keys.

“The view’s amazing,” he said, “but that hill likes to move.”

I thought he was just being dramatic.

Then my first winter arrived.

Rain came down for days at a time.

The ground stayed soaked for weeks.

Little sections of the slope slumped and cracked, nothing dramatic enough to make the news, but enough to make me walk outside every morning with a knot in my stomach.

I hired an engineer before I had the money to feel comfortable hiring one.

I pulled permits.

I followed the county process.

I built a large timber retaining wall along the edge of my property, not because I loved looking at it, but because I loved my house, my neighbors, and the basic idea of gravity staying where it belonged.

For years, the wall did its job.

My daughter grew up with that wall as part of the yard.

Neighbors below me got used to seeing it from their windows.

A few of the older ones even thanked me after heavy storms because they knew exactly what it was doing.

Then Vanessa Harder moved in.

She bought one of the expensive lower homes with the broad valley view and immediately began transforming the backyard into something that looked like it belonged in a resort brochure.

There was a new patio, new stonework, new landscaping, an outdoor kitchen, and an infinity-edge pool placed for maximum sunset drama.

By the end of that summer, she was also the HOA president.

Vanessa was smart, polished, and very sure of herself.

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