rough side toward your yard, if you built it.
No. If the neighbor never talked to you prior to fixing the fence, quantum meruit does not apply.
If a neighbor wanted to install a fence the fence has to be on the neighbors property entirely. Not half the fence on your side and half on the neighbors side. There are also zoning regulations that deal with issues like this. Some counties will not allow a fence to be over five feet tall and they have to be constructed using only approved materials. I know that in my neighborhood metal fences are against code and they can only be constructed using fence block. If I were you I would call the city planning office and ask them, they will have a definitive answer. Who knows, maybe the fence was put up without the proper permits and your neighbor has to take the entire thing down.
Well, you definitely cannot have a dog without a fence. Try asking the neighbor over for dinner and then ask them then. Explain why you want a fence (e.g., privacy, dog's safety) and remind them that you will be paying for the fence (fences cost up to thousands of dollars, and I would suggest a tall fence; I know from experience). I hope this is helpful. If your neighbor still doesn't want the fence, hopefully they will soon move out and you can try with the next owner. But in the meantime, rdo some research about the dog you want. (Do this if you get a dog or not.) Remember dogs are not just a cute face; they are a big responsibility, so be prepared.
Depends on who owns the fence, i.e. whose property it is on or who bought it in the first place. Often one person installs a fence (maybe 3 owners ago) then allows the neighbor to install wood on their side of the owners fence. This wood is the owners wood but people do it cause it is cheaper than installing a second fence on their own property. If you own the fence (its on your property) then you can do whatever you want including tear it down. If it is on their property they can tell you what you can or can't do. The best thing is to go to the neighbor and actually talk with them about what you'd like to do.
To look best from the outside, ribs are placed twords the house, but if you want the best view from your back deck then the ribs can be faced outwards.
toward the ridge
to answer that ? is the post is to the inside of the fence
Wilson was inspired in part by a neighbor that Tim Allen had when he was too young to see over his neighbor's fence (and therefore unable to see his neighbor). As a result, the bottom half of Wilson's face was almost never seen on the show. Initially he was always seen with his mouth obscured by the fence; the gag quickly became covering the lower half of his face with other props, wardrobe, set pieces, other characters' heads, or using unconventional camera angles. Occasionally, the top half of his face would be covered leaving only the bottom half visible, and rarely, his entire face would be shown disguised by makeup for a costume. Earl Hindman's face was fully shown following the series finale episode while taking his final bow, though he did come out holding a miniature fence on a stick over the lower half of his face for one last gag. However, his full face is very briefly seen over the fence in the pilot episode, in "The Karate Kid Returns," and in the bar in "Something Old, Someone Blue.
Toward the RCH.
Toward the RCH
Yes
The foil should face out, as it is a thermal block and should deflect heat before it enters the wall cavity.