In reply to foxtrapper:
I completely agree. (Assuming the house and wall were built together by the same contractor. If a contractor did the house, and a homeowner later did the landscaping, then it would not have raised eyebrows).
No dander here. I am not the least bit perturbed.
I deal with regulations every day. Construction is a ridiculously over-regulated industry (because they CAN- think of the children!, and the tax revenue base). Rules were much more lenient when I was in the chemical industry.
Here what I've noticed. People are VERY black and white in their understanding of rules in general. They like to take a small bit of understanding, then universally apply it.
However, ALL laws, rules, and guidelines are nuanced and full of grey areas. They just don't mean what people think they mean. Even code enforcement officials think they say something that they usually do not. Imaginary laws get enforced all the time based on someone's understanding, even when the law does not say so.
And laws are not applied evenly. There are things you can do which are fine, but they are illegal if I do them (because I am licensed). There are also things I can do as a homeowner which I can not do as a contractor.
So, we say stuff like "RR ties are banned", or "lead paint is illegal", or "asbestos must be removed", or "DDT is no longer manufactured" because we think they are true, and then everyone else jumps on the band wagon and spreads the rumors. (None of these statements are true).
Mr Darwin would like to make his wood E36 M3 look better. I can't help him with that, because every product I have seen used is worthless, and some of the techniques I might use myself in my own yard I can't recommend to others (because of my license).
But I also don't think he (or other random readers) should get scared about some "illegal banned product in my yard OMG", when that's just not true.
So folks, again I apologize for the thread jack.