Generally no, not without your neighbor's permission. You will have no proof of the permission unless you get it in writing.
In the case of a rural mailbox the Pennsylvania Appellate court held that rural mailboxes which are authorized depositories for United States mail are a part of the postal system and therefore constitute a public use. As a public use, they may be placed within the public road easement. See related link for Miller v. Nichols.
If you need a definitive answer for your jurisdiction you should try inquiring at your local post office for the law in your state or consult with an attorney who can research the status of the state law.
Sudowoodo is found blocking the path on Route 36.
In order to perform a quality fence installation through a wooded area, the path of the fence will have to cleared. The path need only be wide enough to install the fence without interference. In order to maintain the fence in good repair, the path must continue to be kept clear, especially of roots, bushes, and trees, as these can quickly ensnare, tangle, and twist a fence.
Allows you to move rocks blocking your path.
If the mailbox is mounted on the house he must have a clear path to the mailbox. If you are mounting your mailbox on a rural road, mount it so the bottom of the mailbox is 47 inches from the surface of the road. Mount the mailbox far enough off the side of the road where it won't get hit. 12" is a good figure to use. Remember that school buses and trucks have mirrors that stick out on the right side that could hit your mailbox. If your mailbox is on a street with a curb, mount the mailbox so the bottom of the mailbox is 47" from the street. Mount the front of the mailbox 9" from the curb.
There was a huge iceberg blocking the path of our boat.
The neighbour cant do anything about it, as long as the fence was put up properly and not on his property then he can not do anything ex... its like me putting up a huge wall all around my backyard and my neighbour complains that the wall is blocking his sun...I'm not sure about the above one of the main reasons for planning permission being refused for extensions and the like is that they would block the sun at a certain time of day and would effect the quality of life in adjacent properties.alsoIt depends where you live and who owned the original fence!In Scotland if you want to make changes to a boundary fence/wall/path you should inform the property holder in the adjacent property in writing 6weeks before work begins (you could be forced to have it removed if you don't)It also depends on how tall the fence is due to planning restrictions and local bylaws.
a guy gives you goggles to use for the thing blocking the path (its actually a Kecleon!)
you have to blow them up with bombs
There was a huge iceberg blocking the path of our boat.
Try to make a path of squirrel feed to your neighbor's to your house. But it dose matter how far you are from the house.
You can't go through the path. There's a harvest sprite blocking the path.
Zone blocking is blocking where the only focus is a hole for the ballcarrier. They block whoever is in their path. Compare that to man blocking, in which blockers are given assignments before the play starts. Linemen in a zone blocking scheme are generally smaller, needing to react and change directions faster.