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Hedging and Garden Screening
We
are often asked for advice on what plants to use
for screening. Screening can mean a low hedge,
higher screening of buildings above a wall, or
individual screening of telegraph poles etc.
Each
situation should be considered carefully, but
other things to think of are:
- Access
to the rear of the hedge for trimming
-
What shade will it throw?
- If
it is planted reasonably tall will it need staking?
- What
provision is there for watering?
- Is
it to be formal or informal, evergreen or deciduous?
Hedges
Hedges will offer a full
screen generally up to 3 metres tall and there
are various options. There are also many reasons
to want a hedge apart from screening: as a wildlife
haven; a backdrop to a border; a windbreak; a
design feature; a noise reducer.
If
you can combine any of these reasons with your
desire to screen then you have double the benefit.
While you can of course go for a single species
approach, typically a deciduous hedge will be
a mixed native type
-
Saxon Mix
This
traditional English hedgerow mix is one of our
best-selling stock lines. It is based upon a
60% Hawthorn content supported by a blend of
different varieties of other native shrubs -
robust and quick-growing.
-
Beech/Hornbeam
These plants make for great screening as they
hold their winter leaves until the new growth
starts in the spring.You therefore get the benefit
of an evergreen hedge without looking at green
all year round! Hornbeam will cope with the
heavier clays in which beech will struggle.
These hedges are suitable for a formal clipped
appearance.
- Other
/ Informal
Informal hedges tend more towards the ornamental,
but still create effective screening and shelter.They
can be planted with a variety of fruiting and
flowering species, for instance Forsythia, Ribes,
Hybrid shrub roses, Potentilla, Cotoneaster
etc. One trim a year is sufficient for many
of these species.
- Evergreen
Hedging
Remember that it will always be green! They
will serve a purpose, great for screening, but
also consider the following:
-
Could the evergreen hedge be worked into
a more interesting shrubbery mix rather
than just the one species?
-
Can you plant a border in front of the hedge?
-
Could you break up the hedgeline with an
ornamental tree or two?
- Can
you achieve a ‘cloud’ effect
rather than a wall effect?
-
What structure will it create in your garden?
Evergreen hedging plants to consider: Buxus,
Cupressocyparis, Cotoneaster, Berberis, Ilex,
Escallonia, Lavandula, Ligustrum, Prunus laurocerasus,
Lonicera, Pyracantha.
Stilted
Hedges and Pleached Trees
Stilted hedges
are hedges on stilts – the stem of the plant
is generally clear of branches for 1.0-2.0m, above
which the plants are pruned into a hedge.These
are ideal for screens needed above a wall or similar
and can be very effective – typical species
to use are Hornbeam and Holm Oak (evergreen).
Pleached trees are trees that
have been pruned and trained to be two-dimensional.They
have a clear stem and are grown on a frame. Often
over time a Pleached tree will form a stilted
hedge if left to grow wide as well.
Individual
Plants
The temptation
when faced with a neighbour capable of overlooking
your garden is to plant up a wall of green, which
solves the immediate problem but leaves you with
a whole new design headache.
Some
thought needs to go into breaking up the wall,
bringing some of the planting forward, looking
at scale, and thinking about the longer term,
shade, underplanting etc.
When you have thought this through there are good
individual tree / shrub options for screening:
Quercus ilex
– This is an evergreen oak, available as
standards or feathered hedging
Cypress
– There are many different varieties of
Cypress, including Leylandii, which on its own
is a great specimen tree.
Pines
– These are good and bushy as young trees,
but bear in mind that some will lose lower branches
as they mature (eg: Scots Pine).
Photinia
– A more ornamental species and available
as a standard or shrub.
Ilex
– There are several different varieties
of holly that make excellent screening plants,
and are available in standard or shrub forms.
Laurel
– Ultimately can mature into a very large
shrub, but can be pruned.
Ligustrum
– The archetypal Privet hedge, available
as standard or shrub.
Cedars
– These are slow-growing and will needing
generous space in years to come.
Cotoneaster
– Offers lots of visual interest
in terms of leaves and berries, with many varieties
to choose from.
Also
consider fastigiate trees which generally have
a dense branch system creating good cover eg Hornbeam.
Many of these trees as standards will come to
you with a clear stem, great for subsequent underplanting.
Some are feathered to the base and work well as
stand alone specimens. Some work best if they
are worked into a ‘shrubbery’ scheme
which needs some planning as to final heights
and subsequent management.
Another wise tip is to discuss your plants with
anybody who might be affected by them.
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