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Old 08-02-2003, 05:34 PM
Adrian Stanley
 
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Default Ceanothus for hedging?

I'd certainly check out Trewithen Blue, as I'm looking for a variety with a
spreading habit, and good coverage. The exact shade of blue is not so
important, as long as it gives a good display at the appropriate time of
year. I don't plan on having to prune it back too much.

"sacha" wrote in message
. uk...
in article , Inge Jones at
wrote on 8/2/03 10:02 am:

In article ,
spam says...
I have a south facing fence, about 60 ft long and 4 ft high. I really

like
the vibrant colour of ceanothus and I'm wondering if it would make a
suitable hedge to run along in front of the fence. I've seen some types
which have small leaves and very type clumps of bright blue flowers in

the
spring/early summer. I would like the plants to grow to least 6-7 ft.

Can anyone make any recommendations?

Thanks very much.



We had a single ceanothus in our last garden, and although I cannot
remember which actual breed it was, I can confirm that the right sort
should work as a hedge. It did want to produce leaf all the way down to
the ground, was dense, and didn't mind being clipped quite severely - it
soon filled in any gaps.


Ray suggests C. 'Trewithen Blue' would spread well for this purpose. But
Adrian would be best to look at an illustration to ensure the blue is what
he wants. C.'Italian Skies' is lovely but it isn't as spreading. You can
keep them in check but received wisdom seems to be that they don't like a
lot of hacking into. But reducing height, for example, should be fine.
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.co.uk