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Old 27-08-2011, 01:06 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Dave Hill Dave Hill is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2007
Location: South Wales
Posts: 2,409
Default low hedge - sort of

On Aug 27, 12:21*pm, Spider wrote:
On 25/08/2011 18:50, Janet Tweedy wrote:





Between *a friend's house and the next one there is a small strip of
ground.
The houses are a cul de sac of large detached but modern houses with
drives only just big enough to contain a car's length and the re is no
proper boundary between each house - rather there is just the tiny strip
about 3 foot wide that goes road.
I know both owners and they wanted me to recommend something other than
the unruly (possibly as it's never been pruned) half-dead lavender in
situ at the moment.
i thought of box balls (nothing too high as the two families get on very
well and so would prefer something quite low,
Perhaps that Ilex that is similar to box or maybe, i thought a row of
small hardy fuchsias though they might stretch out a bit with their
growths in summer and these houses can't really afford the space so it
really should be confined to the three foot wide.


I even thought of rosemary but wondered if anyone out there had a
brighter idea?


p.s. You guessed it, neither are gardeners ! So it really ought to be
something that doesn't show neglect easily.


Where I needed a smart, low hedge, I planted a row of Euonymus
microphyllus pulchella. *It will do pretty much everything box will do,
except get box blight. *I have another, shorter, hedge of just plain
Euonymous micropyllus, which is more readily avaiable. *I am very
pleased with both forms and they are knitting together well now.

--
Spider
from high ground in SE London
gardening on clay- Hide quoted text -

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Strange that no one ever mentiones Santolina