WATERHOUSEA FLORIBUNDA HEDGE
I plan to create a screen (3-4m high) using WATERHOUSEA FLORIBUNDA.
I am looking for advice on planting distance from a paling fence and distance between each plant. Just to confuse me you can offer advice on other lilly pilly varieties to use. I live in melbourne metro area. thanks jamesd |
WATERHOUSEA FLORIBUNDA HEDGE
chookie, thanks for your great comments.
I agree that the Syzygium species are hard to go past. i am curious about your comments on Waterhousea florabunda, it is used extensively down here as a medium screen. For example here is a typical comment from a melbourne retail supplier. Maybe it is a matter of getting the variety correct. http://www.goinggoinggreen.com.au/trees-melbourne.html |
WATERHOUSEA FLORIBUNDA HEDGE
in brisbane the waterhousia is used as a screening plant and they do
produce foliage to ground level and if they are given little water or care they dont really get above 4m or so. |
WATERHOUSEA FLORIBUNDA HEDGE
In article . com,
"jpd1009" wrote: chookie, thanks for your great comments. I agree that the Syzygium species are hard to go past. i am curious about your comments on Waterhousea florabunda, it is used extensively down here as a medium screen. For example here is a typical comment from a melbourne retail supplier. Maybe it is a matter of getting the variety correct. http://www.goinggoinggreen.com.au/trees-melbourne.html That one's a cultivar (= cultivated variety) and only grows to 5m. I thought you meant the original, which is described this way a bit lower down: "Evergreen tree that grows 8-10meters tall around inner suburban Melbourne. This tree can be pruned or cut back to shape or maintained at a particular height (say 5m for screening 'the next door extension'). This requires a twice-yearly cut back ..." So the nursery is saying that you need to cut it back twice a year to keep it at 5m. So twice a year, you have to get someone in to cut it, or climb up a very long ladder to do it yourself. That's two Saturdays and/or your money wasted -- or you could just buy the smaller cultivar and let it grow without the need for a high-wire act twice a year. Usually, fruit trees and shrubs are pruned once a year, if at all. Non-fruiting trees are usually left to develop normally. -- Chookie -- Sydney, Australia (Replace "foulspambegone" with "optushome" to reply) "... if *I* was buying a baby I'd jolly well make sure it was at least a two-tooth!" Mary Grant Bruce, The Houses of the Eagle. |
WATERHOUSEA FLORIBUNDA HEDGE
I should have been more specific. I do understand that the 'vanilla'
Waterhousea florabunda is a monster. It is the weeping branches that appeals most. I will continue my investigating into various cultivars. As for clipping, this is not negotiable due to the positioning and styling of the garden...anyway, it is just another reason to be in the garden...definitely not a chore for me. |
WATERHOUSEA FLORIBUNDA HEDGE
In article .com,
"jpd1009" wrote: As for clipping, this is not negotiable due to the positioning and styling of the garden...anyway, it is just another reason to be in the garden...definitely not a chore for me. This is not clipping. This is pruning, five metres off the ground. Got the ladder for that? Got a hospital nearby? -- Chookie -- Sydney, Australia (Replace "foulspambegone" with "optushome" to reply) "Parenthood is like the modern stone washing process for denim jeans. You may start out crisp, neat and tough, but you end up pale, limp and wrinkled." Kerry Cue |
WATERHOUSEA FLORIBUNDA HEDGE
Discussions with a number of nursery's deemed Waterhousea florabunda
'sweeper' to be OK for height management, however I would not have gained the required branch density for the depth of hedge I require. These discussions have now shortlisted the choice to either Acmena smithii var. minor or Syzygium luehmannii. This should releive you :-) |
WATERHOUSEA FLORIBUNDA HEDGE
The same plant???
I dont know...i think more investigation is required, if they are then my short list is even shorter!!! What about Elaeocarpus reticulatus (Blueberry Ash)? |
WATERHOUSEA FLORIBUNDA HEDGE
In article .com,
"jpd1009" wrote: The same plant??? I dont know...i think more investigation is required, if they are then my short list is even shorter!!! What about Elaeocarpus reticulatus (Blueberry Ash)? Another pretty small tree rather than a shrub, I think. Note the trunk to 2m on this information page: http://www.metrotrees.com.au/treehan...us-reticulatus ..html It does say that it *can* retain foliage to the base, but this isn't a given, and again it grows to 10m. I suggest looking for "large shrubs" rather than "small trees". Your Council may (and your local Australian Plants people will) have a list of local native plants; if you are lucky, with basic descriptions. It's worth hunting for the locals; they are usually very tough. -- Chookie -- Sydney, Australia (Replace "foulspambegone" with "optushome" to reply) "Parenthood is like the modern stone washing process for denim jeans. You may start out crisp, neat and tough, but you end up pale, limp and wrinkled." Kerry Cue |
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