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orangetrader 14-12-2004 05:15 AM

Privacy "fence" using bamboo?
 
A friend of mine just bought a new house with a pool in the backyard...only
that to the south, to the east and to the west are three two story houses
with balconies. So privacy is an issue.

I think he can plant a row of very tall bamboo around the entire perimeter
to archieve the effect of a tall fence. What species should he use and will
it be cost prohibitive to "fence" the entire backyard (75' wide and 50'
length) with bamboo?

O



Travis 14-12-2004 05:36 AM

orangetrader wrote:
A friend of mine just bought a new house with a pool in the
backyard...only that to the south, to the east and to the west are
three two story houses with balconies. So privacy is an issue.

I think he can plant a row of very tall bamboo around the entire
perimeter to archieve the effect of a tall fence. What species
should he use and will it be cost prohibitive to "fence" the entire
backyard (75' wide and 50' length) with bamboo?


Climate is a factor in deciding which bamboo to use and yes 125 linear
feet might be expensive, it would be for me but not for Bill Gates.

--
Travis in Shoreline (just North of Seattle) Washington
USDA Zone 8b
Sunset Zone 5


Travis 14-12-2004 05:36 AM

orangetrader wrote:
A friend of mine just bought a new house with a pool in the
backyard...only that to the south, to the east and to the west are
three two story houses with balconies. So privacy is an issue.

I think he can plant a row of very tall bamboo around the entire
perimeter to archieve the effect of a tall fence. What species
should he use and will it be cost prohibitive to "fence" the entire
backyard (75' wide and 50' length) with bamboo?


Climate is a factor in deciding which bamboo to use and yes 125 linear
feet might be expensive, it would be for me but not for Bill Gates.

--
Travis in Shoreline (just North of Seattle) Washington
USDA Zone 8b
Sunset Zone 5


[email protected] 14-12-2004 04:45 PM

Those spread-type bamboo can spread and and fill up the area if you
give them enough
water. And the spread-type bamboo can live in a relatively cold area
(such as zone-6
in USA). But you need to contain it using some kind of heavy gauge
plastic/rubber
edging material and place it very deep into the ground (may be 3-feet
or deeper?)
Check the web site called bamboodirect.com to see the details about
this kind of
heavy duty edging material. According to a TV show that showed this,
this is a
labor-intensive work with multiple strong men placing the heavy duty
edging material
in place. This doesn't look like a DIY kind of job unless you have
many young friends
who can help. Your friend needs to figure out if the cost of the
bamboo itself and the
labor cost is too high for him; he may or may not want to do this, and
he may decide
to get some evergreen trees instead of bamboo.

If you are in a warm zone, you may try non-spreading bamboo. They may
actually be
a better bamboo for screening a property because they are supposed to
grow thick and
bushy. And your friend will not need to put in those heavy gauge
edging material to
contain them.

Jay Chan


[email protected] 14-12-2004 04:45 PM

Those spread-type bamboo can spread and and fill up the area if you
give them enough
water. And the spread-type bamboo can live in a relatively cold area
(such as zone-6
in USA). But you need to contain it using some kind of heavy gauge
plastic/rubber
edging material and place it very deep into the ground (may be 3-feet
or deeper?)
Check the web site called bamboodirect.com to see the details about
this kind of
heavy duty edging material. According to a TV show that showed this,
this is a
labor-intensive work with multiple strong men placing the heavy duty
edging material
in place. This doesn't look like a DIY kind of job unless you have
many young friends
who can help. Your friend needs to figure out if the cost of the
bamboo itself and the
labor cost is too high for him; he may or may not want to do this, and
he may decide
to get some evergreen trees instead of bamboo.

If you are in a warm zone, you may try non-spreading bamboo. They may
actually be
a better bamboo for screening a property because they are supposed to
grow thick and
bushy. And your friend will not need to put in those heavy gauge
edging material to
contain them.

Jay Chan



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