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Leyland Cypress
wow thank you pam for all your answers and time. i really thank you.
how old is that tree btw? i hear people say they get big yet the tag on all the ones i see say they only get grow about 50-60' tall and 6-10 feet wide. is this true? the tags lie? you see i never saw a leyland cypress that wasnt pruned. i want to see what these trees look like if left unprunned and left to grow natural because i wont prune mine. thank you again. "Pam" wrote in message ... Requester wrote: I need to know the following for planting Leyland Cypress trees: 1. root circumference 2. depth to plant 3. distance apart 4. how strong are the roots? will they knock over fences, break concrete, crack walls, etc? 5. anyone have pics of thier lc tree they planted? Root spread will increase with the height of the tree - you can figure roughly that the root spread will mirror the height. Plant at the depth it was in the nursery container and for screening purposes, space at the mature spread (will vary with cultivar of LC, but 15' is a reasonable spacing for most). Roots are dense but not particularly aggressive or invasive - still, one would not be wise to consider planting this tree too close to any permanent structure. Leyland cypress are way too big to be considered for my small garden (or most other urban gardens), but here is a good pic of a still fairly young tree: http://www.uah.edu/admin/Fac/images/naylor.jpg pam - gardengal |
#2
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Leyland Cypress
Requester wrote: wow thank you pam for all your answers and time. i really thank you. how old is that tree btw? i hear people say they get big yet the tag on all the ones i see say they only get grow about 50-60' tall and 6-10 feet wide. is this true? the tags lie? you see i never saw a leyland cypress that wasnt pruned. i want to see what these trees look like if left unprunned and left to grow natural because i wont prune mine. thank you again. Well......50-60 feet IS generally considered big in tree terms! Depending on the cultivar of LC you select, 50-60' could be its mature size, but a number of cultivars can easily exceed that height and a width of 15' is pretty standard for all but columnar forms and some may even exceed that. Tags are only guidelines, as are stated sizes in books or other references - plants don't read and they do keep on gowing indefinitely, although growth tends to slow significantly with age. And some nursery tags reflect plant size in 10 years rather than ulitmate size. Why, I have no idea - some strange perception (or growers' wish) that folks replace their landscaping after 10 years? IMO, unpruned is best with these trees - excessive pruning shortens their life and actually encourages more and faster growth - and they present a very lush, dense screen if left in their natural form. Why people suggest them for a 10 foot hedge is a mystery to me - an incredible amount of maintenance is required to keep something that wants to be 50' tall at this reduced height and they generally will be more prone to insect and disease problems when constantly stressed by excessive pruning. Not to mention that heavy hedgeing results in a mostly woody frame with little softening foliage. I'd guess the tree in the photo at no more than about 10 years old, based on similar growth habits of Leylands in my area. It is also a Naylor's Blue, which tends to be on the smaller side for Leylands. pam - gardengal "Pam" wrote in message ... Requester wrote: I need to know the following for planting Leyland Cypress trees: 1. root circumference 2. depth to plant 3. distance apart 4. how strong are the roots? will they knock over fences, break concrete, crack walls, etc? 5. anyone have pics of thier lc tree they planted? Root spread will increase with the height of the tree - you can figure roughly that the root spread will mirror the height. Plant at the depth it was in the nursery container and for screening purposes, space at the mature spread (will vary with cultivar of LC, but 15' is a reasonable spacing for most). Roots are dense but not particularly aggressive or invasive - still, one would not be wise to consider planting this tree too close to any permanent structure. Leyland cypress are way too big to be considered for my small garden (or most other urban gardens), but here is a good pic of a still fairly young tree: http://www.uah.edu/admin/Fac/images/naylor.jpg pam - gardengal |
#3
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Leyland Cypress
Please don't grow them anywhere near your neighbours property if you don't
intend to keep them pruned! The ones in our garden are a good 20' and we're struggling to even start cutting them back to 7'. They cause so many arguments here in the UK between neighbours that the government is bring in a law that you MUST keep them trimmed to a certain height - thank goodness! My grandparents neighbours have some growing next to the boundary fence and as a result, by grandparents get NO sun ALL DAY in a south facing garden. Charlie. "Requester" wrote in message om... wow thank you pam for all your answers and time. i really thank you. how old is that tree btw? i hear people say they get big yet the tag on all the ones i see say they only get grow about 50-60' tall and 6-10 feet wide. is this true? the tags lie? you see i never saw a leyland cypress that wasnt pruned. i want to see what these trees look like if left unprunned and left to grow natural because i wont prune mine. thank you again. "Pam" wrote in message ... Requester wrote: I need to know the following for planting Leyland Cypress trees: 1. root circumference 2. depth to plant 3. distance apart 4. how strong are the roots? will they knock over fences, break concrete, crack walls, etc? 5. anyone have pics of thier lc tree they planted? Root spread will increase with the height of the tree - you can figure roughly that the root spread will mirror the height. Plant at the depth it was in the nursery container and for screening purposes, space at the mature spread (will vary with cultivar of LC, but 15' is a reasonable spacing for most). Roots are dense but not particularly aggressive or invasive - still, one would not be wise to consider planting this tree too close to any permanent structure. Leyland cypress are way too big to be considered for my small garden (or most other urban gardens), but here is a good pic of a still fairly young tree: http://www.uah.edu/admin/Fac/images/naylor.jpg pam - gardengal --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.476 / Virus Database: 273 - Release Date: 24/04/03 |
#4
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Leyland Cypress
Charlie wrote:
Please don't grow them anywhere near your neighbours property if you don't intend to keep them pruned! The ones in our garden are a good 20' and we're struggling to even start cutting them back to 7'. They cause so many arguments here in the UK between neighbours that the government is bring in a law that you MUST keep them trimmed to a certain height - thank goodness! My grandparents neighbours have some growing next to the boundary fence and as a result, by grandparents get NO sun ALL DAY in a south facing garden. Plant in groups of five. Leave center tree unpruned. |
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