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sawney bean 14-12-2005 10:59 PM

semi mature trees
 
I am in need of some semi mature trees to enable me to have some privacy in
my own garden from over the back where the neighbour has removed approx 4
trees fo an extension, now Im all exposed to the street. they need to span 6
meters at a minimum height of 4 m. If I cant buy any suitable ones then I
will have to pull some up from the local woods like a neighbour has done but
I would rather not damage any in doing so.

any help appreciated.

thanks

Sawney Bean



Mike Lyle 14-12-2005 11:26 PM

semi mature trees
 
sawney bean wrote:
I am in need of some semi mature trees to enable me to have some
privacy in my own garden from over the back where the neighbour has
removed approx 4 trees fo an extension, now Im all exposed to the
street. they need to span 6 meters at a minimum height of 4 m. If I
cant buy any suitable ones then I will have to pull some up from

the
local woods like a neighbour has done but I would rather not damage
any in doing so.


Gosh! I hope you won't do that: illegal, but more importantly,
antisocial. You can buy trees of pretty well any size as long as
you're ready to pay a fair price -- it costs money to produce even a
medium-sized tree, which is one of the reasons one shouldn't steal
them.

Tell us roughly where you are, and we can probably recommend good
nurseries within range.

--
Mike.



Rupert 14-12-2005 11:30 PM

semi mature trees
 

"sawney bean" wrote in message
. uk...
I am in need of some semi mature trees to enable me to have some privacy in
my own garden from over the back where the neighbour has removed approx 4
trees fo an extension, now Im all exposed to the street. they need to span
6 meters at a minimum height of 4 m. If I cant buy any suitable ones then I
will have to pull some up from the local woods like a neighbour has done
but I would rather not damage any in doing so.

any help appreciated.

thanks

Sawney Bean

If you can give a little more information it would be a great help.
Where are you and what sort of trees are you contemplating stealing.?



John McMillan 15-12-2005 11:55 AM

semi mature trees
 
In article , "Rupert" wrote:

"sawney bean" wrote in message
. uk...
I am in need of some semi mature trees to enable me to have some privacy in
my own garden from over the back where the neighbour has removed approx 4
trees fo an extension, now Im all exposed to the street. they need to span
6 meters at a minimum height of 4 m. If I cant buy any suitable ones then I
will have to pull some up from the local woods like a neighbour has done
but I would rather not damage any in doing so.

any help appreciated.

thanks

Sawney Bean

If you can give a little more information it would be a great help.
Where are you and what sort of trees are you contemplating stealing.?


It wouldn't be a sea cave in Galloway that you're trying to conceal
would it?

http://www.mysteriousbritain.co.uk/l...wney_bean.html

landscapeadvice 15-12-2005 11:38 PM

semi mature trees
 
Hi, more info is needed, let any body know where you are then we can
help. Steve.


sawney bean 16-12-2005 04:25 PM

semi mature trees
 
I am near Birmingham and need some instant cover up to a height of 4m and
enough trees to cover a span of 6 m. Evergreens are best for me

cheers




"landscapeadvice" wrote in message
ups.com...
Hi, more info is needed, let any body know where you are then we can
help. Steve.




La puce 16-12-2005 05:40 PM

semi mature trees
 

sawney bean wrote:
I am near Birmingham and need some instant cover up to a height of 4m and
enough trees to cover a span of 6 m. Evergreens are best for me


Quercus ilex would be nice. My cousin planted 5 along a fence to have
instant cover. They're slow grower but you can get them at about 3m
high to start with. Being evergreens, birds will like it, there's
acorns, good as a hedge too and will go quite large afterwards. HTH


Mike Lyle 16-12-2005 05:58 PM

semi mature trees
 
sawney bean wrote:

"landscapeadvice" wrote in message
ups.com...
Hi, more info is needed, let any body know where you are then we

can
help. Steve.


I am near Birmingham and need some instant cover up to a height of

4m
and enough trees to cover a span of 6 m. Evergreens are best for me


There's a good case for Western red cedar (thuja plicata): it makes
an excellent evergreen hedge, and unlike the Leylandii abortion you
can trim it to size, and it won't annoy neighbours. Grows a foot or
more a year.

Try all the nurseries in your local Yellow Pages, and get the size
and price which suit you. But note that you'll pay quite a bit if you
want them big enough to provide instant screening; and as a rule
smaller trees are easier to establish as well as cheaper. I don't
know the prices, but, at a wild guess, I reckon you'd have to pay
well over sixty quid each for ten-footers (if you can even get them),
and you'd probably need about ten.

Flea's suggestion of Quercus ilex is good, too. I don't know how they
respond to being cut into old wood, though -- if they don't like it,
you'll have a problem starting a hedge with ten-foot plants.

Better prices come from forestry tree specialists such as (chosen at
random to start you off):
http://www.tree-shop.co.uk/index.asp

--
Mike.



La puce 16-12-2005 06:09 PM

semi mature trees
 

Mike Lyle wrote:

(snip)

I'm just about to have a thuja cut down for being totally bear to about
2m high. It's my neighbour and it's a deal we've got with the pruning
of my holly. (Decided to keep the eucalyptus and cross our fingers for
foundation problems etc... no I don't want to talk about it).

Flea's suggestion of Quercus ilex is good, too. I don't know how they
respond to being cut into old wood, though -- if they don't like it,
you'll have a problem starting a hedge with ten-foot plants.


The thing is that they don't need any pruning in a life time at least,
so it's the grand children's problem :o)


Mike Lyle 16-12-2005 07:02 PM

semi mature trees
 
La puce wrote:
Mike Lyle wrote:

[...]
Flea's suggestion of Quercus ilex is good, too. I don't know how

they
respond to being cut into old wood, though -- if they don't like

it,
you'll have a problem starting a hedge with ten-foot plants.


The thing is that they don't need any pruning in a life time at

least,
so it's the grand children's problem :o)


So how do you get them to form a hedge?

--
Mike.



La Puce 16-12-2005 11:08 PM

semi mature trees
 

Mike Lyle wrote:
So how do you get them to form a hedge?


A tall hedge g But seriously, he wants 6m high and after spending the
last two weeks looking at formal and informal hedges ... I am so tired
of the usual plants given as examples. I suggested the quercus ilex
because as my cousin did it, 5 along as standards, evergreen heads
touching, which she prunes in spring. It gives a fabulous tall hedge,
with bear trunks up to 1.5m. I have also seen them pruned with a square
shape but on a high trunk, not an hedge, in a park in Bordeaux. It's
lovely and really different.


Rupert 17-12-2005 12:09 AM

semi mature trees
 

"La Puce" wrote in message
oups.com...

Mike Lyle wrote:
So how do you get them to form a hedge?


A tall hedge g But seriously, he wants 6m high and after spending the
last two weeks looking at formal and informal hedges ... I am so tired
of the usual plants given as examples. I suggested the quercus ilex
because as my cousin did it, 5 along as standards, evergreen heads
touching, which she prunes in spring. It gives a fabulous tall hedge,
with bear trunks up to 1.5m. I have also seen them pruned with a square
shape but on a high trunk, not an hedge, in a park in Bordeaux. It's
lovely and really different.

A bit like in an instant pleached hedge?
Not sure that the Sawney Bean would appreciate one of those-you can't nick
it from the local woods.



La Puce 17-12-2005 08:12 PM

semi mature trees
 

Rupert wrote:
A bit like in an instant pleached hedge?
Not sure that the Sawney Bean would appreciate one of those-you can't nick
it from the local woods.


:o) I like different out of the ordinary things especially in
horticulture.



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