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Oppressive garden
"sweetheart" wrote Sorry to barge in posting but I need some advice. I have a large garden with some large trees and tons of hedges - mostly hazel. I would like to cut the lot down . If I did , will it all come back? Do you want it to grow back? I'm unsure what you actually want. If you "prune" it hard mature trees and shrubs usually do grow again, there are exceptions and those that simply give up but as a rule they do survive to grow/flower again. How can I get rid of the rubbish. The garden is becoming one bug weed and rubbish patch already with stuff to burn. Hire/buy a good shredder, this will reduce drastically the bulk of the waste and the shredding can be used as a mulch to suppress weeds and conserve moisture or composted to make a good soil improver. I have an apple tree, looks about 30 years old and must be 20 ft high. It flowered profusely but I haven't has a single apple. Can I chop this back or should I just have someone take a chain saw to it? It can be dramatically reduced in size but it's a job for someone with knowledge of such pruning if you are not to permanently damage the tree. Do you know if it's a tip bearer for example? I also have a ceanothus ( sp)? Can I cut this back and will it start again. It seems half dead, probably from the icy winter we had. Then there is one more bush/ tree. I am not sure what it is but I think it is a verbena, It flowers before it puts on leaves and the flowers come sometime early spring . Little pink clusters. It also looks a bit dead. Its 15 ft high. Could I cut it back or do I have to loose it and start again? I once pruned a very large and overgrown Vibernum with a chainsaw, I cut it down to a single stump about 2ft tall, it grew back into a beautiful bush after a few years. Finally I have another bush which has white flowers in summer. Someone told me it was a mock orange. The leaves are umbel and it smells like cats pee to me. Again its leggy and dead in the middle. How much can I take off and it will still live? I think you can also be quite drastic with Philodelphus. One more. not on plants. I need a good heavy duty electric strimmer . I cannot handle a petrol one. I have seen a Flymo 600 HD. Has anyone used one of these - are they any good? Before you buy an electric one do try a small petrol strimmer, you may find it no heavier than a heavy duty electric one and it will be much better at the job. If it's weight on your arms you are concerned about then get a shoulder strap. -- Regards Bob Hobden W.of London. UK |
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