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Iain A Gilroy 27-01-2003 10:41 AM

Quick growing hedge
 
I want to plant a hedge that will "quickly" give me a low (2-3 feet high)
box shaped hedge.

What would I be best to use.

Cheers

Iain
Scotland




Rodger Whitlock 28-01-2003 07:55 PM

Quick growing hedge
 
On Mon, 27 Jan 2003 10:41:57 -0000, "Iain A Gilroy"
wrote:

I want to plant a hedge that will "quickly" give me a low (2-3 feet high)
box shaped hedge.

What would I be best to use.


Remember that a plant which grows 2 or 3 feet rapidly will
continue growing at the same rate for quite a long time.

IOW, there's no plant like the one you want.


You might think Lonicera nitida would do, but it really needs to
be cut back very hard the first few years so it has a properly
thick base. A good hedge of L. nitida takes, in my estimation,
5-10 years to develop.

Another possibility is box, but you will likely have to pay a
high price for the full-sized plants you need. Otherwise it's too
slow growing.


--
Rodger Whitlock
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

david 28-01-2003 09:18 PM

Quick growing hedge
 
Rodger Whitlock wrote
"You might think Lonicera nitida would do, but it really needs to
be cut back very hard the first few years so it has a properly
thick base..."

If you plant it almost flat on the ground and at a slight angle to the last
plant i.e. so that they form a row 6 inches or so wide then they will
sprout along the stem and form a thick base.
also once they start to shoot then you could even pin the stems down to the
ground and they will root along the stem..
If you then just top them lightly at around 12 inches then again at 18
inches you should have a 3 ft hedge in less than 3 year.
Alternatively you could plant as described and also plant one plant every 12
to 15 inches upright to make the height quicker whilst the base will thicken
up at the same time.
This is all dependant on the size of the plants you start with.
--
David Hill
Abacus Nurseries
www.abacus-nurseries.co.uk




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