Hedge Ambition - A Neatly Trimmed Bush

Hedge Ambition - A Neatly Trimmed Bush

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Discussion

Sterillium

Original Poster:

22,318 posts

237 months

Tuesday 8th April
quotequote all
I have reached the age where tending a hedge has begun to appeal to me...

Recommendations please for something fast-growing and evergreen -- that isn't Leylandii -- that would work well in a row of approximately thirty feet that sits in direct south, facing sunlight.

Ideally something that is tough enough to cope with the conditions above and survive in not the greatest quality soil.

I'd like something that will look nice as closely spaced shrubs (a few feet high) when planted, but would become a hedge over time.

Help please - I'm already shopping for massively overpowered hedge clippers. hehe

TimmyMallett

3,009 posts

124 months

Tuesday 8th April
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Yew? If you like shaping.

Laurel if you want lower maintenance.

HughG

3,659 posts

253 months

Tuesday 8th April
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Hawthorn?

adamInca

222 posts

155 months

Tuesday 8th April
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Privet?
Grows quick, is hardy and doesn't mind a really hard cut back.

Grande Pedro

377 posts

8 months

Tuesday 8th April
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I'm doing exactly the same thing at the moment, for a south-facing hedge of about 20 metres. I considered Hornbeam but am now favouring Beech; a mixture of green and copper, with an odd number of forsythia thrown-in to mix it up a bit.

Edited by Grande Pedro on Tuesday 8th April 16:11

Voguely

357 posts

170 months

Tuesday 8th April
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If you want fast growing then consider Cherry Laurel. However, these are quite large-leafed, and so not as good for a tightly clipped look if that is what you're after. Yew is best for a tight clip, but isn't particularly fast growing until really established. Some varieties of Holly could also work - also usefully spiky if wanted to use it as a deterrent for people trying to climb through/over the boundary.

dhutch

15,817 posts

209 months

Tuesday 8th April
quotequote all
Fast growing and easy to maintain....

....the fast it grown, the more it needs cutting.!

Privet works, Laurel works, Holly is a classic, Hawthorn (or mixed native) works well but is spikey and not every green.

Beach? and or Purple Beech. Not evergreen but holds its leaves well.

Arrivalist

1,082 posts

11 months

Tuesday 8th April
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Why not a mix of things for variety. Different types of laurel, red robin etc.


Cow Corner

481 posts

42 months

Tuesday 8th April
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Laurel is fast growing but a bugger to maintain (I cut mine by hand as a hedge trimmer tears the leaves and makes it look horrible)

Hawthorn is nice and great wildlife habitat, but it will tear strips off you and the clippings are hard to process.

Photinia is a solid choice, lovely colours year round and easy to maintain.

Beech is lovely and provides some winter cover - not that fast growing though.

Yew likewise, but not fast growing.

OutInTheShed

10,606 posts

38 months

Tuesday 8th April
quotequote all
Arrivalist said:
Why not a mix of things for variety. Different types of laurel, red robin etc.
Mixed is my preference.
In addition to most of the plants mentioned, I would add pyracantha, berberis, viburnam, camellia...