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#1
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Advice on choice of foundation plants to create a hedge
Hello,
I am new to gardening and would would very much appreciate your advice. I would like to plant a hedge around my front garden. It is currently 5m x 8m of lawn. The house is end of terrace and due to the very low wall, the garden is quite exposed to people walking past, throwing litter in etc. I was originally thinking of planting bare root privet or laurel but realised that if I plant right up to the side of the house, the roots could potentially cause problems. So my plan now is to plant privet or laurels along the front garden wall only. But am stumped about what to plant along the side running up to the house. I love choisya ternata and would like to find some other foundation plants that might go well with this and eventually grow bushy / high enough to create a decent barrier, without being invasive. Do you have any suggestions? The garden is North West facing and not overshadowed so gets a reasonable amount of sun in the afternoons/evenings. It's a fairly quiet street so not too much traffic, but there is some. I'd also eventually like to plant a tree in the garden, as well as maybe a climbing rose for the front wall, and possibly some raised beds for vegetables. But as an inexperienced gardener I would like to start slowly and make the right choices! Thanks very much for your help. |
#2
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Just to add to this - it is the sundance variety of Choisya that I like the best. and ideally I would prefer evergreen plants so that it can act as a screen year-round
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#3
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Advice on choice of foundation plants to create a hedge
On Feb 20, 6:06*am, poppyseed
wrote: Hello, I am new to gardening and would would very much appreciate your advice. I would like to plant a hedge around my front garden. *It is currently 5m x 8m of lawn. *The house is end of terrace and due to the very low wall, the garden is quite exposed to people walking past, throwing litter in etc. *I was originally thinking of planting bare root privet or laurel but realised that if I plant right up to the side of the house, the roots could potentially cause problems. So my plan now is to plant privet or laurels along the front garden wall only. *But am stumped about what to plant along the side running up to the house. *I love choisya ternata and would like to find some other foundation plants that might go well with this and eventually grow bushy / high enough to create a decent barrier, without being invasive. *Do you have any suggestions? The garden is North West facing and not overshadowed so gets a reasonable amount of sun in the afternoons/evenings. *It's a fairly quiet street so not too much traffic, but there is some. *I'd also eventually like to plant a tree in the garden, as well as maybe a climbing rose for the front wall, and possibly some raised beds for vegetables. *But as an inexperienced gardener I would like to start slowly and make the right choices! Thanks very much for your help. -- poppyseed Could you state where you are? It helps us to give advice if we know a newbie's country, area within the country, climate (dry/wet/cold/ warm), etc. HB |
#4
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Advice on choice of foundation plants to create a hedge
In article
, Higgs Boson wrote: On Feb 20, 6:06*am, poppyseed wrote: Hello, I am new to gardening and would would very much appreciate your advice. I would like to plant a hedge around my front garden. *It is currently 5m x 8m of lawn. *The house is end of terrace and due to the very low wall, the garden is quite exposed to people walking past, throwing litter in etc. *I was originally thinking of planting bare root privet or laurel but realised that if I plant right up to the side of the house, the roots could potentially cause problems. So my plan now is to plant privet or laurels along the front garden wall only. *But am stumped about what to plant along the side running up to the house. *I love choisya ternata and would like to find some other foundation plants that might go well with this and eventually grow bushy / high enough to create a decent barrier, without being invasive. *Do you have any suggestions? The garden is North West facing and not overshadowed so gets a reasonable amount of sun in the afternoons/evenings. *It's a fairly quiet street so not too much traffic, but there is some. *I'd also eventually like to plant a tree in the garden, as well as maybe a climbing rose for the front wall, and possibly some raised beds for vegetables. *But as an inexperienced gardener I would like to start slowly and make the right choices! Thanks very much for your help. -- poppyseed Could you state where you are? It helps us to give advice if we know a newbie's country, area within the country, climate (dry/wet/cold/ warm), etc. HB H.B., don't you see .co.uk in the header? -- Billy E Pluribus Unum Palestinian Villages May Soon Go Dark Once Again http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,815476,00.html |
#5
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Advice on choice of foundation plants to create a hedge
On 2/20/12 10:07 AM, Billy wrote:
In article , Higgs Boson wrote: On Feb 20, 6:06 am, poppyseed wrote: Hello, I am new to gardening and would would very much appreciate your advice. I would like to plant a hedge around my front garden. It is currently 5m x 8m of lawn. The house is end of terrace and due to the very low wall, the garden is quite exposed to people walking past, throwing litter in etc. I was originally thinking of planting bare root privet or laurel but realised that if I plant right up to the side of the house, the roots could potentially cause problems. So my plan now is to plant privet or laurels along the front garden wall only. But am stumped about what to plant along the side running up to the house. I love choisya ternata and would like to find some other foundation plants that might go well with this and eventually grow bushy / high enough to create a decent barrier, without being invasive. Do you have any suggestions? The garden is North West facing and not overshadowed so gets a reasonable amount of sun in the afternoons/evenings. It's a fairly quiet street so not too much traffic, but there is some. I'd also eventually like to plant a tree in the garden, as well as maybe a climbing rose for the front wall, and possibly some raised beds for vegetables. But as an inexperienced gardener I would like to start slowly and make the right choices! Thanks very much for your help. -- poppyseed Could you state where you are? It helps us to give advice if we know a newbie's country, area within the country, climate (dry/wet/cold/ warm), etc. HB H.B., don't you see .co.uk in the header? There are several different climates in the UK. Furthermore, just because someone has an E-mail address with a UK domain does not mean that person actually is in the UK. -- David E. Ross Climate: California Mediterranean, see http://www.rossde.com/garden/climate.html Gardening diary at http://www.rossde.com/garden/diary |
#6
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Advice on choice of foundation plants to create a hedge
On Feb 20, 9:06*am, poppyseed
wrote: Hello, I am new to gardening and would would very much appreciate your advice. I would like to plant a hedge around my front garden. *It is currently 5m x 8m of lawn. *The house is end of terrace and due to the very low wall, the garden is quite exposed to people walking past, throwing litter in etc. *I was originally thinking of planting bare root privet or laurel but realised that if I plant right up to the side of the house, the roots could potentially cause problems. So my plan now is to plant privet or laurels along the front garden wall only. *But am stumped about what to plant along the side running up to the house. *I love choisya ternata and would like to find some other foundation plants that might go well with this and eventually grow bushy / high enough to create a decent barrier, without being invasive. *Do you have any suggestions? The garden is North West facing and not overshadowed so gets a reasonable amount of sun in the afternoons/evenings. *It's a fairly quiet street so not too much traffic, but there is some. *I'd also eventually like to plant a tree in the garden, as well as maybe a climbing rose for the front wall, and possibly some raised beds for vegetables. *But as an inexperienced gardener I would like to start slowly and make the right choices! Thanks very much for your help. -- poppyseed Sorry I have no advice for you I was trying to figure out as to how these groups are all about and hope to use them better now. Thanks for your time. Star |
#7
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Advice on choice of foundation plants to create a hedge
Sorry I have no advice for you I was trying to figure out as to how these groups are all about and hope to use them better now. Thanks for your time. Star Who or what is it that inspires these drones to come here and make vapid remarks? D |
#8
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Advice on choice of foundation plants to create a hedge
poppyseed wrote:
Hello, I am new to gardening and would would very much appreciate your advice. I would like to plant a hedge around my front garden. It is currently 5m x 8m of lawn. The house is end of terrace and due to the very low wall, the garden is quite exposed to people walking past, throwing litter in etc. I was originally thinking of planting bare root privet or laurel but realised that if I plant right up to the side of the house, the roots could potentially cause problems. So my plan now is to plant privet or laurels along the front garden wall only. But am stumped about what to plant along the side running up to the house. I love choisya ternata and would like to find some other foundation plants that might go well with this and eventually grow bushy / high enough to create a decent barrier, without being invasive. Do you have any suggestions? In the right conditions privet becomes invasive. It has a million berries that are spread by birds and water and every one (it seems) germinates. The garden is North West facing and not overshadowed so gets a reasonable amount of sun in the afternoons/evenings. It's a fairly quiet street so not too much traffic, but there is some. I'd also eventually like to plant a tree in the garden, as well as maybe a climbing rose for the front wall, and possibly some raised beds for vegetables. But as an inexperienced gardener I would like to start slowly and make the right choices! Thanks very much for your help. Don't start by planting. Start by planning. Draw a scale plan of the whole area, consider sun, views, wind, use now and in the future, consider the situation in all seasons of the year. There is no point (for example) in planting a big tree where it will shade your vege plot or fill your gutters with leaves. David |
#9
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Quote:
Choisya 'sundance' whilst being a lovely shrub, is quite slow growing and will only get to about 4ft tall in 10 yrs ??? so if its privacy that your after, I think you need something a bit quicker ! I'd think about Grisellinia, either plain green or variegated, Viburnum tinus, Photinia 'red robin', Euonymous japonica in its various forms or even a mixture which will give a less formal effect and might look very good. It really depends on what style you have in mind ? best of luck ! Lannerman. |
#10
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Quote:
Choisya 'sundance' whilst being a lovely shrub, is quite slow growing and will only get to about 4ft tall in 10 yrs ??? so if its privacy that your after, I think you need something a bit quicker ! I'd think about Grisellinia, either plain green or variegated, Viburnum tinus, Photinia 'red robin', Euonymous japonica in its various forms or even a mixture which will give a less formal effect and might look very good. It really depends on what style you have in mind ? best of luck ! Lannerman. |
#11
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Quote:
Choisya 'sundance' whilst being a lovely shrub, is quite slow growing and will only get to about 4ft tall in 10 yrs ??? so if its privacy that your after, I think you need something a bit quicker ! I'd think about Grisellinia, either plain green or variegated, Viburnum tinus, Photinia 'red robin', Euonymous japonica in its various forms or even a mixture which will give a less formal effect and might look very good. It really depends on what style you have in mind ? best of luck ! Lannerman. |
#12
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#13
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Advice on choice of foundation plants to create a hedge
On Tue, 21 Feb 2012 09:15:42 +1100, "David Hare-Scott"
wrote: Sorry I have no advice for you I was trying to figure out as to how these groups are all about and hope to use them better now. Thanks for your time. Star Who or what is it that inspires these drones to come here and make vapid remarks? Those who respond. |
#14
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Advice on choice of foundation plants to create a hedge
In article ,
"David E. Ross" wrote: On 2/20/12 10:07 AM, Billy wrote: In article , Higgs Boson wrote: On Feb 20, 6:06 am, poppyseed wrote: Hello, I am new to gardening and would would very much appreciate your advice. I would like to plant a hedge around my front garden. It is currently 5m x 8m of lawn. The house is end of terrace and due to the very low wall, the garden is quite exposed to people walking past, throwing litter in etc. I was originally thinking of planting bare root privet or laurel but realised that if I plant right up to the side of the house, the roots could potentially cause problems. So my plan now is to plant privet or laurels along the front garden wall only. But am stumped about what to plant along the side running up to the house. I love choisya ternata and would like to find some other foundation plants that might go well with this and eventually grow bushy / high enough to create a decent barrier, without being invasive. Do you have any suggestions? The garden is North West facing and not overshadowed so gets a reasonable amount of sun in the afternoons/evenings. It's a fairly quiet street so not too much traffic, but there is some. I'd also eventually like to plant a tree in the garden, as well as maybe a climbing rose for the front wall, and possibly some raised beds for vegetables. But as an inexperienced gardener I would like to start slowly and make the right choices! Thanks very much for your help. -- poppyseed Could you state where you are? It helps us to give advice if we know a newbie's country, area within the country, climate (dry/wet/cold/ warm), etc. HB H.B., don't you see .co.uk in the header? There are several different climates in the UK. Furthermore, just because someone has an E-mail address with a UK domain does not mean that person actually is in the UK. I'll bet you this one is, or very close. In any event, I've always been partial to Crataegus laevigata http://www.pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Crataegus+laevigata, Crataegus monogyna, or Crataegus pinnatifida for health, or hedges. -- Billy E Pluribus Unum Palestinian Villages May Soon Go Dark Once Again http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,815476,00.html |
#15
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Thanks for your replies - good suggestions and things to think about.
I am based in South East London in the UK - sorry, I thought that appeared on my message in the right hand corner. We were thinking of cherry laurel which I believe is less rampant than other types? But perhaps you are right and it would be a bad idea to plant it in this small space. Have no idea what privet smells like - will make sure I check that out. Thanks again. I will investigate your plant suggestions and will make sure I draw a scale plan. |
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