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#1
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Green leaf ivy,or it was now dead and formed an 8ft x 12ft border hedge to ours and aunts garden. Died off over two years ago, hoped new growth would emerge, nothing.
Blackberries, a rose and some blue flowered, shrub types, growing in hedge so not poisoned ground. Could it be age of the plants they were quite old as the base trunk is around 2.5-3 inches on four out of around six that form the hedge. Any ideas what might have killed them off?.f Thanks Charlie2 |
#2
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On Mon, 21 Mar 2011 11:36:52 +0000, Charlie2
wrote: Green leaf ivy,or it was now dead and formed an 8ft x 12ft border hedge to ours and aunts garden. Died off over two years ago, hoped new growth would emerge, nothing. Blackberries, a rose and some blue flowered, shrub types, growing in hedge so not poisoned ground. Could it be age of the plants they were quite old as the base trunk is around 2.5-3 inches on four out of around six that form the hedge. Any ideas what might have killed them off?.f Thanks Charlie2 Ivy does not on its own form an 8 x 12 hedge. Ivy has to climb up and cling to something and if, as your post suggests, the bulk of the hedge was ivy then things like blackberries and roses would be snuffed out by it or flattened as they aren't strong enought to bear the weight of that amount of ivy. Ivy is notoriously difficult to kill once established. I've never known it to just die. Generally the plain green variety is tougher than old boots though some variegated varieties are a bit more tender until established. I have an "indoor" ivy growing happily around, and into, my garden pond and needing to be drastically cut back every year. On the basis of your description, I'm wondering whether what died was actually ivy. |
#3
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![]() "Charlie2" wrote in message ... Green leaf ivy,or it was now dead and formed an 8ft x 12ft border hedge to ours and aunts garden. Died off over two years ago, hoped new growth would emerge, nothing. Blackberries, a rose and some blue flowered, shrub types, growing in hedge so not poisoned ground. Could it be age of the plants they were quite old as the base trunk is around 2.5-3 inches on four out of around six that form the hedge. Any ideas what might have killed them off?.f Thanks Charlie2 -- Charlie2 If the growth of the ivy was large and top heavy it can sometimes die back like that, but it always reappears from below, as yours hasn't I suspect something may have happened to it, some clones are actually quite tender so it may just be a winter casualty, Ivy can take ages to show its in trouble. alternatively if it is near any one else's property someone may have sabotaged it! -- Charlie, Gardening in Cornwall Holders of National Collections of Clematis viticella and Lapageria rosea cvs http://www.roselandhouse.co.uk |
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