Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
Hi,
Got an old hawthorn hedge and I hate it - it's manky, bare in winter and horrid to trim. So it's going. I'll keep one in tree form as it needs no maintenance work. I was mooting the idea of a silver beech hedge, but as I have 4 or so self seeded holly bushes (plus a tree) I thought it would be nice to keep the theme. Holly is not as objectionable as hawthorne, it's evergreen, the berries are cute and it's easy to trim. We're on heavy clay, but the hedge is on higher ground. Current holly is "standard English dark green with red berries and pointy leaves" - no idea which sub species. So I was wondering if I could add some other types of holly for variety - different colours, styles? The real questions a 1) If standard English green is happy, then will all varieties likely be happy with the clay? This is south and west facing - plenty of light on one side at least. 2) Roots. Have a sewer about 3-4 foot down under the hedge. The hawthorne got into it and Southern Water had to come and fix it. I promised to remove that particular hawthorn plant at the least. How deep to holly roots go? 3) Side question - I'll pay a tree surgeon to chainsaw and mince the old hedge. It's going to be hard to remove some 25-30 stumps (about 3-4" wide at most). If I add stump killer, am I likely to be able to get away with planting the holly in between? Many many thanks Tim |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On 02/12/17 12:23, Tim Watts wrote:
Hi, Got an old hawthorn hedge and I hate it - it's manky, bare in winter and horrid to trim. So it's going. I'll keep one in tree form as it needs no maintenance work. I was mooting the idea of a silver beech hedge, but as I have 4 or so self seeded holly bushes (plus a tree) I thought it would be nice to keep the theme. Holly is not as objectionable as hawthorne, it's evergreen, the berries are cute and it's easy to trim. We're on heavy clay, but the hedge is on higher ground. Current holly is "standard English dark green with red berries and pointy leaves" - no idea which sub species. So I was wondering if I could add some other types of holly for variety - different colours, styles? The real questions a 1) If standard English green is happy, then will all varieties likely be happy with the clay? This is south and west facing - plenty of light on one side at least. 2) Roots. Have a sewer about 3-4 foot down under the hedge. The hawthorne got into it and Southern Water had to come and fix it. I promised to remove that particular hawthorn plant at the least. How deep to holly roots go? 3) Side question - I'll pay a tree surgeon to chainsaw and mince the old hedge. It's going to be hard to remove some 25-30 stumps (about 3-4" wide at most). If I add stump killer, am I likely to be able to get away with planting the holly in between? Many many thanks Tim I was in a similar situation to you this time last year, but the hedge was Lawson's cypress. There were a couple of dozen trees, which had been topped off years ago around 6 metres high, and not bothered with until we moved in 5 years ago. We had tree surgeons in to tidy them up a couple of times, but they were really unsalvageable. Some were doubled-trunked, others single; they varied from about 15 cm to nearly 30 cm in diameter. Last November we had them taken down and the stumps/roots ground down, in readiness for planting a holly hedge. It's a amazing how much air was incorporated in the soil when this had been done. I reckon the soil surface was 10 - 15 cm higher than it had been. I assumed this would leave the soil in great condition when the ground wood material rotted. But after a few days of heavy rain, the soil effectively collapsed, and after it had dried again, I couldn't get a spade into it - it had basically turned into a sort of reinforced concrete composed of dried soil with lengths of shredded wood! If you do go for grinding rather than use root killer as recommended by Chris, you might find it advantageous to dig the planting holes immediately after grinding to avoid the problem I had. After three months it was a bit easier to work, but I still needed a ground spike to loosen the soil before digging the planting holes. I bought 10 Ilex aquifolium "Argentea Marginata" and 10 "Alaska" (both females) from Welsh Holly (http://www.welsh-holly.co.uk/hollies.htm). They were 100 - 120 cm tall, as I wanted quick growth. They were planted alternately a metre apart just in front of a larch-lap fence. That's a lot further apart than recommended, but I didn't need the hedge to start below 6 ft as the fence was there. They've been in about 9 months now, and put on a few cm of growth. Every one of the "Alaska" has berries. There are none yet on the variegated "Argentea", but it's early days. The soil here is clayey, but had been "improved" by the cypress needles a bit over the years. The hollies seem ok in it. According to the Welsh Holly website, they don't like their feet wet. If that's the case, Wales would be the last place I'd try to grow them! But they seem to be good plants - I've had more problem with drought than them being too wet, having had to soak them several times this year. -- Jeff |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On 03/12/17 08:48, Chris Hogg wrote:
On Sat, 2 Dec 2017 12:23:53 +0000, Tim Watts wrote: Hi, Got an old hawthorn hedge and I hate it - it's manky, bare in winter and horrid to trim. So it's going. I'll keep one in tree form as it needs no maintenance work. I was mooting the idea of a silver beech hedge, but as I have 4 or so self seeded holly bushes (plus a tree) I thought it would be nice to keep the theme. Holly is not as objectionable as hawthorne, it's evergreen, the berries are cute and it's easy to trim. We're on heavy clay, but the hedge is on higher ground. Current holly is "standard English dark green with red berries and pointy leaves" - no idea which sub species. So I was wondering if I could add some other types of holly for variety - different colours, styles? The real questions a 1) If standard English green is happy, then will all varieties likely be happy with the clay? This is south and west facing - plenty of light on one side at least. Many hollies available are varieties of the common holly, Ilex aquifolium, so should do as well. They will grow on clay, but not if it's waterlogged. https://www.rhs.org.uk/plants/details?plantid=6332 Some interesting varieties he http://www.gardenersworld.com/plants...llies-to-grow/ If you want lots of berries, get female varieties but have at least one male among them for pollination, otherwise no berries! Be aware that the names are misleading; Silver Queen is male, Golden King is female! 2) Roots. Have a sewer about 3-4 foot down under the hedge. The hawthorne got into it and Southern Water had to come and fix it. I promised to remove that particular hawthorn plant at the least. How deep to holly roots go? No idea. A big tree will probably put down quite deep roots eventually, but that would take many decades (they live for centuries, potentially). I wouldn't worry too much about it. 3) Side question - I'll pay a tree surgeon to chainsaw and mince the old hedge. It's going to be hard to remove some 25-30 stumps (about 3-4" wide at most). If I add stump killer, am I likely to be able to get away with planting the holly in between? Drill two or three half-inch holes, say three inches down into the stumps; fill the holes with 'compost accelerator' (aka 'Root Out', ammonium sulphamate, https://tinyurl.com/y7btjaqy ), cover with a slate, flower pot or poly bag, to keep the rain out, and that will kill the stumps without poisoning the soil. Ammonium sulphamate slowly breaks down in the soil over a few weeks anyway, so any that gets into the soil, either spilled or diffused out from the dead hawthorn roots, won't hang around for long. Many many thanks Tim Brilliant - thanks Chris! |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On 03/12/17 08:51, Chris Hogg wrote:
PS: I forgot to mention that the old hedge will probably have depleted the soil over the years, so dig in lots of compost when you plant the new hedge, to re-invigorate the soil. I want to put a mini fence there too - just a couple of foot high, to stop dogs coming in and balls rolling out and down the hill. I'll get a trailer of manure and stick it in once the hawthorn is down, then fit the fence, then plant the holly. That will probably be a 2 month gap for the manure to break down and be a bit less hot on the new plants. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On 03/12/17 13:23, Jeff Layman wrote:
On 02/12/17 12:23, Tim Watts wrote: Hi, Got an old hawthorn hedge and I hate it - it's manky, bare in winter and horrid to trim. So it's going. I'll keep one in tree form as it needs no maintenance work. I was mooting the idea of a silver beech hedge, but as I have 4 or so self seeded holly bushes (plus a tree) I thought it would be nice to keep the theme. Holly is not as objectionable as hawthorne, it's evergreen, the berries are cute and it's easy to trim. We're on heavy clay, but the hedge is on higher ground. Current holly is "standard English dark green with red berries and pointy leaves" - no idea which sub species. So I was wondering if I could add some other types of holly for variety - different colours, styles? The real questions a 1) If standard English green is happy, then will all varieties likely be happy with the clay? This is south and west facing - plenty of light on one side at least. 2) Roots. Have a sewer about 3-4 foot down under the hedge. The hawthorne got into it and Southern Water had to come and fix it. I promised to remove that particular hawthorn plant at the least. How deep to holly roots go? 3) Side question - I'll pay a tree surgeon to chainsaw and mince the old hedge. It's going to be hard to remove some 25-30 stumps (about 3-4" wide at most). If I add stump killer, am I likely to be able to get away with planting the holly in between? Many many thanks Tim I was in a similar situation to you this time last year, but the hedge was Lawson's cypress. There were a couple of dozen trees, which had been topped off years ago around 6 metres high, and not bothered with until we moved in 5 years ago. We had tree surgeons in to tidy them up a couple of times, but they were really unsalvageable. Some were doubled-trunked, others single; they varied from about 15 cm to nearly 30 cm in diameter. Last November we had them taken down and the stumps/roots ground down, in readiness for planting a holly hedge. It's a amazing how much air was incorporated in the soil when this had been done. I reckon the soil surface was 10 - 15 cm higher than it had been. I assumed this would leave the soil in great condition when the ground wood material rotted. But after a few days of heavy rain, the soil effectively collapsed,Â* and after it had dried again, I couldn't get a spade into it - it had basically turned into a sort of reinforced concrete composed of dried soil with lengths of shredded wood! If you do go for grinding rather than use root killer as recommended by Chris, you might find it advantageous to dig the planting holes immediately after grinding to avoid the problem I had. Thank you for that tip My soil is likely to go the same way... After three months it was a bit easier to work, but I still needed a ground spike to loosen the soil before digging the planting holes. I bought 10 Ilex aquifolium "Argentea Marginata" and 10 "Alaska" (both females) from Welsh Holly (http://www.welsh-holly.co.uk/hollies.htm). They were 100 - 120 cm tall, as I wanted quick growth. They were planted alternately a metre apart just in front of a larch-lap fence. That's a lot further apart than recommended, but I didn't need the hedge to start below 6 ft as the fence was there. They've been in about 9 months now, and put on a few cm of growth. Every one of the "Alaska" has berries. There are none yet on the variegated "Argentea", but it's early days. The soil here is clayey, but had been "improved" by the cypress needles a bit over the years. The hollies seem ok in it. According to the Welsh Holly website, they don't like their feet wet. If that's the case, Wales would be the last place I'd try to grow them! But they seem to be good plants - I've had more problem with drought than them being too wet, having had to soak them several times this year. All my hedges are 1-2 ft above the pavement on mounds so despite the clay, they seem to not waterlog there (lower parts of the garden do). |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On Sunday, December 3, 2017 at 5:24:32 PM UTC, Tim Watts wrote:
On 03/12/17 13:23, Jeff Layman wrote: On 02/12/17 12:23, Tim Watts wrote: Hi, Got an old hawthorn hedge and I hate it - it's manky, bare in winter and horrid to trim. So it's going. I'll keep one in tree form as it needs no maintenance work. I was mooting the idea of a silver beech hedge, but as I have 4 or so self seeded holly bushes (plus a tree) I thought it would be nice to keep the theme. Holly is not as objectionable as hawthorne, it's evergreen, the berries are cute and it's easy to trim. We're on heavy clay, but the hedge is on higher ground. Current holly is "standard English dark green with red berries and pointy leaves" - no idea which sub species. So I was wondering if I could add some other types of holly for variety - different colours, styles? The real questions a 1) If standard English green is happy, then will all varieties likely be happy with the clay? This is south and west facing - plenty of light on one side at least. 2) Roots. Have a sewer about 3-4 foot down under the hedge. The hawthorne got into it and Southern Water had to come and fix it. I promised to remove that particular hawthorn plant at the least. How deep to holly roots go? 3) Side question - I'll pay a tree surgeon to chainsaw and mince the old hedge. It's going to be hard to remove some 25-30 stumps (about 3-4" wide at most). If I add stump killer, am I likely to be able to get away with planting the holly in between? Many many thanks Tim I was in a similar situation to you this time last year, but the hedge was Lawson's cypress. There were a couple of dozen trees, which had been topped off years ago around 6 metres high, and not bothered with until we moved in 5 years ago. We had tree surgeons in to tidy them up a couple of times, but they were really unsalvageable. Some were doubled-trunked, others single; they varied from about 15 cm to nearly 30 cm in diameter. Last November we had them taken down and the stumps/roots ground down, in readiness for planting a holly hedge. It's a amazing how much air was incorporated in the soil when this had been done. I reckon the soil surface was 10 - 15 cm higher than it had been. I assumed this would leave the soil in great condition when the ground wood material rotted. But after a few days of heavy rain, the soil effectively collapsed,Â* and after it had dried again, I couldn't get a spade into it - it had basically turned into a sort of reinforced concrete composed of dried soil with lengths of shredded wood! If you do go for grinding rather than use root killer as recommended by Chris, you might find it advantageous to dig the planting holes immediately after grinding to avoid the problem I had. Thank you for that tip My soil is likely to go the same way... After three months it was a bit easier to work, but I still needed a ground spike to loosen the soil before digging the planting holes. I bought 10 Ilex aquifolium "Argentea Marginata" and 10 "Alaska" (both females) from Welsh Holly (http://www.welsh-holly.co.uk/hollies.htm). They were 100 - 120 cm tall, as I wanted quick growth. They were planted alternately a metre apart just in front of a larch-lap fence. That's a lot further apart than recommended, but I didn't need the hedge to start below 6 ft as the fence was there. They've been in about 9 months now, and put on a few cm of growth. Every one of the "Alaska" has berries. There are none yet on the variegated "Argentea", but it's early days. The soil here is clayey, but had been "improved" by the cypress needles a bit over the years. The hollies seem ok in it. According to the Welsh Holly website, they don't like their feet wet. If that's the case, Wales would be the last place I'd try to grow them! But they seem to be good plants - I've had more problem with drought than them being too wet, having had to soak them several times this year. All my hedges are 1-2 ft above the pavement on mounds so despite the clay, they seem to not waterlog there (lower parts of the garden do). There's a reason pyracantha is so popular. Looks good all year round. Yes, prickly, but pruning (a little and often) is all it needs. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On 03/12/17 17:46, stuart noble wrote:
There's a reason pyracantha is so popular. Looks good all year round. Yes, prickly, but pruning (a little and often) is all it needs. Prickly? It's not "prickly" - it's bloody lethal! And it grows much, much, faster than any holly. I have a 6 metre high double-trunked yellow-berried pyracantha here. A couple of years ago I decided to prune one of the higher branches back a bit as it was well over my neighbour's fence. I wore a thick padded anorak, hard hat, thick gloves, and eye protection, and I still got damaged! And it is very awkward to put through the shredder as you have to prune off those long thorns first. Yes, it looks wonderful when the berries are on it, and the birds do seem to leave them alone. But seedlings tend to appear where you don't want them, and even small ones have those sharp thorns, making them difficult to pull up without gloves. -- Jeff |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
In article ,
Jeff Layman wrote: On 03/12/17 17:46, stuart noble wrote: There's a reason pyracantha is so popular. Looks good all year round. Yes, prickly, but pruning (a little and often) is all it needs. Prickly? It's not "prickly" - it's bloody lethal! And it grows much, much, faster than any holly. Indeed. Mine grew stems 6-8' high and 1-1.25" across in a season. As I reacted to its thorns, I decided enough was enough and got rid of it. An even more lethal shrub is Berberis vulgaris, but it doesn't clip well. Mine is (probably) the no-longer-extant variant "asperma", which the national collection did/does? not have. Anyone who can propagate deciduous berberis from cuttings (and they are a b*gg*r) is welcome to contact me. Its berries are also useful in cooking, and (because it is "asperma") there are very few seedlings. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On Saturday, 2 December 2017 12:23:57 UTC, Tim Watts wrote:
Hi, Got an old hawthorn hedge and I hate it - it's manky, bare in winter and horrid to trim. So it's going. I'll keep one in tree form as it needs no maintenance work. I was mooting the idea of a silver beech hedge, but as I have 4 or so self seeded holly bushes (plus a tree) I thought it would be nice to keep the theme. Holly is not as objectionable as hawthorne, it's evergreen, the berries are cute and it's easy to trim. We're on heavy clay, but the hedge is on higher ground. Current holly is "standard English dark green with red berries and pointy leaves" - no idea which sub species. So I was wondering if I could add some other types of holly for variety - different colours, styles? The real questions a 1) If standard English green is happy, then will all varieties likely be happy with the clay? This is south and west facing - plenty of light on one side at least. 2) Roots. Have a sewer about 3-4 foot down under the hedge. The hawthorne got into it and Southern Water had to come and fix it. I promised to remove that particular hawthorn plant at the least. How deep to holly roots go? 3) Side question - I'll pay a tree surgeon to chainsaw and mince the old hedge. It's going to be hard to remove some 25-30 stumps (about 3-4" wide at most). If I add stump killer, am I likely to be able to get away with planting the holly in between? Many many thanks Tim Felling them like a fairly easy diy job, even without a chainsaw. NT |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On 03/12/17 17:46, stuart noble wrote:
There's a reason pyracantha is so popular. Looks good all year round. Yes, prickly, but pruning (a little and often) is all it needs. No thanks That's stuff makes hawthorn look soft and fluffy. I hate spiky plants with a hatred that cannot be expressed by words alone. Holly is the only one I'll tolerate as it's more scratchy than spiky. |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On 04/12/2017 08:03, Tim Watts wrote:
On 03/12/17 17:46, stuart noble wrote: There's a reason pyracantha is so popular. Looks good all year round. Yes, prickly, but pruning (a little and often) is all it needs. No thanks That's stuff makes hawthorn look soft and fluffy. I hate spiky plants with a hatred that cannot be expressed by words alone. Holly is the only one I'll tolerate as it's more scratchy than spiky. I like pyracantha. Nice choice of coloured berries and it is more stock proof than even hawthorn. The cows round here will eat holly for breakfast. Holly seems to grow OK as a hedge on our heavy clay which is a bit on the damp side in winter and too dry in summer (you may have to water for a couple of summer seasons until it is established). The only problem is that it is slow growing so if you tend to get stray cars through it then replacements take a very long time to knot together as a hedge again. I rather like the variagated cultivars with no spikes and red berries and the more unusual ones with spikes and yellow berries. Can't recall their names - a neighbour has them in their old holly hedge. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On 05/12/17 08:39, Martin Brown wrote:
On 04/12/2017 08:03, Tim Watts wrote: On 03/12/17 17:46, stuart noble wrote: There's a reason pyracantha is so popular. Looks good all year round. Yes, prickly, but pruning (a little and often) is all it needs. No thanks That's stuff makes hawthorn look soft and fluffy. I hate spiky plants with a hatred that cannot be expressed by words alone. Holly is the only one I'll tolerate as it's more scratchy than spiky. I like pyracantha. Nice choice of coloured berries and it is more stock proof than even hawthorn. The cows round here will eat holly for breakfast. Holly seems to grow OK as a hedge on our heavy clay which is a bit on the damp side in winter and too dry in summer (you may have to water for a couple of summer seasons until it is established). The only problem is that it is slow growing so if you tend to get stray cars through it then replacements take a very long time to knot together as a hedge again. I rather like the variagated cultivars with no spikes and red berries and the more unusual ones with spikes and yellow berries. Can't recall their names - a neighbour has them in their old holly hedge. Interesting - thanks Martin. I'll look out for those in the online hedging suppliers. |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
Planting a holly hedge
On 05/12/2017 08:48, Chris Hogg wrote:
On Tue, 5 Dec 2017 08:39:50 +0000, Martin Brown wrote: if you tend to get stray cars through it Likely to be a regular occurrence when they become driverless :-) I suspect likely to become a _less_ regular occurrence. Driverless cars never fall asleep, and they always know where they are going. It's lack of concentration and unexpected ends that put most cars in hedges. Andy |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
OT: Driverless cars (was Planting a holly hedge)
On 06/12/2017 08:51, Martin wrote:
On Tue, 5 Dec 2017 20:56:53 +0000, Vir Campestris wrote: On 05/12/2017 08:48, Chris Hogg wrote: On Tue, 5 Dec 2017 08:39:50 +0000, Martin Brown wrote: if you tend to get stray cars through it Likely to be a regular occurrence when they become driverless :-) I suspect likely to become a _less_ regular occurrence. Driverless cars never fall asleep, and they always know where they are going. It's lack of concentration and unexpected ends that put most cars in hedges. ATM driverless cars lack the ability to anticipate all the idiot things drivers do. ATM, yes. By the time they get to production they'll have to be able to survive class action lawsuits against the manufacturer. Imagine if someone proved Ford liable for several deaths owing to a SW defect? It would break the company. Driverless cars will be much safer. But not, as you say, ATM. Andy |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Large Holly Hedge pushing over low wall | Gardening | |||
Yaupon Holly (and other holly questions) | North Carolina | |||
Holly hedge - how do you get the hawthorn trees out? | United Kingdom | |||
[IBC] Ilex vomitoria "Schilling's dwarf" Yaupon holly; miniature hedge q's | Bonsai | |||
Ilex vomitoria "Schilling's dwarf" Yaupon holly; miniature hedge q's | Bonsai |