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Good tree for smallish garden - scots pine/mountain ash/aspen
Hello
We need to replace our badly blown robinia tree (the only tree in our garden), and I'm looking at different options. The replacement tree will be about 12 feet from the house and needs to be hardy and survive some strong winds with added wind tunnel effect! I was wondering about the possibility of an evergreen to provide obscuring of neighbouring houses, but it needs to have a trunk which allows me access around it, ie not too thick and spreading around the bottom, as it's in a small sectioned-off part of the garden. The three possibilities I've thought of so far a scots pine - has a trunk, is evergreen, but gets very big, is it too big for a smallish garden and are the roots bad news? mountain ash - considering edulis, which apparently produces edible berries - is it a nice 'feature' tree? aspen - don't know very much about this tree except it's native and grows very fast, would it be a bad choice for a small garden? Comments good/bad on the above are welcome, as are any other suggestions for a windy back garden! Thanks - Lynda |
#2
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Good tree for smallish garden - scots pine/mountain ash/aspen
"Lynda Thornton" wrote in message ... Hello We need to replace our badly blown robinia tree (the only tree in our garden), and I'm looking at different options. The replacement tree will be about 12 feet from the house and needs to be hardy and survive some strong winds with added wind tunnel effect! I was wondering about the possibility of an evergreen to provide obscuring of neighbouring houses, but it needs to have a trunk which allows me access around it, ie not too thick and spreading around the bottom, as it's in a small sectioned-off part of the garden. The three possibilities I've thought of so far a scots pine - has a trunk, is evergreen, but gets very big, is it too big for a smallish garden and are the roots bad news? This tree is much too large for a small garden, IMO. mountain ash - considering edulis, which apparently produces edible berries - is it a nice 'feature' tree? I would be wary about planting a rowan much closer than 7 metres from a house. aspen - don't know very much about this tree except it's native and grows very fast, would it be a bad choice for a small garden? I have known Aspen to grow very large and to shed limbs readily in strong winds. Comments good/bad on the above are welcome, as are any other suggestions for a windy back garden! 12 feet is a bit close for comfort for most trees. Perhaps you might get away with a birch? |
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