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#1
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I think my hedge is dying/dead??
Hi,
I just moved into a house with a garden (rented property) recently after living in a city centre for 10 years. I must admit I haven't got a single clue what I'm doing. I cut my hedge and now parts of it seem to be dying. It needs cutting again but I daren't incase more of it starts dying. Can someone look at the picture I've attached and perhaps recommend something I can buy or do to help restore it? Many thanks Gavin |
#2
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"gavinf" wrote in message ... Hi, I just moved into a house with a garden (rented property) recently after living in a city centre for 10 years. I must admit I haven't got a single clue what I'm doing. I cut my hedge and now parts of it seem to be dying. It needs cutting again but I daren't incase more of it starts dying. Can someone look at the picture I've attached and perhaps recommend something I can buy or do to help restore it? It's a Leylandii, isn't it? Cut it back too far and it's dead, nothing you can do about it, they will not regrow from old wood. Andy. |
#3
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I've no idea what it is but thanks for the input. Told you I was clueless! Guess I'd better call the landlord and tell him what I've done. I was just getting to like it here too :-(
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#4
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In article , gavinf gavinf.1r2kvy@gar
denbanter.co.uk writes I've no idea what it is but thanks for the input. Told you I was clueless! Guess I'd better call the landlord and tell him what I've done. I was just getting to like it here too :-( It's not dead yet! There are still lots of green bits. It may not be your fault, so don't be too hasty to assume the blame. "I'm worried about the hedge - it seems to have a lot of brown bits on it and I'd like your advice" might be a good way of opening the conversation. -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
#5
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Thanks Kay! I've left a message to call me and that's exactly how I'll approach I think :-)
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#6
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gavinf wrote in message ... Hi, I just moved into a house with a garden (rented property) recently after living in a city centre for 10 years. I must admit I haven't got a single clue what I'm doing. I cut my hedge and now parts of it seem to be dying. It needs cutting again but I daren't incase more of it starts dying. Can someone look at the picture I've attached and perhaps recommend something I can buy or do to help restore it? Many thanks Gavin +-------------------------------------------------------------------+ |Filename: IMGP0025.jpg | |Download: http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=2815| +-------------------------------------------------------------------+ -- gavinf Hi Gavin, I thought it was a Thuja, but it still won't grow back if you cut into old wood. There is a fungal disease of coniferous trees called Phytophthera (sp?) which would create brown patches where growth has died back. Usually, when I've heard about Phytophthera, it's because a tree is dead, or almost, so it is easy to get the impression that it is fatal. (It may be!?). Have a google on Phythophthera and see if this gives you a) an image for comparison, b) a remedial course of action. A disease like this would certainly relieve you of blame/guilt. On the other hand, if the dead growth is where you know you've cut back into old wood, it may help to reduce the height of the hedge. By cutting back the top-growth, new growth lower down should be stimulated. You'll never get the dead wood to 'green up' again, but you may get enough new growth to disguise the damage. You should still talk to your landlord, of course. Hope it goes well. Spider |
#7
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Spider wrote:
gavinf wrote in message ... Hi, I just moved into a house with a garden (rented property) recently after living in a city centre for 10 years. I must admit I haven't got a single clue what I'm doing. I cut my hedge and now parts of it seem to be dying. It needs cutting again but I daren't incase more of it starts dying. Can someone look at the picture I've attached and perhaps recommend something I can buy or do to help restore it? [...] I thought it was a Thuja, but it still won't grow back if you cut into old wood. There is a fungal disease of coniferous trees called Phytophthera (sp?) which would create brown patches where growth has died back. Usually, when I've heard about Phytophthera, it's because a tree is dead, or almost, so it is easy to get the impression that it is fatal. (It may be!?). Have a google on Phythophthera and see if this gives you a) an image for comparison, b) a remedial course of action. A disease like this would certainly relieve you of blame/guilt. On the other hand, if the dead growth is where you know you've cut back into old wood, it may help to reduce the height of the hedge. By cutting back the top-growth, new growth lower down should be stimulated. You'll never get the dead wood to 'green up' again, but you may get enough new growth to disguise the damage. You should still talk to your landlord, of course. Hope it goes well. Spider If the picture is typical, I don't think Gavin needs to worry: those rather small brown bits will soon be covered up as the green bits grow. I've never grown thuja plicata myself, but I agree this looks like it from the colour (are its sprays that shape, though?) Spider's advice is sound stuff. So, Gavin, don't have a worried weekend, and -- if, as I say, the picture is typical of the whole -- I don't think you need to talk to the landlord unless the thing looks awful come September, but I fancy it won't. If you do still want to prune (you don't say why), restrict yourself to trimming branches individually, and always leave plenty of green on each one: as Spider says, if you cut to bare wood on a typical conifer it won't grow back. -- Mike. |
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