David_Dublin
Registered User
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- 864
What Redonion has said is true.Hi. Looking for suggestions for a hedge to plant alongside a 4ft garden wall to give some privacy from passers by to front garden. Ideally would grow fairly quickly due to my impatience. It would only be about 10ft long so not too worried about maintenance, a few trims a year is fine.
Looking at Portuguese laurel, seems to tick all the boxes. Any other ideas? I'd love to be able to grow something colourful or fragrant through a hedge, but don't know is that possible.....thoughts?
i hadn't thought of buying already grown
Thanks, I hadn't known that. Seems OK in relation to sitting near-ish to it....I don't have 10 acres.I would go with laurel.
Its evergreen, does not grow too crazy. One point to note ... The fumes from it are poisonous.
I've a 10 acre garden, so I know a bit about plants.
This is all scaremongering and mostly untrue.RE: Laurel (all types apart from the bay leaf)
It is a noxious invasive non-native plant that produces cyanide from all of its parts. Stems, leaves, seeds contain cyanide, particularly toxic in the process of wilting: symptoms of laurel/cyanide poisoning: brick red mucous membranes, dilated pupils, difficulty breathing, panting, shock,
It is poisonous to pets, livestock and humans, small children particularly. It even poisons the ground it is planted in, rendering it barren in extreme cases.
I love griselinia, very easy cut as well and lovely colour but lost all my hedge back in snow/frost so that put me off it a bit, I still planted more but not in a crucial screening area!Surprised griselinia hasn't been mentioned - it makes a thick evergreen hedge, good for nesting birds.
The problem is if we ever get another bad fall of snow it will die.Surprised griselinia hasn't been mentioned - it makes a thick evergreen hedge, good for nesting birds.
Would have to agree on beech. If you mix green and purple it will be a beautifully hedge during the growing season. Will keep foliage in winter so it gives good privacy all year round but changes colour with the seasondLaurel is an awful hedge. Grows much much too thick. Is difficult to trim back. I would never recommend it to anyone in any garden circumstance. You will regret it. Go to a hedge nursery and look at hedges. Go for a small leaf variety that you can easily manage and be prepared to trim to keep it looking neat. Laurel is too vigourous, ugly, never looks neat, grows three foot thick and ten feet high. Remember hedges block out light. Beech or privet would be easier to manage and much nicer to look at.
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