Bare root Hedging – Planting Time is Near

The quickest, cheapest and in the long run generally the most successful way to get a hedge the neighbours will be jealous of is by using bare root hedging plants.

The time to plant them is from the middle of November onwards (until the end of February really, although with TLC in April they can be planted in March as well).

The time to plan for that planting is NOW.

Here is what you need to consider.

How long with the hedge be and will you plant in one or two rows (you need two rows if the hedge is to be stockproof, if it is to replace a fence or if you want extra density as in the case of a windbreak). That determines how many plants you will need – generally 3 per metre for a single row and 5 per metre for a double one.

Deal with the weeds.  Perennial weeds are the number one enemy of newly planted hedging.  Either kill them by using a glyphos based weedkiller, or kill them by covering them with a light (but not water) proof membrane. Our woven polypropylene is good for the job, but you can use almost anything the weeds can’t grow through. Whatever you do, kill them.

Unfortunately, by now the membrane will only work for hedges where you do not intend to dig over the ground later as you have to leave it down. However there is nothing to stop you doing your digging first and then covering with fabric and planting through that.

Arrange your planters – have a planting party, or invite some unsuspecting friends over….  if you want a professional to do the job, just ask us as we sell to hundreds of planters around the country and can almost certainly recommend someone near you.

And order  your plants – it is always best to do that as soon as you can so you be sure they are delivered when you want them; this is the busy time of year for bare root hedging and delivery weeks fill up incredibly rapidly.

And then sit back, relax and wait for them to turn up…

We have a great range if you want to have a look at our bare root hedging plants

How to Plant a Box Hedge – What Katy did next…

There are enough articles on this site about how to plant a box hedge, the title is a bit of a fraud really – but it is there because it always amazes us how much effort people put into planting trees and shrubs and how little attention the poor things receive afterwards.

All plants benefit from a bit of TLC, but few reward their owner/grower/carer as much as box hedging plants.

Box hedges are truly a thing of beauty when they are well grown. They do not have the solemnity of yew, they are definitely smarter than privet, they are more evergreen than beech or hornbeam. They don’t prickle, they forgive dreadful mistakes with clippers and shears and even when they are unclipped, box hedging plants still look neat and tidy.

However the modern curse of a box hedge is blight (and there is enough said about that elsewhere on this site as well). So this post is all about what you do if you want to plant a box hedge but you are scared of all the “death and destruction” box blight stories that are going around.

If you are a follower of this blog you will have read any number of times that we preach good hygiene as the number one weapon the gardener uses against disease.  So, remembering that while box hedging may be evergreen it still drops leaves, rake them up every month or so and put them on the bonfire with your rose and fruit sweepings and prunings. Dead leaves harbour more box diseases and fungal infections than anything else.

Next, play to the strengths of evergreen plants in general and box in particular. Clip your hedge in winter. That is correct – in winter. A sneaky tactic which takes a number of fungi (that attack plants through open wounds) by surprise,  is to create the wounds when the fungi are sleeping, so giving the plant time to heal.  Eat your Xmas dinner and then work it off by clipping your box hedge on Christmas Day (any time before the end of February will do fine). And do not clip your box hedge in summer unless you absolutely, positively have to. And then only ever do so on a dry day.

Box blight loves a nice, warm, moist environment in which to multiply. So do not give it one.  Mulch your plants well so the soil holds moisture and you do not have to water. Really importantly, do not clip the top of your box hedge so it is flat.  Box plants have rather “cupped” leaves that seem designed to hold moisture. By clipping the top of the hedge as a dome, or in an A shape, you reduce the ability of the leaves to catch water and create a dangerous microclimate.

Spray your box twice a summer (on a nice dry day). Once with a copper fungicide such as Bordeaux mixture and once with a systemic one such as Scott’s Roseclear.  First spray in late April, second in late June.

And that is it – follow these few simple tips and your box hedge will grow to a happy and astonishingly beautiful old age.

Relax and watch your plants – or box hedging – grow.