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15/09/2025
Privet is such a valuable hedge plant, especially for urban areas, that it has become synonymous with ordinariness.
In the Harry Potter books, Privet Drive is the address of Harry's aunt and uncle, who represent normal, hard-working folk that like good food, and sensibly keep their dangerous nephew safely under the stairs.
But Privet has some magical qualities of its own, easily available to all us voluptuous muggles.
Autumn to Late Winter is the season for taking hardwood cuttings, so although February is the last really good month for it, privet is in a group of plants that propagate so easily this way that you can stick them directly into the ground and forget about them almost anytime!
This is a great way to beef up gaps in your hedge, and inside a hedge is usually an ideal place for an establishing cutting because it will have shelter from the sun, which could otherwise dry it out in its first summer.
Other easy things to try include cherry laurel, willow, poplar, forsythia, flowering and fruiting currants, elderflower (most gardeners are more likely to want to propagate its cultivars Black Lace or Aurea), roses, and of course dogwood. Fuchsias may not have quite the same high success rate but are still reliable.
Right now is an ideal time to try, when the soil is nice and damp and not-frozen.
You might need to make a slit with your spade first, but in most garden soils you should be able to push the cutting right in.
It helps the cuttings to root if you say your catchphrase, such as "bam, in the ground!" as you do so. Professional plantsman John Lord demonstrates his method:
If you want your cuttings in a sunny place that gets hot and dry in summer, the best thing is to grow them in pots in a cool, shaded place for a growing season, then transplant them out the following Autumn.
Cuttings root best in cool, shady conditions, regardless of what the mature plant prefers.
You could use a shade barrier to protect them, but this is usually more work and potentially looks messy in the garden; natural things like logs, stones, straw are good for creating blocks of shade at ground level.
This RHS Guide had more details on hardwood cuttings: note that while rooting hormone is always helpful, it's not necessary for the plants listed above.