Buxus & Sarcococca Hedge Plants & Shrubs
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Buy Potted Sweet Box Hedging Now ...


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Bareroot
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We take great care in delivering healthy trees to your doorstep. Each order is hand-picked, carefully packaged, and shipped using trusted couriers to ensure safe arrival.
All trees are shipped in eco-friendly recyclable packaging. Roots are securely wrapped to retain moisture during transit, keeping your tree healthy and ready for planting.
We currently deliver across the UK mainland. Unfortunately, we cannot deliver to Northern Ireland, the Isle of Man, or the Channel Islands due to plant health regulations.
Once your order has been dispatched, you will receive a tracking link by email so you can follow your tree’s journey from our nursery to your garden.
If you require delivery on a specific date (e.g., birthday gift, landscaping project), please add a note at checkout and we’ll do our best to accommodate.
Buxus & Sarcococca Hedge Plants & Shrubs
Delivered Direct from Our Nursery
Buy Potted Sweet Box Hedging Now ...
Buxus & Sarcococca Hedge Plants & Shrubs
Delivered Direct from Our Nursery
Buy Potted Sweet Box Hedging Now For September Delivery
Pre-Order Bareroot Boxwood Plants For 2025/26 Winter Planting Season
Best used for low, formal hedges and edging within a garden, such as along paths, around a rose border, or to divide areas in a parterre, the original Box is Buxus sempervirens.
Slow growing and shade-tolerant, with small evergreen leaves that clip beautifully, perfect for ornamental hedges and edging within the garden, and topiary.
Buxus sempervirens: Common Box is native and (along with Yew) has been a quintessential formal hedge plant for centuries, intended to be clipped with sharp edges or neat contours to provide structure.
Sarcococca confusa: Sweet Box, looks a lot less box-like than the others, with larger, darker leaves and a less dense habit, which doesn't lend itself so well to a really formal look, although it's also slow growing.
The Euonymus cultivar Jean Hugues is a good, disease free alternative to Box.
Common Box should be planted at 4 or 5 plants per metre (every 20 to 25cm) in a single row.
Our Box Hedging comes in only two sizes, and there is not much between them.
Smaller plants are cheaper, easier to plant, and tend to establish better because they are dug up with most of their roots intact.You can also clip them attentively and ensure a very bushy plant from the base up.
Your mail order Box hedge plants are delivered by next working day courier.If there is anything wrong with your plants when they arrive, Contact Us within 5 working days, and our friendly support team will sort it out.
All bareroot plants are covered by our Refund Guarantee, so you can give them a whirl with complete confidence.
Browse our full range of Hedging Plants, or have a look at our Ornamental Shrubs.
For formal hedges, it has to be Box, which clips perfectly and has a great upright structure.Sweet box does not clip as crisply, and has a somewhat arching habit that suits an informal style.
There are three big differences between Sweet Box, Sarcococca confusa, and Common Box:
All of those features combined give Sweet Box a special purpose, because it does not really need to be seen to be appreciated.
You can grow box hedges almost anywhere in the UK that has decent drainage. They are all hardy, shade-tolerant, and not fussy about soil type.
Common Box:
Sweet Box:
Our how to plant a formal hedge video demonstrates with beech, but the principles are the same with Box.
Spacing a Box Hedge:
Common Box and Sweet Box are planted at 3 plants per metre (every 33cm) in a single row.
Box plants are slow growing, no matter your location! But as with any plant, the growth rate is affected by the amount of sun, shelter, local climate, and soil nutrients.
Ranked from slowest to less slow:
Common Box: 7-8 cm per year in ideal conditions.Given enough time, it can grow to several metres tall, but most box hedges are around 50cm to 1.5metres.
Sweet Box: Because it is usually grown in deep shade, expect less than 10cm per year, but it can do up to 15cm in sunnier spots.It is good for hedges up to about 1 - 1.5m tall.
To avoid risk of Box Blight disease, the best time to trim is during a period of dry weather, so keep an eye on the forecast. Any time between May and August is probably best.You can also trim in dry winter weather, whenever the temperature is above freezing, but then you are likely to need to trim again in summer if you want that classic near, formal look.
There is an old custom of clipping your Box hedge on Derby Day in June, but that is only the best date to achieve a neat, formal look with only one trim per year, because Buxus does most of its growing in the cooler Spring weather.
Always collect or rake up and burn fallen leaves, then apply mulch to cover the soil.
Clip once per year, after flowering - in May or April is fine.