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Advice needed with my Leylandii hedging

Discussion in 'Trees' started by Will Hay, Aug 1, 2022.

  1. Will Hay

    Will Hay Gardener

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    Hi there fellow gardeners


    So one of the issues in my back garden is with my mature Leylandii heading that I have had in place about 22 years now as you can see from the photographs sections are starting to die or have died in recent years!!

    I was hoping that fresh growth would appear or that healthy sections would grow and cover the dead parts and in the past two years I have trimmed very little in a hope that the healthy sections of the tress/ hedge would help but I am afraid not!!

    The top two are not Leylandii I may add - I should have bought this for the entire hedge but thats another story!

    Question - Is my hedge lost? will it ever recover??

    If the answer is bad news and it wont recover does anyone have recommendations for a replacement ?

    I was thinking of low maintenance PVC fencing but I guess would be very expensive and I may add all the cost I would have to bear as my neighbour isn't the nicest person lets say

    I was also thinking of birch hedging and would like thoughts on this

    Please bear in mind I would like something that is low maintenance and grows to about 7 feet for privacy

    Thanks again

    IMG-3925.jpg

    IMG-3926.jpg

    IMG-3927.jpg
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Aug 1, 2022
  2. NigelJ

    NigelJ Total Gardener

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    @Will Hay
    Sadly yes and it, almost certainly, won't recover.
    You could consider yew as a replacement, beech? 7ft might be too tall for it, but I'm no expert.
     
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    • Will Hay

      Will Hay Gardener

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      I didnt realise it had about a 25 year life span!!!!
       
    • shiney

      shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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      Unfortunately it is no more :sad:

      Putting up a fence is a quick fix (I think I saw some 6ft x 6ft panels for about £40 in Wickes). Otherwise there are many options. It looks as though you may have Laurel alongside it and that is a fairly fast growing option.

      Good luck :blue thumb:
       
    • pete

      pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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      I dont think you can beat yew for a hedge.
      They always say its slow, but I've found yew to grow fairly fast, not as fast as some but who wants a hedge that grows like the clappers.
       
    • Will Hay

      Will Hay Gardener

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      I want a hedge with privacy and also easy to maintain - yew is the recommended option? Birch not so?
       
    • Will Hay

      Will Hay Gardener

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      Question I forgot to ask...

      Can anyone explain why they died off?
       
    • NigelJ

      NigelJ Total Gardener

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      There is a conifer aphid that can cause that sort of damage.
       
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      • pete

        pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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        I don't think that birch is good for hedging plant, @NigelJ suggested beech which I think could work.
        Just my personal opinion that I like yew which is evergreen and and gives a dense hedge.
        It could be a disease that is killing your existing hedge, getting it out and replanting is going to be a big job.
         
      • Will Hay

        Will Hay Gardener

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        Yes a big expensive job and therein is my problem - finance - as I have another huge job staring at me the wall at the back of the garden

        If you see the photos it replaced a ditch the was collapsing and built about 2007 but was built wrong as it is a facing wall and not a retaining wall as it should have been. The wall is now tilting and bulging and needs to be addressed most people I have contacted are interested and the two that have come down have different approaches

        One company is mentioning wall anchors about 7 - 10 of them but they extend into the neighbours land above and they MAY object

        Another company is suggesting stabilising the wall by building at type of rockery structure

        Either way will be €15,000 at least image_50431745.JPG image_67511297.JPG IMG_0001.jpg
         
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        • pete

          pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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          It looks like the wall is probably the most pressing of the two jobs.

          Not sure how feasible, but I've seen those cages filled with rocks used as retaining walls.
          I always fancied something like that, add some soil and you could have a living wall.
           
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          • Loofah

            Loofah Admin Staff Member

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            Another vote for yew. It's tough to beat!
             
          • Loofah

            Loofah Admin Staff Member

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            That wall problem looks a right pain to sort. I guess the wall anchors would go through the wall and into your neighbours land by a meter or more and leave you with a smallish visible plate in several places? Definitely the simplest solution if the wall is tough enough to stand it.
             
          • NigelJ

            NigelJ Total Gardener

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            Gabions and they work very well, instant rock garden.
            Wall would be my priority as well. Anchors would be the quickest and least disruptive, may be cheaper as well, but if you need neighbours permission then it depends on your relationship with them.
            In the meantime, while sorting the wall out, you could plant climbers in pots along the hedge, sweet peas, nasturtiums, Eccremocarpus scaber etc not a complete answer, but will give colour and interest in summer at least.
             
          • gks

            gks Total Gardener

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            I wanted to have some of these gabion planters in our parish, but I was out voted and we went down the route of half whiskey barrels.

            These come in all shapes and sizes and look lovely when planted.

            gab1.jpg gab2.jpg gab3.jpg Gabion-Bench-Seat-21.jpg gab5.jpg
             
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