Posted by Culp on January 29, 2011, 1:12 pm
Hello everybody!
I am the owner of an absolute monster of a beech hedge. It runs
North/South between our garden and the road. Its about 15 feet high,
6-8 feet wide and runs for about 200 yards. The hedge is about 40 years
old, the main trunks are 8-12 inches in diameter. Many of the
individual plants are (in my completely inexpert opinion) way too close
together at about 6 inch spacings some of them now grow out the ground
right next to each other.
Every year trimming the hedge gets a little higher, a little more
difficult, a little more dangerous, and this year I have reached
breaking point!
Do i
Take the whole thing out and start again?
I've seen some advice in this excellent forum about renovating the
hedge, is it do-able on such an old, huge hedge?
Thin it out and produce a line of effectively pollarded trees?
Cut it down to ground level and effectively coppice the trees, let them
sprout up from ground level and regrow the hedge?
Any help gratefully received from a frazzled and rather overwhelmed
gardener
--
Culp
Posted by redruthgardener on January 29, 2011, 4:22 pm
Culp;911421 Wrote:
> Hello everybody!
>
> I am the owner of an absolute monster of a beech hedge. It runs
> North/South between our garden and the road. Its about 15 feet high,
> 6-8 feet wide and runs for about 200 yards. The hedge is about 40 years
> old, the main trunks are 8-12 inches in diameter. Many of the
> individual plants are (in my completely inexpert opinion) way too close
> together at about 6 inch spacings some of them now grow out the ground
> right next to each other.
>
> Every year trimming the hedge gets a little higher, a little more
> difficult, a little more dangerous, and this year I have reached
> breaking point!
>
> Do i
>
> Take the whole thing out and start again?
>
>
>
> I've seen some advice in this excellent forum about renovating the
> hedge, is it do-able on such an old, huge hedge?
>
> Thin it out and produce a line of effectively pollarded trees?
>
> Cut it down to ground level and effectively coppice the trees, let them
> sprout up from ground level and regrow the hedge?
>
> Any help gratefully received from a frazzled and rather overwhelmed
> gardener
Hi ,
sounds as though you have a wonderful old and healthy hedge , if
maintenance is an issue get a tree surgeon in and reduce height to a
more managable height and width maybe trim height to 6ft .
Now is a good time before nesting of birds starts .
--
redruthgardener
Posted by David Hare-Scott on January 29, 2011, 5:10 pm
Culp wrote:
> Hello everybody!
> I am the owner of an absolute monster of a beech hedge. It runs
> North/South between our garden and the road. Its about 15 feet high,
> 6-8 feet wide and runs for about 200 yards. The hedge is about 40
> years old, the main trunks are 8-12 inches in diameter. Many of the
> individual plants are (in my completely inexpert opinion) way too
> close together at about 6 inch spacings some of them now grow out the
> ground right next to each other.
I don't know the growing habits of beech. You need to find out as this
crowding may or may not be a problem. Also the way that the species behaves
in your area is important, advice from those with other soils or climates
may not be useful.
> Every year trimming the hedge gets a little higher, a little more
> difficult, a little more dangerous, and this year I have reached
> breaking point!
> Do i
> Take the whole thing out and start again?
You have a resource that has taken a long time to develop. If it was me I
would be looking for the best ways to make use of it and I would consider
taking it out as a last resort.
> I've seen some advice in this excellent forum about renovating the
> hedge, is it do-able on such an old, huge hedge?
> Thin it out and produce a line of effectively pollarded trees?
> Cut it down to ground level and effectively coppice the trees, let
> them sprout up from ground level and regrow the hedge?
> Any help gratefully received from a frazzled and rather overwhelmed
> gardener
So far the only problem you have described is trimming this hedge is too
hard. What would happen if you didn't trim it?
Are beech hedges common in your district? What do other people do to manage
them, could you ask them? Is there a local garden club or something similar
that could give you clues about how the species behaves in your area and the
best way to manage it?
David
Posted by Brooklyn1 on January 29, 2011, 5:41 pm
On Sat, 29 Jan 2011 18:12:12 +0000, Culp
>Hello everybody!
>I am the owner of an absolute monster of a beech hedge. It runs
>North/South between our garden and the road. Its about 15 feet high,
>6-8 feet wide and runs for about 200 yards. The hedge is about 40 years
>old, the main trunks are 8-12 inches in diameter. Many of the
>individual plants are (in my completely inexpert opinion) way too close
>together at about 6 inch spacings some of them now grow out the ground
>right next to each other.
>Every year trimming the hedge gets a little higher, a little more
>difficult, a little more dangerous, and this year I have reached
>breaking point!
>Do i
>Take the whole thing out and start again?
>I've seen some advice in this excellent forum about renovating the
>hedge, is it do-able on such an old, huge hedge?
>Thin it out and produce a line of effectively pollarded trees?
>Cut it down to ground level and effectively coppice the trees, let them
>sprout up from ground level and regrow the hedge?
>Any help gratefully received from a frazzled and rather overwhelmed
>gardener
Beech trees are wonderful as trees but are really lousy as a hedge...
whoever planted them as hedge is definitely seriously retarded. I
would remove them because they grow huge, if you can't relocate them
too bad.
Posted by despen on January 29, 2011, 10:06 pm
Brooklyn1 <Gravesend1> writes:
> On Sat, 29 Jan 2011 18:12:12 +0000, Culp
>>
>>Hello everybody!
>>
>>I am the owner of an absolute monster of a beech hedge. It runs
...
> Beech trees are wonderful as trees but are really lousy as a hedge...
> whoever planted them as hedge is definitely seriously retarded. I
> would remove them because they grow huge, if you can't relocate them
> too bad.
I never knew, there is actually a famous beech hedge:
http://www.bonsai4me.com/AdvTech/ATBeechHedgeMeikleour.htm
1/3 of a mile long and 100 feet high.
>
> I am the owner of an absolute monster of a beech hedge. It runs
> North/South between our garden and the road. Its about 15 feet high,
> 6-8 feet wide and runs for about 200 yards. The hedge is about 40 years
> old, the main trunks are 8-12 inches in diameter. Many of the
> individual plants are (in my completely inexpert opinion) way too close
> together at about 6 inch spacings some of them now grow out the ground
> right next to each other.
>
> Every year trimming the hedge gets a little higher, a little more
> difficult, a little more dangerous, and this year I have reached
> breaking point!
>
> Do i
>
> Take the whole thing out and start again?
>
>
>
> I've seen some advice in this excellent forum about renovating the
> hedge, is it do-able on such an old, huge hedge?
>
> Thin it out and produce a line of effectively pollarded trees?
>
> Cut it down to ground level and effectively coppice the trees, let them
> sprout up from ground level and regrow the hedge?
>
> Any help gratefully received from a frazzled and rather overwhelmed
> gardener
Hi ,