Breaking Wind - The Best Hedges For The Job
For many years now, people have been using hedges to act as wind breakers for their gardens. Strong winds can cause irreparable damage to a beautiful garden, making the use of hedges as wind breakers even more popular. While all hedges can act as wind breakers to some extent, some hedges that are best for the job include:
Cotoneaster lacteus
Taxus baccata
Blackhaw viburnum
Rose of Sharon
Emerald Arborvitae
Ornamental grasses
First, cotoneaster lacteus, which comes from the Rosacea family, can serve as a very good windbreaker. These hedges yield red berries in the wintertime, white flowers in the summertime, and can grow to be very wide. As a matter of fact, they are often wider than they are tall. The foliage remains green year round, and they thrive in full sun conditions. Cotoneaster lacteus can serve as the perfect wind breaking hedge, as well as bring beauty to your garden year round. Planting this hedge around the edge of your property will block the wind from every direction, keeping your flowerbeds safe from wind damage. Yet this hedge will not grow high enough to block your view. This is one of the most popular wind breaking hedges offered.
Next, Taxus baccata, also know as English Yew, can be very useful as a wind breaking hedge. They can be closely trimmed, or can be left to grow very tall. They serve as great wind breakers year round, due to their thickness, and year round durability. These evergreens yield a poisonous red berry that is pretty to the eye, but dangerous if consumed by humans or livestock. Birds and deer have been known to safely consume the fruit from the English Yew. This hedge, though beautiful, may not be your first choice if you have small children.
Another type of bush that can serve as a great wind breaking hedge is the Blackshaw viburnum. This shrub is similar to the Hawthorn, except this shrub has no thorns. These wind breaking hedges will bloom flowers in the spring, which will turn into edible berries by harvest time, in the fall. These hedges make great wind breakers because they are durable and can grow up to fifteen feet in height and twelve feet in width. This makes them not only a great wind breaker, but a great sound barrier as well.
The Rose of Sharon shrubs, when planted closely together, can also serve as great wind breakers. They can reach heights that exceed eight feet, and have grown to be up to six feet wide. Rose of Sharon blooms beautiful flowers throughout the summer, and will flourish from pruning. Rose of Sharon can make great wind breakers because of their sturdy, upright form. A row of these shrubs planted shoulder to shoulder not only forms a wind breaking barrier, but it also can serve as a colorful privacy screen. At its full width, it's also a nice sound barrier.
The Emerald Arborvitae is a tall evergreen shrub that is also well suited to form a great wind barrier. This shrub has a dense growth habit, and has long lasting needles that also aid in breaking the wind. These shrubs require very little maintenance, and grow to heights of twelve to fifteen feet and widths of four to six feet. In place of lined trees, this shrub makes a wonderful hedge.
Last are the ornamental grasses that can also serve as great wind barriers. Ornamental grasses have become popular in helping break the wind. Most ornamental grasses are easy to grow, and reach maturity quickly. They work well with other plants, and come in many sizes, colors, and shapes. Their heights range from one foot to twenty feet in height, which is one of the factors that can make them great wind breakers.
Hedges can serve many functions in your garden. They can be used to divide up a garden plot, as ornamental features, as privacy screens, as sound barriers and as wind breakers. Not only are hedges cheaper than fences, they are also friendlier to the environment. On top of serving your gardening purposes, hedges also provide a habitat for many insects, birds and other wildlife.
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Hedges
Home Page
Pruning The Perfect Hedge
Choosing Garden Hedge Paint To Paint A Living Room
Container Vs. Roots - Which Hedge Planting Is Right For You?
Bamboo: The Unconventional Hedge
Hedges As A Crime Deterrent: Which Varieties Will Discourage Burglars?
The Basics Of Forming Your Hedge Shapes
The Basics Of Planting A Hedge In Your Yard
Deciding On Deciduous Hedges
Don't Hedge Your Bets: Winterize Those Shrubs
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Hedges
Common Hedge Hacking Mistakes
... addition to most garden spaces. Some hedges are better suited to decoration, while others serve very important practical purposes. For example, a hedge can be an excellent way to secure your property if you are not interested in installing fencing. Hedges, like fences, can also serve as privacy screens ...
Learning About Hedges And Gardens
... shape of the hedges. It is very important to keep enough space between the different plants so that it is easy to get in when they need to be trimmed or watered and so it is not always going to be a hassle to get the maintenance work done.
These are just a few of the most basic tips on ...
Don't Hedge Your Bets: Winterize Those Shrubs
... is in place, you want to cover the plant with burlap. This will keep out the wind and the moisture. If you have a row of your shrubs, you can build a tent-like or tepee structure over them using plywood and bamboo. You want to make sure to place mulch around the base of the shrubs. This will help to prevent ...
Hedges - An Alternative To Fencing
... Once you're sure that you can provide the time and energy needed to establish your hedge fence, you will have to do a bit of research to determine what your native plants and shrubs are. You certainly don't' want to plant any kind of shrub that won't survive the local climate. Native plants, those that ...
Maintaining English Garden Hedges
... thicker with time as some of the berries fall on the ground and develop into small hedges.
People have different ideas for the type of hedge they want for their English gardens. Most gardeners today prefer trimming and pruning their hedges into box shapes to achieve a more symmetrical ...
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