Hedge inspiration required
Author
Discussion

Dr Murdoch

Original Poster:

3,889 posts

157 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
Ive been procrastinating over what hedge I need at the edge of the driveway.

The driveway is about 20m long, and I can't decide whether I should:

1. Get a continuous hedge i.e all red robin or all laurel etc
2. Get a mix (will that look ok if I end up with a square continuous hedge)?

Preferably quick growing, height needs to be a min of 6ft.

randlemarcus

13,644 posts

253 months

Monday 19th May 2025
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There's a really effective hedge in the village that looks great, and is alternating green and copper beech. Very handsome, though not as wildlife friendly as a mixed hedge. I have few stretches of laurel, and hate it, but thats a personal choice and realted to having to grub up some particularly egregious random blobs of it.

Stock image from the web


Edited by randlemarcus on Monday 19th May 12:49

Steve Campbell

2,322 posts

190 months

Monday 19th May 2025
quotequote all
Quick growing = pain to maintain in the future. Just saying ;-)

Grande Pedro

679 posts

18 months

Monday 19th May 2025
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I think a hedge in photinia is pretty attractive and it's easy to keep in check once it's at the right height. The 'more is more' element of a longish single-species hedge can work really well.

Evanivitch

25,669 posts

144 months

Monday 19th May 2025
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Holly (ilex) makes a great hedge, but slow to establish and expensive to buy at 6ft. Personally, I think they make incredible hedges but it's long time to result.

Beech is a good compromise but you still need to keep on top of maintenance otherwise it'll be 3m tall before you know it. There's no guarantee it'll hold leaves in winter.

Mixed hedges are great for wildlife, but really depends what you want the hedge for in terms of privacy and security.

Laurel and Photinia hurl

hidetheelephants

33,289 posts

215 months

Monday 19th May 2025
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Unless it's a formal garden I'd go for a mix, as said it's best for the wildlife.